Summary
When Liverpool clinched the 2024-25 Premier League title under Arne Slot with several games to spare, their club-by-club breakdown told the real story: a home record at Anfield that ranked among the most dominant in the club's Premier League era,...
Table of contents
- 1 How Premier League Results Are Structured by Team
- 2 Understanding Home and Away Splits
- 3 2024-25 Season: Final Results by Team
- 4 Best Home Fortresses in Premier League History
- 5 Away Results: Which Teams Travel Best?
- 6 Where to Find Premier League Results by Team
- 7 Historical Context: How Club Records Shift Season to Season
- 8 Frequently Asked Questions
- 8.1 How many home and away games does each Premier League team play per season?
- 8.2 Where can I find Premier League results split by home and away for every club?
- 8.3 Which Premier League team has the best home record of all time?
- 8.4 Who won the Premier League in 2024-25 and what was their overall record?
- 8.5 Does home advantage still matter in the Premier League?
- 8.6 Which teams were relegated from the Premier League in 2024-25?
- 8.7 How do you compare Premier League results across different seasons?
- 8.8 What is the worst away record ever in the Premier League?
- 9 Sources
When Liverpool clinched the 2024-25 Premier League title under Arne Slot with several games to spare, their club-by-club breakdown told the real story: a home record at Anfield that ranked among the most dominant in the club’s Premier League era, combined with away form that made rivals nervous from the opening whistle. Tracking Premier League results by team – broken down across home and away matches – is the sharpest analytical lens available for understanding which clubs are genuine title contenders, which are fighting for European spots, and which face a grinding relegation battle before the season is over.
How Premier League Results Are Structured by Team
The Premier League operates as a 20-club division in which every team meets every other team twice – once at home and once away. That produces exactly 380 matches per season and gives each club a record composed of wins, draws, and losses in both settings. The official Premier League table at premierleague.com publishes these splits in real time throughout the season, but a fuller picture emerges when the home record and away record are read separately rather than as a combined total.
Points are awarded on the standard three-points-for-a-win system, which the Premier League has used since its founding in August 1992 when 22 top-flight clubs broke away from the Football League to form the new competition. The division settled at 20 clubs from the 1995-96 season onward – a format documented on the Wikipedia Premier League article – and has not changed since. Each club therefore plays exactly 19 home matches and 19 away matches every season, with the final table reflecting both environments equally.

Understanding Home and Away Splits
A club’s home record and away record can tell entirely different stories. Some teams build their seasons on what supporters call fortress status – racking up points at their own ground and surviving away fixtures just enough to stay safe. Others, particularly well-organised sides with disciplined defensive shape, make up ground on the road by grinding draws and occasional wins even when home form is average. Reading each record in isolation rather than as a combined total is what separates useful analysis from surface-level table watching.
Home advantage in the Premier League is measurable and consistent over three decades of data. According to BBC Sport’s Premier League coverage, home teams have won roughly 45 percent of all top-flight fixtures across the competition’s history, with draws accounting for around 25 percent and away wins making up the remaining 30 percent. That 15-percentage-point edge for the home side explains why managers place such emphasis on protecting home form during title races and relegation battles, and why a single unexpected home defeat can shift the mood around an entire campaign.
Fans tracking results in real time can follow how the home and away split develops week by week at the Premier League match results hub, which updates tables and scorelines after each round of fixtures.
2024-25 Season: Final Results by Team
The 2024-25 Premier League season concluded in May 2025 with Liverpool claiming the title in Arne Slot’s debut campaign as manager – a remarkable achievement for the Dutchman who replaced the celebrated Jürgen Klopp. Arsenal finished as runners-up for the second consecutive season, while Chelsea secured Champions League football with a strong final quarter of the campaign. Nottingham Forest, under Nuno Espírito Santo, produced one of the more surprising high finishes of the modern era, driven primarily by an outstanding home defensive record at the City Ground.
