Bournemouth host Crystal Palace at the Vitality Stadium on Sunday 3 May 2026 in a Premier League meeting that matters at both ends of the table for different reasons. Andoni Iraola’s side are still chasing a strong finish after a season that has kept them in the upper half of the division, while Oliver Glasner’s Palace arrive with the comfort of mid-table security but also the distraction and momentum of a European run that’s come to define their spring.
For Bournemouth, seventh place and 49 points means there’s still a real reward to chase. A place in the European conversation is there for the taking, but only if they keep collecting results. Palace sit 13th on 43 points, which sounds fairly routine until you remember they’ve been splitting their energy between the league and the Conference League knockout rounds. That changes the shape of this game. One side is trying to keep pace at home. The other is trying to avoid a drop in intensity after a huge continental win away to Shakhtar Donetsk on 30 April.
The meeting also carries a familiar edge. These two have produced some tight, awkward games in recent years, with Bournemouth unbeaten in the last five league clashes between them and three of the last four finishing level. That doesn’t guarantee anything on Sunday. It does tell you Palace won’t be overawed, and Bournemouth won’t be allowed to treat this like a straightforward home banker. It rarely is against Palace.
Bournemouth Form & Analysis
Bournemouth’s recent form reads like the story of a side that’s hard to beat and increasingly hard to keep quiet. They came through a 0-0 draw at Burnley on 14 March, then repeated the scoreline at home to Brentford on 3 March before finding themselves held again in a lively 2-2 draw with Manchester United at the Vitality Stadium on 20 March. None of that was spectacular, but it showed a team refusing to unravel. Then came the push. They held Leeds United 2-2 at home on 22 April after edging Newcastle United 2-1 away on 18 April and beating Arsenal 2-1 at the Emirates on 11 April. That’s a proper run. Not pretty all the time, but proper.
The numbers at home tell a straightforward story. Bournemouth have taken 27 points from 18 league matches at the Vitality, with six wins, nine draws and only two defeats. They’ve scored 25 and conceded 19 there, which gives them a decent platform but also hints at a few too many draws for a side sitting seventh. They don’t collapse. They don’t really coast either. This is a team that tends to stay in games right to the end, and the late equaliser against Leeds — Sean Longstaff’s goal coming in stoppage time after VAR had already ruled out a potential winner — was a neat example of that stubbornness.
What stands out most is the balance. Bournemouth have scored 52 league goals and conceded 52, a neat reflection of a side that can hurt opponents but isn’t airtight at the back. At home, they’ve been more controlled than chaotic, which is why they’ve lost only twice in front of their own fans. Mind you, draws have become a habit. Four of their last six league games have ended level, and while the unbeaten run is impressive — 15 matches without defeat since losing to Arsenal in early January — they’ll know Palace are a step up from a comfortable mid-table visitor. That said, Iraola’s side have been creating enough and finishing enough to trust them to score again here.
Crystal Palace Form & Analysis
Palace arrive with a very different rhythm. Glasner’s side have had to juggle league points with continental ambition, and the result is a form line that’s less tidy than Bournemouth’s but more volatile in a way that can be dangerous. They lost 3-1 away to Liverpool on 25 April, after a 0-0 home draw with West Ham on 20 April and a 2-1 defeat at Fiorentina on 16 April in the Conference League. Before that, though, they beat Newcastle United 2-1 at home on 12 April and produced a convincing 3-0 win over Fiorentina at Selhurst Park on 9 April. Then came the sharpest response of all: a 3-1 win at Shakhtar Donetsk on 30 April, sealed by goals from Ismaïla Sarr, Daichi Kamada and Jørgen Strand Larsen.
That European performance mattered. Palace were strong in key moments, ruthless when it counted and efficient enough to get through a difficult away tie. But the Premier League form around it has been uneven. They’ve won 11 league games, drawn 10 and lost 12, leaving them with 43 points and a fairly modest 36 goals scored against 39 conceded. That’s not the profile of a side that dominates matches for long spells. It’s more a team that can suddenly spring to life, especially when the front line gets space. The issue is whether they can keep that same sharpness after a Europa-style Thursday night in eastern Europe. That won’t be easy.
Away from home, Palace have actually been decent by mid-table standards. Seven wins, two draws and seven defeats from 16 league trips is a solid return, with 20 goals scored and 20 conceded. They’ve not been passive travellers. Far from it. The flip side is that they’re neither particularly watertight nor consistently clinical on the road, which leaves them vulnerable against a Bournemouth side that’s been awkward to beat at home. Palace have the tools to score — the recent away win at Shakhtar and the three goals at home to Fiorentina show that plainly — but the defensive stability isn’t always there, especially when the game opens up. If this turns into a chase, they’re in the contest. If it becomes a slow tactical squeeze, Bournemouth should fancy their chances more.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has quietly developed into a pattern game. The most recent meeting ended 3-3 at Selhurst Park on 18 October 2025, a result that summed up the way both teams can swing between control and chaos in the same afternoon. Before that, though, the draw trend was already clear: 0-0 at Palace in April 2025, 0-0 at Bournemouth on Boxing Day 2024, and Bournemouth edging it 1-0 in April 2024. Go back a little further and Bournemouth won 2-0 at Palace in December 2023, while Palace beat them 2-0 in May 2023 and again in December 2022.
The broader picture is simple enough. Bournemouth are unbeaten in the last five league meetings with Palace, and a lot of those games have been tight, low-margin affairs. Three of the last four ended level. Still, the 3-3 from October is the one that lingers, because it showed there’s no guarantee this becomes a cagey stalemate again. Both sides can land punches. Both sides can also leave gaps.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
We’re backing Both Teams To Score at 8/11 for this one. If you want to dig a bit deeper here, the betting guides hub pulls together all of our core football betting explainers so you can jump straight to the market or strategy you need. It’s a fair price for a match that has enough evidence on both sides: Bournemouth have found the net in games against Newcastle, Arsenal and Leeds in recent weeks, while Palace have scored three away at Shakhtar and two at home to Newcastle in the same stretch. The 3-3 in October still feels relevant too. These two know how to make this fixture messy.
The 2-1 Bournemouth correct score looks the best call, and it fits the shape of the game. Bournemouth’s home record is sturdy, Palace’s away record gives them a route into the contest, and both sides have just enough attacking threat to get on the board. But Bournemouth look a little steadier in the league and a touch more settled at home. If you want a livelier alternative, over 2.5 goals is live as well — Palace’s recent games have been leaning that way — but BTTS is the cleaner angle.