N

NLA

Switzerland · Handball

Season 2025

NLAToday's Matches

Live scores, upcoming kick-offs, and finished results for today. Data refreshes automatically so you never miss a moment.

Upcoming Today

1 matches
Kadetten SchaffhausenBern

Finished Today

2 matches
Pfadi WinterthurHC Kriens
BernKadetten Schaffhausen

NLAPlayoffs

Semi-finals

HKHC Kriens2
RBRTV Basel0
42–35,41–29
ZZurich0
KSKadetten Schaffhausen2
28–32,25–36

NLAStandings

Current NLA 2025 standings with 10 teams. Kadetten Schaffhausen leads the table with 50 points after 27 matches, followed by HC Kriens on 43 points. The table shows wins, losses, scoring, and win percentage — essential for pre-match betting analysis.

#Team
1
Played: 27Won: 25Lost: 2Goal Diff: +129
2
Played: 27Won: 21Lost: 5Goal Diff: +124
3
Played: 27Won: 18Lost: 7Goal Diff: +61
4
Played: 27Won: 14Lost: 12Goal Diff: +59
5
Played: 27Won: 14Lost: 12Goal Diff: -15
6
Played: 27Won: 13Lost: 13Goal Diff: +2
7
Played: 27Won: 10Lost: 14Goal Diff: -47
8
Played: 27Won: 6Lost: 19Goal Diff: -45
9
Played: 27Won: 6Lost: 19Goal Diff: -84
10
Played: 27Won: 1Lost: 25Goal Diff: -184

NLAResults

The latest 25 completed matches in the NLA. The highest-scoring result was HC Kriens 46–38 RTV Basel. Review recent scorelines to spot form trends, home advantage patterns, and upset results that can inform your next bet.

HomeScoreAway
Semi-finals
3341
3341
2026-04-30FT
2829
2829
2026-04-29FT
3827
3827
2026-04-26FT
3829
3829
2026-04-25FT
Final
3432
3432
2026-04-25FT
3332
3332
2026-04-22FT
3130
3130
2026-04-19FT
3033
3033
2026-04-15FT
3133
3133
2026-04-12FT
Quarter-finals
2628
2628
2026-04-18FT
3429
3429
2026-04-16FT
3224
3224
2026-04-16FT
4638
4638
2026-04-15FT
3127
3127
2026-04-15FT
2941
2941
2026-04-11FT
2536
2536
2026-04-11FT
3127
3127
2026-04-09FT
2928
2928
2026-04-09FT
4235
4235
2026-04-08FT
3228
3228
2026-04-08FT
Results
3937
3937
2026-04-01FT
4529
4529
2026-04-01FT
3531
3531
2026-04-01FT
3332
3332
2026-04-01FT
3123
3123
2026-04-01FT

NLATeam Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 10 teams in the NLA. Kadetten Schaffhausen leads with 25 wins this season. The colour-coded heatmap highlights wins, losses, scoring, scoring difference, and win percentage — making it easy to spot the strongest and weakest teams at a glance for betting analysis.

NLABetting Insights

NLA 2025 — key betting statistics across 155 matches played. Games average 62.60 combined scoring. Home sides win 55.5% of the time and the most common scoreline is 33-30. Use these metrics to calibrate your betting strategies.

62.60Scoring / Match
100.0%Both Score %
55.5%Home Win %
40.0%Away Win %
0.0%Clean Sheet %
+22.20Home Advantage

NLASeason Trends

Season-by-season comparison across 2 seasons of the NLA, with 2025 highlighted. The current season averages 62.60 combined scoring per match across 155 matches played. Columns cover home win % and away win % — use year-on-year trends to spot if the league is becoming higher or lower scoring and calibrate your betting strategy accordingly.

Rows highlighted in blue = current season

Top Scoring Teams

10 teams in the NLA 2025 season ranked by wins. Kadetten Schaffhausen leads with 25 wins. Their 1-season average is 23.0 wins per season. Pfadi Winterthur shows the biggest improvement this season with 12 more wins than their past average. Compare current form against historical averages to spot rising and declining teams — useful for match result and outright winner betting.