At the bottom, Southampton endured one of the worst points hauls in Premier League history, joined in relegation by Ipswich Town and Leicester City – two clubs that had earned promotion from the Championship the previous season and could not sustain top-flight intensity. The table below summarises final standings for selected clubs, with home and away records drawn from the Wikipedia article on the 2024-25 Premier League season and the Premier League’s official records.
| Pos | Club | Pts | Home (W-D-L) | Away (W-D-L) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Liverpool | 82 | 14-3-2 | 11-4-4 |
| 2 | Arsenal | 74 | 12-4-3 | 10-4-5 |
| 3 | Chelsea | 69 | 11-3-5 | 9-6-4 |
| 4 | Nottingham Forest | 65 | 12-3-4 | 7-5-7 |
| 5 | Newcastle United | 63 | 11-4-4 | 7-5-7 |
| 6 | Aston Villa | 61 | 11-3-5 | 7-4-8 |
| 18 | Leicester City | 27 | 5-2-12 | 2-4-13 |
| 19 | Ipswich Town | 22 | 3-4-12 | 2-3-14 |
| 20 | Southampton | 12 | 2-1-16 | 1-2-16 |
Liverpool’s 2024-25 home record at Anfield was among the most dominant in the club’s Premier League era – just two home defeats in 19 outings, with 14 wins securing the foundation of their title campaign.
For a full archive of all 380 scorelines from the completed campaign, the Premier League results 2024-25 season archive presents every match result in one place, organised by gameweek.
Best Home Fortresses in Premier League History
Certain grounds have become synonymous with home dominance across Premier League history. Anfield (Liverpool), the Etihad Stadium (Manchester City), and Old Trafford during the Ferguson era each went through extended periods where opponents expected nothing and usually collected exactly that. The benchmark for a single perfect home season has been approached several times but never fully reached – the closest came from Chelsea in 2005-06 under José Mourinho, when they won 18 of 19 home fixtures, conceding just 11 goals at Stamford Bridge across the entire league season.
The table below shows some of the strongest single-season home records in Premier League history, drawn from season articles published on Wikipedia.
| Club | Season | Home Record (W-D-L) | Home Pts |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chelsea | 2005-06 | 18-1-0 | 55 |
| Manchester City | 2011-12 | 18-0-1 | 54 |
| Liverpool | 2019-20 | 18-0-1 | 54 |
| Manchester City | 2017-18 | 16-2-1 | 50 |
| Arsenal (Invincibles) | 2003-04 | 15-4-0 | 49 |
Chelsea’s 2005-06 campaign under Mourinho remains a reference point for home dominance: 18 wins from 19 home games, a run halted only by a 1-0 loss to Manchester United in February 2006. Liverpool’s 2019-20 season – the year they won the title by 18 points – produced an identical 18-0-1 home record, halted only by a 3-0 loss to Watford in late February. Arsenal’s 2003-04 Invincibles went undefeated in all 19 home league fixtures as part of a completely unbeaten 38-game campaign, a record that remains unique in Premier League history, as confirmed by the Wikipedia article on that Arsenal season.
To check which teams have the best home records heading into an upcoming round, the Premier League results this weekend page shows the full fixture list alongside current form at home and away for each club.
Away Results: Which Teams Travel Best?
Away form separates good teams from great ones. Over the last decade, the clubs that challenged for the title most consistently – Manchester City, Liverpool, and Arsenal – all posted exceptional away records in their strongest seasons. Manchester City’s 100-point campaign of 2017-18 included 16 wins from 19 away fixtures, producing one of the best single-season away hauls the division has seen. Liverpool’s 2019-20 title triumph came with 12 away wins, helping them build an insurmountable points lead over City before the pandemic shutdown in March of that year.
In 2024-25, Chelsea surprised many observers with their away form under Enzo Maresca. After several seasons of inconsistency following the Todd Boehly takeover, Chelsea collected 9 away wins – more than any club outside the top two – which proved decisive in securing third place and Champions League qualification ahead of Newcastle United, who finished fifth after a difficult run of road fixtures in the final month of the season.
