Inter welcome Parma to San Siro on Sunday evening, 3 May 2026, with the Serie A title race still very much alive at the top and the visitors trying to keep pushing towards the top half of the table. For Cristian Chivu’s side, this is a home stretch game they simply have to control. They sit first with 79 points, four clear in the win column, and every remaining fixture carries the weight of a title defence.
Parma arrive in 12th place on 42 points, which leaves them safe enough but still with something to chase. Carlos Cuesta’s team aren’t looking over their shoulder any more, yet they’re close enough to the European fringe that a strong run would still mean something. The issue is obvious: this is a brutal assignment away to the most productive attack in the division. Inter have scored 80 league goals already. Parma have shipped 40. That gap matters.
There’s also a familiar edge to this matchup. Inter beat Parma 2-0 in January, and they’ve had the better of this fixture for a while. Parma have usually found a way to make it competitive, though, and that’s why the totals market feels more alive than a simple home-win angle. The numbers point towards goals. Plenty of them.
Inter Form & Analysis
Inter come into this one on the back of a strange but dangerous little run. They were held 2-2 away at Torino on 26 April, and that result interrupted what had been a strong sequence of wins. Before that, they beat Como 3-2 in the Coppa Italia, put Cagliari away 3-0 at home, won a wild one 4-3 away to Como in Serie A, and dismantled Roma 5-2 at San Siro. Go back a little further and there was a 1-1 draw at Fiorentina too. That’s six matches, only one defeat all season since early March, and an attack that keeps finding different routes to goal.
The Torino draw summed Inter up pretty well. They weren’t quite as sharp as they’d been against Roma or Cagliari, but they still created enough to win it. Marcus Thuram got them moving early, Yann Bisseck added another, and they kept pushing even after Torino levelled. That’s the thing with this Inter side: even when they’re not at their smoothest, they still look capable of scoring two or three. Their league record says the same. 25 wins, 80 goals, just 31 conceded. That’s a serious title-winning profile.
At home, they’ve been even more convincing. Inter’s San Siro record reads 13 wins, two draws and only two losses, with 47 goals scored and 15 conceded. That’s not just dominant, it’s relentless. They score more than two and a half per home game on average, and they don’t often leave their own crowd hanging around in a tense, low-energy contest. The flaw? They do still give teams a route in. Fifteen home goals conceded is tidy rather than bulletproof. So if Parma do nick one, it won’t come as a complete shock. Still, Inter are the sort of side who can absorb that and keep going.
One trend is hard to ignore: Inter have gone over 2.5 goals in five straight league games of this kind of tempo, and their matches at home rarely stay quiet for long. They’ll fancy themselves to break Parma down early, then turn the screw after the break. That’s how they’ve been operating for much of the season. Efficient. Aggressive. Hard to live with.
Parma Form & Analysis
Parma arrive in decent nick, which matters a lot more than their league position suggests. They’ve won two and drawn two of their last four league matches, and the first thing to say is that they’ve shown a bit of grit. A 1-0 home win over Pisa on 25 April followed a narrow 1-0 success away at Udinese, and before that they held Napoli 1-1 at home and Lazio 1-1 in Rome. Those are good results. Not glamorous, but proper points. They’ve stopped the slide and made themselves awkward again.
That said, Parma’s recent form has been built on defensive discipline rather than firepower. They beat Pisa with a late Nesta Elphege goal in a match they weren’t exactly swarming over their opponents, and the xG against Pisa was messy enough at 1.65 to 1.71. Against Udinese, they got the job done with a slim margin and plenty of resistance. Against Napoli and Lazio, they were organised enough to hang in there. The problem is that this same approach doesn’t always travel well against the best sides, especially when the game opens up early. Inter are not Pisa. They’re not even close.
Parma’s away record is respectable: six wins, six draws and five defeats, with 12 goals scored and 18 conceded. That tells you they’re not a disaster on the road. They’ve taken points in enough difficult places to avoid being written off. But 12 away goals in 17 matches is thin stuff. You can usually get away with that when your defence is smothering everything. Against Inter, that bar rises sharply. Chivu’s side attack from all angles, and Parma’s away return of only 12 goals suggests they may spend long stretches in survival mode.
The positive for Cuesta is that Parma don’t look beaten before kick-off any more. They’ve gone four league matches unbeaten since their last loss to Cremonese in March, and that has given their season a steadier shape. Yet there’s a limit to how much confidence a couple of tight wins can buy. If Inter score first, Parma will have to open up. If they open up, this could get away from them. That’s the harsh reality.
Head-to-Head
Inter have had the upper hand in this fixture for a long time. They beat Parma 2-0 in Parma on 7 January 2026, and that followed a 3-1 home win in December 2024. Go back through the recent meetings and Inter have generally had the better of it, with the 2-2 draw at Parma in April 2025 standing out as one of the few times Parma have truly made them sweat.
There’s also a clear pattern worth keeping in mind: Inter haven’t lost to Parma in the recent record here, and Parma haven’t kept a clean sheet against them in any of those meetings. That fits the broader picture. Inter usually find a way through. Parma usually contribute something. It tends to pull this fixture towards goals rather than caution.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 1/2 for this one. If you want more detail on goal line betting, our goal line betting guide breaks down goal line betting with a better feel for how totals markets shift from match to match. It’s the cleanest angle on the board. Inter have gone over 2.5 in five straight matches across the league and cup, and their home games have a habit of turning into one-way traffic once they settle. Parma, meanwhile, have kept things tight lately but they’ve also been playing a much lower-risk game against opponents who don’t punish mistakes like Inter do.
The straight score call is 2-1 to Inter. That feels right. Inter should control the territory and create the better chances, but Parma have enough away nous to make a goal of their own plausible, especially if they can survive the first half-hour and keep the crowd waiting. Still, a 3-1 wouldn’t surprise anyone either. If you want a secondary angle, Inter to win and over 1.5 goals in the match looks a sensible companion bet, but the main play is the goals line. This one should open up.