Played27Lost2Goals For922Goals Against793Avg W23.0Avg L3.0
2HKHC Kriens21Won
Played27Lost5Goals For943Goals Against819Avg W19.0Avg L6.0
Played27Lost7Goals For874Goals Against813Avg W6.0Avg L15.0
4BBern14Won
Played27Lost12Goals For887Goals Against828Avg W17.0Avg L9.0
5WTWacker Thun14Won
Played27Lost12Goals For842Goals Against857Avg W7.0Avg L14.0
6SGSt. Gallen13Won
Played27Lost13Goals For804Goals Against802Avg W9.0Avg L16.0
7RBRTV Basel10Won
Played27Lost14Goals For810Goals Against857Avg W5.0Avg L19.0
8ZZurich6Won
Played27Lost19Goals For757Goals Against802Avg W14.0Avg L12.0
9SASuhr Aarau6Won
Played27Lost19Goals For757Goals Against841Avg W11.0Avg L12.0
Played27Lost25Goals For827Goals Against1011Avg WAvg L

NLAPast Seasons

Browse 8 archived seasons of the NLA, from 2022 to 2024. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.

History 19 Mar 2026

Founded1950

The Swiss Handball League was established in 1950 as the nation's premier handball competition, emerging from a period of growing interest in the sport across Switzerland. The league has evolved significantly over seven decades, expanding and contracting its membership to maintain competitive balance while showcasing elite-level handball. In 2024, the league adopted Quickline as its title sponsor, reflecting the commercial growth of Swiss handball and increased investment in professional infrastructure. The NLA has become increasingly competitive on the European stage, with Swiss clubs regularly qualifying for Champions League and Europa League competitions, establishing Switzerland as a respected handball nation in continental competitions.

  • 1950 — Swiss Handball League (NLA) founded as the top division of Swiss handball
  • 1992 — Pfadi Winterthur won the first of their 10 national championships
  • 2005 — Kadetten Schaffhausen began their era of dominance with their first title
  • 2012 — Kadetten Schaffhausen won their fourth consecutive championship (2010-2012)
  • 2021 — Pfadi Winterthur won their 10th and final championship after 17 years without a title
  • 2024 — Quickline became the official title sponsor, rebranding the league as Quickline Handball League

Competition Format 19 Mar 2026

Teams10Relegation spots2European spots2

The NLA operates on a home-and-away round-robin format during the regular season, with each of the 10 teams playing 18 matches (9 home, 9 away) for a total of 90 matches across the campaign. Teams earn 3 points for a win and 1 point for a draw, with the final standings determined by total points and goal difference. The top two finishers qualify directly for the EHF Champions League, while the third-place team enters the EHF European League. At the conclusion of the regular season, the top eight teams advance to the playoffs, contested in a best-of-three quarter-final and semi-final format, culminating in a single-match final to determine the champion. The bottom two teams are automatically relegated to Nationalliga B, Switzerland's second-tier handball competition.

Records 19 Mar 2026

Most titlesGrasshopper Club Zürich (21)

Kadetten Schaffhausen holds the modern-era points record with 46 points in the 2023/24 season, demonstrating extraordinary consistency across their 24 matches.

Analysis 19 Mar 2026

Current Season Analysis

Kadetten Schaffhausen continues their remarkable dominance of Swiss handball, maintaining an extraordinary 93 win rate through the 2024/25 season with 22 wins from 27 matches and 50 points on the table. The defending champions have established a commanding 7-point lead over second-place HC Kriens, who hold 43 points from 22 matches with a respectable 73% win percentage. Pfadi Winterthur sits in third position with an identical 33-point tally from 23 matches, separated only by goal difference from Kriens, creating an intense battle for the second Champions League qualification spot.

The title race appears largely settled in Schaffhausen's favour, barring an unprecedented collapse, though the pursuit of the second European spot between Kriens and Winterthur remains genuinely competitive. Wacker Thun occupies fourth position with 29 points from 24 matches, maintaining a 58% win rate and demonstrating solid mid-table form, while Bern holds fifth with 25 points from 23 matches, keeping themselves within striking distance of the European qualification positions.

The relegation battle intensifies at the bottom of the standings, with Handball Stafa in severe danger, having won only 1 match from 23 played and accumulating just 3 points—a catastrophic record that virtually guarantees their descent to Nationalliga B. Zurich (10 points from 23 matches) and Suhr Aarau (14 points from 24 matches) are also in serious jeopardy, though both retain mathematical possibilities of survival. RTV Basel (18 points from 22 matches) and St. Gallen (21 points from 23 matches) have established slightly more comfortable margins above the relegation zone.