Away form does not lie. A team accumulating points on the road is genuinely performing well, regardless of where they sit in the table after a run of convenient home fixtures.
For clubs in the lower half, away results usually determine survival. Southampton’s 2024-25 road record of just one win from 19 away matches confirmed the wider picture of a club that never found a footing either at home or on the road. Relegation battles unfold across a full season of home and away results, and the Premier League results today live page is useful for tracking how the bottom three shifts on matchdays.

Where to Find Premier League Results by Team
Several authoritative platforms publish complete Premier League results broken down by club, with home and away splits updated in real time on matchdays.
- Premier League official website (premierleague.com): The primary source for tables, fixtures, and results. The Results section lets you filter by team and toggle between home and away matches specifically.
- BBC Sport football section (bbc.com/sport/football): Full scorelines, match reports, and league tables updated live during matches, including a split-table view showing home and away columns separately.
- Wikipedia season articles: Each completed Premier League season has a dedicated Wikipedia page listing every club’s full W-D-L record in both home and away columns, alongside goals scored and conceded in each setting.
- The Guardian football section (theguardian.com/football): Results archives with home and away context for all 20 clubs, plus end-of-season reviews that include record analysis per club.
- Fbref.com (Sports Reference): Advanced metrics alongside standard results, filterable by home or away context and comparable across multiple seasons going back to the mid-2010s.
Historical Context: How Club Records Shift Season to Season
No Premier League record is permanent. Manchester City were the division’s dominant force from 2017 to 2023, winning six titles in seven seasons and producing the highest-ever points total of 100 in 2017-18. Their home record across that period was machine-like in consistency – multiple seasons recording only one or two Etihad defeats. Yet 2024-25 brought a dramatic reversal. City finished outside the top six for the first time in the Pep Guardiola era, their away form collapsing under the weight of injuries and a squad that appeared stretched after years of sustained competition on multiple fronts.
Arsenal provide the defining historical example of what elite home dominance looks like sustained across a full season. The 2003-04 Invincibles season saw Arsène Wenger’s side go 38 league matches without a single defeat – 19 at home, 19 away – finishing with 26 wins and 12 draws, 90 points total, and a home record of W15 D4 L0. Their ground at Highbury was effectively impenetrable for an entire campaign. Two decades later, Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal produced consistent top-two finishes built on comparably strong home records across 2022-23, 2023-24, and 2024-25, even if the title remained beyond reach.
The broader lesson for analysts and fans is that Premier League results by team are best read across multiple seasons rather than as a single-year snapshot. A club that posts a strong home record one season and follows with a more modest one the next has not necessarily declined – fixture difficulty, squad depth, injury patterns, and cup commitments all affect what the numbers show in any given 38-game campaign.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many home and away games does each Premier League team play per season?
Every Premier League team plays 38 league matches per season: 19 at their home ground and 19 away from home. The format is a double round-robin in which each of the 20 clubs faces every other club twice – once in each location. This structure has been in place since the league reduced from 22 clubs to 20 clubs ahead of the 1995-96 season. The equal 19-and-19 split means a club’s final points tally is always the direct sum of what it collects in both environments. A team that wins all 19 home games but wins nothing away would finish on 57 points – enough for European contention in most seasons, but well short of title pace, which illustrates precisely why away form matters as much as home fortress status when assessing a club’s true quality.
Where can I find Premier League results split by home and away for every club?
The most reliable sources are the Premier League official website, where the standings table includes a toggle to display home-only or away-only records for each club, and BBC Sport, which publishes a split table on its football section with live updates during matchdays. Wikipedia maintains detailed season articles for every completed Premier League campaign, each listing every club’s full W-D-L record in home and away columns alongside goals data. The Guardian’s football section also publishes results archives at the end of each season with home and away context included for all 20 clubs.
Which Premier League team has the best home record of all time?
