Estoril Praia host Benfica at the Estádio António Coimbra da Mota on Saturday evening, 16 May 2026, in a Liga Portugal Betclic meeting that carries very different pressures for the two clubs. Estoril are trying to finish a mixed season with some dignity and stability, while Benfica arrive with a title race already gone and a top-three finish secure, but with pride, momentum and the need to close out the campaign properly still on the line. There’s a gulf in the table, and it’s hard to ignore.
Benfica sit third on 77 points and are still unbeaten in the league this season, which is an outrageous return even if it hasn’t been enough to take them all the way. Estoril are ninth on 39 points, a comfortable mid-table position, but their season has been far bumpier. They’ve spent the last few weeks chasing a first win in over a month, and that matters here. When a side like Benfica come calling, your recent form is no longer a detail. It’s the story.
This fixture also has a clear shape to it. Benfica have owned this matchup for long stretches, and the broader picture points the same way: the visitors are far stronger, far cleaner in both boxes, and far better equipped to turn possession into chances. Estoril have enough about them to land a punch — they’ve scored freely at home at times — but keeping Benfica quiet for 90 minutes is a different matter entirely.
Estoril Praia Form & Analysis
Estoril’s latest run reads like a team stuck in the middle. They drew 1-1 away at FC Alverca on 10 May, and that was enough to stretch their unbeaten run to two, but it still felt like another reminder that they’re finding it hard to turn decent moments into wins. Before that, they had also drawn 1-1 away to Sporting Braga, which is a respectable result on paper. The problem is what came before it. A 0-1 home loss to Famalicão, a 1-0 defeat at Moreirense, a 3-1 loss at home to FC Porto and a 3-2 defeat away to FC Arouca tell a less forgiving story. They’ve been competitive, yes. They’ve also been loose.
That’s the theme with Estoril. They can score. They usually do. But they don’t shut games down nearly often enough. They’ve gone seven matches without a win and, even in the recent unbeaten pair, they only managed to take a point from each. Their last victory came all the way back on 15 March away to CD Nacional. That’s a long time ago now. Long enough for the pressure to become part of the background. You can feel it in the results.
At home, Estoril have been better than their overall table position might suggest, with six wins, five draws and five defeats from their league games at this ground. They’ve scored 28 and conceded 23 at home, so there’s enough attacking life there to trouble opponents, but not enough control to trust them fully. Ian Cathro’s side have a habit of making matches open, which can be fun when they’re on the front foot and dangerous when they’re not. Against Benfica, that looseness is a problem. A big one.
Benfica Form & Analysis
Benfica arrived at this game off a 2-2 draw at home to Sporting Braga on 11 May, a result that felt slightly frustrating given the control they enjoyed. They put up 24 shots, had eight on target and created three big chances, yet still needed a late Vangelis Pavlidis penalty to avoid defeat. That’s been the recent tone for José Mourinho’s side: strong enough to dominate, but not always ruthless enough to kill teams off early. Still, unbeaten is unbeaten. You don’t stumble into 22 wins and 11 draws. Not in any league. Not without serious quality.
Before that Braga draw, Benfica had been putting together a proper run. They drew 2-2 at Famalicão, beat Moreirense 4-1 at home, won 2-1 away at Sporting CP and beat CD Nacional 2-0 at home. Earlier in April they also drew 1-1 away to Casa Pia. That’s a sequence with almost everything you’d want from a contender: goals, control, and a few testing away trips handled with authority. Their only defeat in all competitions came back in February in Europe, away to Real Madrid. Since then, they’ve gone 10 league and cup matches without losing. That won’t bother them much on Saturday. It should bother Estoril.
The away record is especially strong. Benfica are third in the league’s away table with 11 wins and five draws from 16 matches, and they’re still unbeaten on the road. They’ve scored 30 away goals and conceded just 11, which is the sort of balance that travels well. Mourinho’s teams are usually built on organisation first, and that’s exactly what this away record reflects. They don’t need chaos. They’re comfortable keeping things measured, then stepping up when the space appears. When they’re in rhythm, they make opponents run back towards their own box for long stretches. Estoril won’t love that.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has leaned Benfica’s way for some time. They beat Estoril 3-1 in Lisbon on 3 January 2026, won 2-1 at Estoril in May 2025, and had already put together a 3-0 win at home in December 2024 and another 3-1 success in March 2024. There was that wild Taça da Liga meeting in January 2024, which Estoril somehow won 6-5, but that feels like the exception that proves the rule. In the league, Benfica have been far more reliable.
There’s also a pattern in the goals. These meetings have often opened up, and Estoril haven’t kept a clean sheet against Benfica in a long time. If you’re looking for one simple takeaway, it’s this: Benfica usually find a way through, and Estoril usually have to chase. That’s rarely a good place to be against a side of this quality.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 2/5 for this one, and that price reflects the obvious shape of the game. Benfica have been involved in plenty of high-scoring league matches, they’ve scored at least twice in several recent outings, and Estoril’s home games have not been the sort you expect to finish 0-0 or 1-0 very often. There’s enough in both attack and defence — or the lack of it on Estoril’s side — to point towards a game with at least three goals.
The cleanest read is a Benfica win with Estoril nicking one. A 1-2 scoreline fits the numbers and the eye test. Benfica’s away control, Estoril’s habit of conceding first, and the visitors’ stronger chance creation all point that way. If you wanted a more aggressive angle, Benfica to win and over 1.5 goals in the match would also be a natural route. But the safer call is the totals market. This should have goals in it.