Allsvenskan 2026 Table tips

Allsvenskan 2026 table prediction

Allsvenskan is back. Sixteen clubs, 30 rounds, and a title race that already looks wide open before a single ball has been kicked. The season kicks off on 4 April with a statement opener: Hammarby hosting defending champions Mjällby AIF. Here is our predicted table for 2026, with a short verdict on every club.

Allsvenskan 2026 table prediction

Our Predicted Table

Before we break down each club, here is the full predicted table at a glance. The consensus among Swedish media and coaches at the official Allsvenskan launch event put Hammarby first, Mjällby second and GAIS third. We have gone with Malmö at three instead of GAIS, and we will explain why as we go through the clubs.

1. Hammarby

The most popular pick to win the title, and it is hard to argue with. Hammarby finished second in 2025 but were a distant 13 points behind Mjällby, which tells you they still have ground to make up. New coach Kalle Karlsson arrives with a strong reputation after his work at Västerås, and the squad has retained most of its quality. Nahir Besara, widely considered the best player in the league, gives them a creative edge nobody else can match. Home form at Tele2 Arena will be crucial. If they hit the ground running, the title is theirs to lose.

2. Mjällby AIF

Defending champions and the story of last season. Mjällby won Allsvenskan 2025 with a record 75 points, a remarkable achievement for a club of their size. The challenge now is doing it again without Anders Torstensson, who stepped down as manager, and with key departures including goalkeeper Noel Tornqvist and midfielder Herman Johansson, who left for FC Dallas. Elliot Stroud remains and is one of the most dangerous players in the division. Retaining a title is always harder than winning one, but this squad has shown it knows how to grind results out across a long season.

3. Malmö FF

Most of the official Swedish media table tips have Malmö at four behind GAIS, but we think that underestimates them. Malmö are the most decorated club in Swedish football with 24 league titles, and 2025 was an unusually poor season for them by their standards, finishing sixth. They will be motivated and they have the resources to strengthen. Erik Botheim, one of the sharpest strikers in the division, gives them a consistent goal threat. A bounce-back season is coming, and third feels like the floor rather than the ceiling.

4. GAIS

One of the surprises of 2025, finishing third, and they go into 2026 with real confidence. Gustav Lundgren has been named one of the best players in the league by the media consensus at the pre-season launch, which says a lot about how far this club has come. They play in Gothenburg, they have an identity and a structure under their coach, and they are no longer just making up the numbers in the top half. The question is whether they can back up last season’s performance or whether it was a peak they cannot sustain.

5. Djurgården

A club with a history of performing well in Stockholm derbies and European football, Djurgården enter 2026 with genuine top-five ambitions. At least one Swedish pundit, Viktor Elms of Fotbollskanalen, has gone as far as tipping them to win the whole thing, pointing to a strong squad core and a new coach who has the system working well. Robbie Ure, tipped by some as a potential top-three finisher in the scoring charts, could be the difference maker. Fifth is our pick but they would not shock us if they ended up higher.

6. AIK

AIK are one of the biggest clubs in Sweden by support and history, but recent seasons have not matched those expectations on the pitch. The rebuild continues in 2026 and there are signs of progress, though a genuine title challenge feels a step too far right now. A mid-table finish somewhere between fifth and eighth feels most realistic. We have gone with sixth, which would represent a solid if unspectacular campaign for a club that always demands more.

7. IFK Göteborg

A club in transition but with one of the most passionate fanbases in Sweden. IFK Göteborg are well-organised and competitive, and they showed enough in 2025 to suggest they belong in the upper half of the table. Their away form has historically been a weakness, particularly on artificial surfaces, and that could cost them points against sides like Elfsborg at Borås Arena. Seventh feels about right.

8. Sirius

Based in Uppsala, Sirius are consistently one of the more interesting clubs to follow in Allsvenskan. Robbie Ure is their standout attacking threat and is being tipped by several sources as a genuine contender for the top scorer award in 2026. If Ure fires, Sirius could push into the top six. If he does not, eighth to tenth is the realistic range. A club worth keeping an eye on throughout the season.

9. Elfsborg

New coach Bjorn Hamberg arrives at Elfsborg working with Graham Potter’s football philosophy, which is an intriguing appointment. Elfsborg finished eighth in 2025 and are described as a club in transition, with the departure of a key creative player weakening their identity somewhat. They have strong home support at Borås Arena and can be difficult to beat there, but the away record is the concern. A mid-table finish around ninth seems the most likely outcome while Hamberg beds in his ideas.

10. Häcken

Häcken are a well-run Gothenburg club who have punched above their weight in recent seasons, including European campaigns that have raised their profile. The squad has seen some movement in the winter window and there are question marks about depth. Tenth feels like a fair assessment of where they are heading into this season, though they are the kind of club that can surprise in individual matches against the bigger sides.

11. Brommapojkarna

BP are a Stockholm club who have established themselves in Allsvenskan after years in the lower divisions. Staying up is the primary objective and they are capable of achieving it. They are not expected to threaten the top half but they have shown enough defensive organisation in recent seasons to avoid the very bottom of the table. Eleventh would be a solid return.

12. Degerfors

A small club from Degerfors in Örebro County who have become something of a cult favourite in Swedish football for punching above their weight. Survival is always the goal and they are experienced at doing just that. The squad is built for resilience rather than attacking flair. Twelfth feels like a realistic and respectable position for a club of their resources.

13. Kalmar FF

Kalmar return to Allsvenskan after a season in Superettan, coming up as runners-up behind Västerås. Newly promoted sides often find the step up difficult, particularly with a condensed pre-season, and Kalmar will need time to adjust to the pace and physicality of the top division again. Staying up would be a good result. We have them just above the relegation zone, but it could easily go either way.

14. Halmstad

Halmstad have been in and around the relegation zone in recent seasons and 2026 looks likely to be another difficult year. The squad lacks the depth of the clubs above them and their pre-season has not generated much optimism. At least one prominent Swedish pundit has tipped them for relegation. We think they have just enough to survive but the margin will be thin.

15. Västerås

Västerås won Superettan in 2025 to earn promotion, which is a real achievement, but the step up to Allsvenskan is significant. Losing coach Kalle Karlsson to Hammarby over the winter is a major blow. He was the architect of their promotion and replacing his ideas and energy will be difficult. Survival will be the target and it is not guaranteed. Fifteenth with a playoff spot feels like the likely outcome.

16. Örgryte

Örgryte return to Allsvenskan after 16 years away, having won the Superettan playoff against IFK Norrköping. It is a wonderful story for a historic Gothenburg club, but the reality of top-flight football after such a long absence is harsh. They are the shortest-priced relegation candidate among the bookmakers and the squad simply does not have the quality to compete week after week at this level. Relegation is the most likely outcome, though stranger things have happened in Swedish football.

The Title Race in One Line

Hammarby are the pick, Mjällby will make them work for it all season, and Malmö will be dangerous if they hit their stride before the summer break. The opener on 4 April, Hammarby against the defending champions, could set the tone for everything that follows. Swedish football is back.

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