Across the full Premier League era from 1992 to the present, Manchester United accumulated the most total home wins given their long period of dominance under Sir Alex Ferguson, who won 13 league titles with the club – more than any other manager in the competition’s history. For the best single-season home record, Chelsea (2005-06) and Liverpool (2019-20) share the benchmark with 18 wins from 19 home games each. Arsenal’s 2003-04 Invincibles produced W15 D4 L0 in home fixtures, and remain the only side in Premier League history to complete an entire season – home and away combined – without a single defeat, a distinction confirmed in the Wikipedia entry for that season.
Who won the Premier League in 2024-25 and what was their overall record?
Liverpool won the 2024-25 Premier League title under Arne Slot, the Dutch manager who replaced the retired Jürgen Klopp at the start of the season. Liverpool finished with 82 points, built on a home record of W14 D3 L2 and an away record of W11 D4 L4 – the strongest combined haul in the division. Arsenal were runners-up with 74 points. At the other end of the table, Southampton finished bottom with just 12 points from 38 matches, making it one of the lowest points totals recorded by a Premier League club in the modern 20-team format and confirming their return to the Championship for the 2025-26 season.
Does home advantage still matter in the Premier League?
Yes, home advantage remains real and measurable, though the gap has narrowed over time. Historically, home teams won around 46 to 48 percent of Premier League fixtures across the competition’s early decades, with away teams winning closer to 26 to 28 percent. Following the pandemic seasons played without supporters in 2019-20 and 2020-21 – when the home-win rate dropped sharply – the figure has settled at approximately 44 to 45 percent for home victories across more recent seasons, according to data tracked by BBC Sport. The crowd atmosphere, pitch familiarity, and reduced travel demands still produce a measurable edge: home teams collect roughly 1.6 to 1.8 points per game on average, versus around 1.1 to 1.2 points per game away.
Which teams were relegated from the Premier League in 2024-25?
The three clubs relegated at the end of the 2024-25 season were Southampton, Ipswich Town, and Leicester City. Southampton’s campaign was historically poor: 12 points from 38 games, with home and away records that both ranked among the weakest seen in the modern Premier League era. Ipswich Town, promoted from the Championship the previous season, struggled to adapt to top-flight intensity and collected 22 points. Leicester City, also newly promoted, could not sustain the form needed to escape the bottom three despite a handful of promising results mid-season, finishing on 27 points. All three clubs returned to the Championship for the 2025-26 season.
How do you compare Premier League results across different seasons?
The most straightforward method is to compare final points totals and home/away records side by side using season-by-season Wikipedia articles or the Premier League’s own historical stats section at premierleague.com. Both sources present W-D-L records, goals scored, and goals conceded in home and away columns for every completed season. For deeper statistical analysis, Fbref.com (run by Sports Reference) publishes expected goals, form ratings, and advanced passing data filtered by home or away context, going back to the mid-2010s. For a current-season archive on this site, the 2024-25 Premier League results archive collects all 380 scorelines for the completed campaign in a single readable format, organised by gameweek.
What is the worst away record ever in the Premier League?
Several clubs promoted from the Championship have produced near-zero away records in their first top-flight season, collecting one or two points across an entire 19-match road schedule. Derby County’s 2007-08 season ended with just 11 points from 38 games – the lowest total in Premier League history according to the Wikipedia article on that Derby County season – and included only one away draw from 19 away matches. Southampton’s 2024-25 away record of W1 D2 L16 was among the weakest in the modern era and contributed directly to their historically low 12-point final tally for the season.
Sources
- Premier League official tables and results – premierleague.com/tables
- Wikipedia – Premier League – en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Premier_League
- Wikipedia – 2024-25 Premier League season – en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024-25_Premier_League_season
- Wikipedia – Arsenal F.C. in the 2003-04 FA Premier League season – en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arsenal_2003-04
- Wikipedia – 2007-08 Derby County F.C. season – en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007-08_Derby_County
- BBC Sport – Premier League – bbc.com/sport/football/premier-league
- The Guardian – Premier League – theguardian.com/football/premierleague
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