The standout individual performer this season has been Kadetten Schaffhausen's collective excellence, demonstrated by their remarkable +129 goal difference—the best in the league by a significant margin. Their defensive solidity (677 goals conceded) combined with prolific attacking output (785 goals scored) represents the hallmark of a championship-calibre team. An unexpected storyline has been the struggles of Zurich, a club with historical pedigree in Swiss handball, finding themselves in the lower reaches of the table with only a 17% win rate—a dramatic underperformance that raises questions about their squad composition and coaching effectiveness.

League Characteristics and Competitive Dynamics

The Swiss Handball League occupies a unique position in European handball, representing a highly competitive mid-tier nation that regularly produces competitive European club teams. The league's 10-team format ensures that every match carries significant weight, with the playoff structure adding drama and intensity to the final stages of the season. Kadetten Schaffhausen's sustained excellence—winning 15 of the last 20 championships—has created a dominant club culture that has elevated the overall competitive standards of Swiss handball while simultaneously raising questions about competitive balance.

The geographic distribution of clubs across Switzerland—from Schaffhausen in the north to Aarau in the northwest, Zurich and Winterthur in the east, and Basel in the south—reflects the sport's genuine national reach. This geographic diversity has historically produced distinct club cultures and passionate local rivalries, though recent seasons have been dominated by the consistent excellence of Schaffhausen's organization and investment in player development.

European Handball Context

Swiss handball clubs have become increasingly competitive on the European stage, with Kadetten Schaffhausen establishing themselves as regular Champions League participants. The qualification pathway through the NLA—with two guaranteed Champions League spots and one Europa League spot—ensures that the league maintains visibility among European handball's elite. The recent success of Swiss clubs in European competitions has elevated the profile of the NLA internationally and attracted greater investment from sponsors and broadcasters.

The Quickline sponsorship deal represents a significant commercial milestone for Swiss handball, signalling increased professionalization and investment in the sport's infrastructure. This commercial growth has enabled clubs to improve training facilities, expand coaching staff, and recruit higher-quality international players, thereby raising the overall competitive standard of the league.

Historical Context and Legacy

The 75-year history of the Swiss Handball League reflects the sport's evolution from a niche activity to a genuinely professional competition. Grasshopper Club Zürich's 21 championships—accumulated over multiple decades from 1950 to the late 1970s—represent the league's early era of dominance, while Kadetten Schaffhausen's recent success reflects the modern era of professional investment and systematic player development. The emergence of Pfadi Winterthur as a 10-time champion demonstrates that competitive dominance, while challenging to sustain, remains achievable for well-managed clubs with adequate resources.

The league's structure and format have evolved to maximize competitive balance while ensuring that the strongest teams advance to European competitions. The regular season's round-robin format ensures that every club plays each opponent twice, providing comprehensive data for playoff seeding and reducing the possibility of fortuitous advancement. The best-of-three playoff format adds dramatic intensity while ensuring that the champion is genuinely the strongest team across the season.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the Swiss NLA?

The Nationalliga A consists of 10 professional handball clubs competing in a single-division format, with the top 8 teams advancing to the playoffs following the regular season.

Who has won the most Swiss handball championships?

Grasshopper Club Zürich holds the all-time record with 21 national championships, though Kadetten Schaffhausen has won 15 titles and dominates the modern era with multiple championships in recent decades.

How does relegation work in the Swiss NLA?

The bottom two teams in the NLA standings are automatically relegated to Nationalliga B at the end of each season, with the top two teams from Nationalliga B earning promotion to the NLA.

Which Swiss handball teams qualify for European competitions?

The top two NLA teams qualify directly for the EHF Champions League group stage, while the third-place team enters the EHF European League. Additional spots may be available through national cup competitions.

When was the Swiss Handball League founded?

The Swiss Handball League (Nationalliga A) was founded in 1950 and has operated continuously as Switzerland's top-tier handball competition for over 70 years.

What is the playoff format in the NLA?

The top 8 teams in the regular season advance to best-of-three quarter-finals and semi-finals, with the winners competing in a single-match final to determine the national champion.

API data: 1 May 2026 · Stats updated: 30 Apr 2026 · Content updated: 19 Mar 2026