Spanish football league system

Summary

The Spanish football league system consists of several professional, semi-professional and non-professional leagues bound together hierarchically by promotion and relegation. The top two tiers of the male league pyramid — Primera División (a.k.a. La Liga) and Segunda División (a.k.a. La Liga 2) — are administered by the Liga Nacional de Fútbol Profesional, a sports association with independent legal status from the Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF), the governing body of football in Spain. Conversely, the top tiers of the women's pyramid (Liga F), second and third tier of the women's pyramid, (Primera Federación and Segunda Federación) are administered by the RFEF. The lower tiers (6th and below for the men's pyramid; 5th and below for the female one) are run by the regional federations. In addition to clubs from Spain, and under the purview of the additional provision 17 of the 1990 Law of Sport, Andorran clubs affiliated to a Spanish regional federation are allowed to compete in the system.[1]

The RFEF allows reserve teams to compete in the main league system, as is the case in most European domestic leagues. However, reserve teams are not allowed to compete in the same tier as their senior team, and no reserve team has thus competed in the top flight.

Men edit

La Liga edit

La Liga is the highest level in the Spanish football league system and is operated by the Liga Nacional de Fútbol Profesional.

Other professional divisions edit

Segunda División, also called La Liga 2 is the second highest level in the Spanish football league system and is also operated by the Liga Nacional de Fútbol Profesional.

Professional & Semi-Professional divisions edit

The Royal Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) created a new tier to begin in the 2021–22 season placed between the Segunda División and the former Segunda División B which had been created in 1977.[2] The federation officially named the third tier, containing two regionalised groups, the Primera Federación.

Below the new Primera División RFEF sits the fourth tier, the Segunda Federación, roughly corresponding to the format of Segunda B, other than that the new format has five regionalized groups. In contrast, the old system contained only four, other than in its final season, 2020–21, unique both due to the transition into the new system and complications caused by the COVID-19 pandemic in Spain which led to more teams being included and a complicated format involving 10 localized leagues half the size of the usual groups, followed by 15 sections to determine which teams would go into the second, third, fourth and fifth levels.

Following the reorganization, the Tercera Federación is the fifth highest level in the Spanish football league system[3] and is operated by the RFEF and 17 regional federations corresponding to each of the autonomous communities of Spain (there are 18 groups – Andalusia is divided into two due to its size). Prior to 2021, this was known as the Tercera División and was the fourth level, but had the same format. In 2020–21 the division also had an atypical form of 36 local subgroups followed by a total of 50 subgroups to allocate promotion, playoff, and relegation places.

Lower divisions edit

From level 6, each of the RFEF's 19 regional federations runs its regional league pyramid under its own jurisdiction.

Pyramid table edit

Level

League(s)/Division(s)

Professional leagues

1

Primera División
(LaLiga EA Sports)
20 teams

↓↑ 3 teams

2

Segunda División
(LaLiga Hypermotion)
22 teams

↓↑ 4 teams
Professional & Semi-professional leagues

3

Primera Federación
40 clubs divided into 2 groups

Group 1
20 clubs
Group 2
20 clubs
↓↑ 10 teams

4

Segunda Federación
90 clubs divided into 5 groups

Group 1
18 clubs
Group 2
18 clubs
Group 3
18 clubs
Group 4
18 clubs
Group 5
18 clubs
↓↑ 27 teams

5

Tercera Federación
324 clubs divided into 18 groups

Group 1
18 clubs
Group 2
18 clubs
Group 3
18 clubs
Group 4
18 clubs
Group 5
18 clubs
Group 6
18 clubs
Group 7
18 clubs
Group 8
18 clubs
Group 9
18 clubs
Group 10
18 clubs
Group 11
18 clubs
Group 12
18 clubs
Group 13
18 clubs
Group 14
18 clubs
Group 15
18 clubs
Group 16
18 clubs
Group 17
18 clubs
Group 18
18 clubs
↓↑ 50 teams
Non-professional leagues

6

1st Regional Division

7

2nd Regional Division

8

3rd Regional Division

9

4th Regional Division

10

5th Regional Division

Evolution of the Spanish league system edit

Tier\Years 1929 1929–34 1934–36 1936–39 1939–40 1940–77 1977–2021 Since 2021
1 Primera División Civil War Primera División**
2 Segunda División Group A Segunda División Segunda División
3 Segunda División Group B 3ª División None* None* 3ª División Segunda División B Primera Federación
4 None* None* Lower Tercera División Segunda Federación
5 Lower Tercera Federación
6 Lower
7
8
9
10

* From 1929 to 1940 the Spanish pyramid was similar to the Brazilian system, with two simultaneous and independent pyramids, the national pyramid, and the regional pyramid.

**The Primera and Segunda was founded by the Royal Spanish Football Association, but since 1984 is operated by the Liga Nacional de Fútbol Profesional. Since 2023 the Primera División is commonly known as LaLiga EA Sports and the Segunda División is commonly known as LaLiga Hypermotion for sponsorship reasons.

Women edit

Since 2022–23 edit

Level

League

Professional league

1

Liga F
(finetwork Liga F)
16 teams

↓↑ 2 teams

2

Primera Federación
16 teams

↓↑ 4 teams

3

Segunda Federación
32 teams divided into 2 groups

↓↑ 6 teams

4

Primera Nacional
6 groups, 14 teams each

5

Regional leagues

Youth edit

Level

League

1

División de Honor
(7 groups)

2

Liga Nacional Juvenil
(21 groups)

3

Divisiones regionales

References edit

  1. ^ Castelló, José I. (6 October 2017). "'Club catalán busca liga competitiva para jugar'". Crónica Global (in Spanish) – via El Español.
  2. ^ "Comunicado de la RFEF en relación con las competiciones no profesionales del fútbol español" [RFEF announcement in relation to the non-professional competitions in Spanish football] (in Spanish). RFEF. 6 May 2020. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  3. ^ "La Federación desvela el misterio: La nueva Segunda B se denominará Primera División RFEF". ABC (in Spanish). 15 September 2020. Retrieved 18 September 2020.