/ Football News / Bundesliga News

Bundesliga News

What Makes the Bundesliga Different

The Bundesliga is Germany’s top football division, and it does things its own way. Eighteen clubs, 34 matchdays, the most consistently well-attended league in Europe. No other top-flight competition has as many fans walking through the gates on a weekly basis. That is not a coincidence. German football has a culture around live attendance that the rest of Europe has struggled to match.

Football fans who have only followed the Premier League are often surprised when they first watch a Bundesliga game. The standing areas are enormous. The ultras are relentless. And the football, when it clicks, is fast and aggressive and frequently high-scoring. The average goals-per-game figure has topped three in multiple recent seasons — which tells you something about how the league plays.

How the Bundesliga Works

The Bundesliga was founded in 1963, replacing a regional league system that had existed since the early twentieth century. It took a while for the format to settle, but the basic structure has been stable for decades. Eighteen clubs play each other home and away across 34 matchdays, running from August through to May with a winter break built in around December and January.

Promotion and relegation links the Bundesliga to the 2. Bundesliga, Germany’s second tier. The bottom two clubs go down automatically. The third-bottom side enters a two-legged play-off against the third-placed team from 2. Bundesliga. It is a format that keeps the final weeks of the season tense at both ends of the table.

European Qualification

The top four clubs qualify for the UEFA Champions League. Fifth place earns a Europa League spot, and sixth feeds into the Conference League. The DFB-Pokal, Germany’s domestic cup competition, adds another route into European football for clubs who finish lower in the league.

Bayern Munich and the Title Race

There is no point pretending the Bundesliga title race is always competitive. Bayern Munich have dominated German football to a degree that has few parallels in European football. As of 2026, Bayern have won 35 German league titles in total, comfortably more than any other club. Their nearest rivals, Borussia Dortmund, have eight.

That said, the Bayer Leverkusen title win of 2023/24 showed the league can still produce genuine surprises. Leverkusen went the entire season unbeaten under Xabi Alonso — 34 games without a loss — and became the first team in Bundesliga history to achieve the feat. It remains one of the most remarkable single-season performances in European football.

Harry Kane, who joined Bayern from Tottenham Hotspur in 2023, has taken to the league with immediate effect. He finished as the Bundesliga’s top scorer in his first three seasons, including 36 goals in 2023/24 and 33 in 2025/26. The all-time leading scorer in Bundesliga history is Gerd Müller, whose record of 365 goals stood for decades and remains a formidable benchmark.

The Clubs and the Stadiums

Borussia Dortmund’s Signal Iduna Park holds 81,365 people and sells out consistently. The Yellow Wall — the southern standing terrace — holds around 24,000 fans and is the largest standing terrace at any club ground in the world. Dortmund became the first club in European football to average more than 80,000 per home game over a full season, which tells you everything about the support they generate.

Bayern’s Allianz Arena in Munich averages around 75,000 per match. Eintracht Frankfurt, Borussia Mönchengladbach, Schalke 04 and Hamburg are among the clubs with long and rich histories in the division, even if their recent fortunes have varied considerably.

Bayer Leverkusen are a club with a genuinely unusual background. They are majority-owned by the pharmaceutical company Bayer AG, which gives them an exemption from the 50+1 ownership rule that governs most German clubs. That rule — which requires supporters to hold a majority stake in their own club — is one reason why German football has largely avoided the extreme forms of outside investment that have reshaped clubs in England and elsewhere.

Records and Landmarks

The Bundesliga’s record books are filled with Bayern’s name, but there are entries from across the decades worth knowing. The competition’s fastest-ever goal was scored by Karim Bellarabi for Leverkusen against Dortmund in August 2014. The most hat-tricks in a career belongs to Gerd Müller, who scored three goals in a single game 32 times. Robert Lewandowski is second on 16, with Kane continuing to close the gap.

Tasmania Berlin hold the unwanted record of 31 games without a win — set during their only top-flight season in the 1960s. The record margin of victory in a title race belongs to Bayern’s 2012/13 campaign, when they finished 25 points clear of Dortmund in second.

Following the Bundesliga

For fans outside Germany, the Bundesliga has become increasingly easy to follow. Broadcast rights are held across most major markets, and the league’s own digital platforms carry a significant amount of free content. The transfer market around Bundesliga clubs is also worth watching closely — German clubs have historically developed young talent and exported it to the rest of Europe at the highest level, with players moving on to the Premier League, La Liga and Ligue 1 regularly.

The 2026/27 season is scheduled to begin on 28 August 2026, with Bayern Munich defending champions once again after securing their 34th domestic title in April 2026.