Arsenal host Burnley at the Emirates on Monday evening, 18 May 2026, with the Premier League title picture still alive for Mikel Arteta’s side and survival worries hanging over Michael Jackson’s men. For Arsenal, this is about holding nerve at the summit and taking another step toward the trophy. For Burnley, it’s much more basic than that: every point matters as they battle to climb away from the bottom end of the table. There’s a huge gap in quality, form and expectation. That’s no great surprise.
Arsenal have spent most of the season looking like champions. They sit top with 79 points from 36 matches, while Burnley are 19th on 21. The numbers are stark, but the context matters too. Arsenal have handled the business end properly, putting together a run that has kept them unbeaten in five before this fixture, including a sharp 1-0 win at West Ham United on 10 May and a controlled 1-0 home victory over Atlético Madrid in the Champions League a few days earlier. Burnley arrive on the back of a 2-2 draw with Aston Villa, which was at least a lift after a long, bruising stretch of defeats. They need something from this, but away to Arsenal? That’s a difficult ask.
Arsenal Form & Analysis
Arsenal’s recent run has been what title-winning form usually looks like: steady, disciplined and annoyingly hard to shake. They went to Manchester City on 19 April and lost 2-1, which felt like a setback at the time. Since then, though, they’ve barely put a foot wrong. Newcastle United were edged 1-0 at the Emirates on 25 April, Atlético Madrid were held to a 1-1 draw away in Europe on 29 April, then beaten 1-0 at home on 5 May, and Fulham were swept aside 3-0 on 2 May in another convincing league win. The latest result, that 1-0 success at West Ham, was slightly tighter and slightly messier, but it still did the job. That’s the point. Arsenal don’t need to be dazzling every week. They just keep collecting points.
Their home record explains why they’re sitting top. At the Emirates, Arsenal have taken 44 points from 18 games, with 14 wins, two draws and only two defeats. They’ve scored 40 and conceded just 11 at home, which is a proper foundation. That’s not a side leaving the door open for long spells. It’s a team that usually controls territory, controls chances and suffocates the life out of opponents. The clean-sheet count is a major clue. So is the fact that they’ve scored first in five straight league games in this fixture context, and that pattern matters when they’re in front of their own crowd. Get ahead and they tend to stay ahead.
There are still a couple of things to watch. Arsenal haven’t exactly been piling up explosive scorelines in the league lately, and their home matches can sometimes turn into attritional affairs once they’ve got the lead. Yet that’s more of a stylistic note than a warning sign. The xG line from the West Ham win — 1.18 to 1.16 — was modest, but it also reflected a game Arsenal managed well rather than one they chased recklessly. Against a Burnley side that’s allowed plenty at the back, Arteta’s team should have enough control to create a steady stream of chances without needing to go crazy. They’ve got the platform. They’ve got the habit. And they’re not in the mood to slip now.
Burnley Form & Analysis
Burnley’s story has been the opposite: a long, draining slide that’s left them with very little margin left. Their last six league matches read like a side stuck in mud. They drew 2-2 at home to Aston Villa on 10 May, which at least ended a run of defeats, but before that they’d gone down 3-1 at Leeds United, 0-1 at home to Manchester City, 4-1 at Nottingham Forest, 0-2 at home to Brighton, and 3-1 at Fulham. That’s five defeats in six, and even the draw with Villa didn’t feel like a clean reset. It was frantic, open and full of warning signs. Burnley scored twice, yes, but they also conceded twice at home and were living dangerously throughout.
The away record is grim. Burnley have taken just nine points from 18 away games, with only two wins, three draws and 13 defeats. They’ve scored 20 and conceded 45 on the road, which tells you pretty much everything you need to know. They’re not travelling well and they haven’t been travelling well for a while. The fact they’ve lost so many away matches by more than one goal shows how often they’re chasing games, and that usually ends badly against the better teams. You don’t want to be going to the Emirates with that sort of record. You really don’t.
There is at least some attacking life in them, though. Burnley have scored in a few of their recent matches, and the 2-2 with Villa showed they can still create chances when the game opens up. Their xG in that match was 1.79, which was respectable enough, and they produced six shots on target. The problem is that they gave up just as much the other way, and that’s been the recurring theme. They’ve gone 11 league matches without a win, and six without a clean sheet. At this level, that’s a dangerous combination. Can they nick one at Arsenal? Of course. But can they stay in the contest for 90 minutes if the hosts start moving the ball quickly? That’s the bigger question.
Head-to-Head
Arsenal have had Burnley’s number for years, and the recent meetings are one-way traffic. The Gunners beat Burnley 2-0 at Turf Moor in November 2025, after a 5-0 rout there in February 2024 and a 3-1 home win in November 2023. Go back a bit further and there were the odd awkward nights — the 0-0 at the Emirates in January 2022, Burnley’s 1-0 win in London in December 2020 — but that feels like another era now.
The broader pattern is simple enough: Arsenal usually win this fixture, and Burnley usually struggle to lay a glove on them. Arsenal have six straight matches without losing to Burnley in this league series, and Burnley have failed to keep a clean sheet in three of those meetings. That sort of record matters when one team is chasing the title and the other is trying to stop the bleeding.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 6/4 here, and that price looks fair for a game where the gap in class is huge but the match script still points to chances at both ends. Arsenal should have enough control to win, but Burnley aren’t coming to London just to sit in a shell. They’ve scored in recent defeats, they found the net twice against Aston Villa, and Arsenal’s own attacking approach can leave space if the game stretches even a little.
The cleanest reading is a 3-1 Arsenal win. That fits the home side’s superior record, Burnley’s fragile away numbers and the chance of the visitors grabbing one late on once Arsenal have started to manage the game. If you want a slightly safer angle, Arsenal to win and both teams to score would be the obvious alternative — but BTTS alone offers the better price and the better balance here.