FK Spartak Varna host Slavia Sofia in the First Professional League Relegation Round on Sunday afternoon, 10 May 2026, with both sides still needing points to steady their footing in the post-split battle. This is the sort of fixture that can swing mood as much as mathematics. Spartak are trying to stop the slide and turn a scrappy run into something more stable, while Slavia arrive with a little more momentum and a chance to push themselves clear of any lingering anxiety.
The table context matters, even without exact standings to lean on. In a relegation round, every draw has a price and every win feels like six points. Spartak’s recent habit of dropping into tight, low-margin games leaves them under pressure at home, where they’d love to find a bit of control. Slavia, by contrast, have just beaten FK Septemvri Sofia and look the more settled side going into the trip to Varna. There’s also a recent meeting to remember: Slavia smashed Spartak 4-0 in Sofia on 6 March. That won’t be far from the home dressing room’s mind.
FK Spartak Varna Form & Analysis
Spartak’s last few weeks have been all about frustration. They opened May with a 1-1 home draw against FK Dobrudzha Dobrich, a result that at least stopped the rot, but it came after a narrow 2-1 defeat away to Botev Vratsa on 2 May and a 2-1 home loss to Beroe Stara Zagora on 24 April. Before that, they held FK Septemvri Sofia 0-0 away, beat FK Dobrudzha Dobrich 1-0 at home, then took a heavy 5-0 beating at Botev Plovdiv. That’s not the profile of a side in command. It’s a team living on moments, and too often losing the bigger picture.
The shape of those results tells you plenty. Spartak can keep things respectable when the game is slow and compact, but when they’re forced to chase, they’re vulnerable. Their most recent home outing against Dobrudzha was a case in point: they scored through Xandy on 33 minutes, only to concede a late leveller in the 90+6th minute through Aykut Ramadan. That’s a hard one to swallow. It also extends a worrying run of four matches without a win. They’ve been hard to trust for a while now.
Home form is the first thing they need to improve. The numbers available from this season’s home benchmark are modest, and the performances match that. Spartak aren’t tearing games open at their own ground, and their edge is usually more about staying in the contest than taking control of it. The bigger issue is the defensive side. They’ve gone nine straight head-to-head meetings without a clean sheet against Slavia, and even in the broader run of recent league matches, they keep allowing opponents enough chances to hurt them. That won’t do here. Not against a side that’s just shown it can nick goals and manage ugly passages too.
Slavia Sofia Form & Analysis
Slavia come into this with a better feel about them. Their most recent game was a 2-1 home win over FK Septemvri Sofia on 6 May, a result shaped by a strong start and plenty of nerve after a red card. Lazar Marin scored early, Boris Todorov made it 2-0 after the break, and Dominik Ivkić finished the job late on. That’s the sort of win that matters in a relegation round. It wasn’t clean, and it wasn’t calm, but it was a proper three points. Before that, they were thumped 3-0 away at Beroe Stara Zagora, so there’s still a wobble in the mix. Still, they bounced back when it counted.
Go back a little further and Slavia’s pattern is pretty clear. They drew 1-1 at home to Botev Vratsa on 26 April, drew 0-0 away at PFK Montana 1921 on 16 April, lost 2-1 at home to FK Septemvri Sofia on 10 April, and beat Cherno More Varna 3-1 away on 5 April. That’s a mixed bag, yes, but it includes an away win and a couple of away draws, which is the point here. They’ve shown they can travel. They’ve also shown they can get goals away from home when the game opens up.
That matters at Spartak, because Slavia don’t need to dominate to hurt them. Ratko Dostanić’s side have enough recent evidence to suggest they can score first and manage spells without the ball. They’ve also got a strong psychological edge from March’s 4-0 win over Spartak, when they were simply better in every department. On the road, they’ve not been flawless, but they’ve been competitive, and that’s all this fixture asks of them. If they keep the game contained, they’ll fancy their chances of nicking another result.
Head-to-Head
Slavia have owned this matchup for a while. The last six competitive meetings have brought four Slavia wins and two draws, with Spartak still waiting to beat them in that sequence. The most recent was the one-way traffic in March, a 4-0 Slavia home win, and that followed a 1-1 draw in Varna back in September 2025.
There’s a clear pattern here. Spartak haven’t kept a clean sheet against Slavia in nine straight head-to-head meetings, and four of the last five meetings have gone over 2.5 goals. That’s the sort of record that tells you one side usually finds a way through. Slavia usually do.
We Predict: Double Chance X2
Double Chance X2 at 8/13 looks the right call here. If you want to dig a bit deeper here, the football tips hub pulls together our main football tips hub with singles, goals picks and combo angles in one place. Slavia arrive with the better recent win, the stronger head-to-head record, and enough away competence to avoid defeat. Spartak are struggling to turn home games into control, and their last four matches without a win tell the story plainly enough. They’re not collapsing every week, but they’re not convincing either. That’s a bad place to be when Slavia have already put four past them this season.
The 1-2 correct score fits the shape of this one. Spartak should have a spell, especially at home, and their recent habit of finding one goal means they’re not likely to be blanked without a fight. But Slavia have the cleaner attacking edge and the better habit of getting the first punch in. If you want a slightly bolder route, Slavia to win looks perfectly live too. Still, the safer angle is X2.