Manchester United host Liverpool at Old Trafford on Sunday evening, 3 May 2026, in a Premier League meeting that carries real weight at the top end of the table. United are third on 61 points, Liverpool are just behind in fourth on 58, so this isn’t just a rivalry game — it’s a direct scrap for position, momentum and a cleaner run into the closing weeks of the season. Win here and either side can open breathing room. Lose, and the pressure rises fast.
For Manchester United, Michael Carrick’s side have spent much of the campaign looking like a team with a high ceiling and a few stubborn flaws. They’re strong at home, dangerous going forward and sitting on a record that keeps them firmly in the Champions League picture. Liverpool, under Arne Slot, arrive only three points back and with their own ambitions intact, but their away record has been less convincing than their overall standing suggests. They’ve got enough firepower to hurt anyone. The question is whether they can keep the back door shut.
The narrative around this one is clear enough. United have the better home numbers, Liverpool have the slightly worse away profile, and both teams have been involved in plenty of open games. That’s usually a decent recipe for goals, tension and a scoreline that stays alive deep into the second half. Old Trafford won’t exactly be a quiet place. Neither side needs telling what’s at stake.
Manchester United Form & Analysis
Manchester United come into this off the back of a 2-1 home win over Brentford on 27 April, and it was the kind of result that felt important beyond the three points. They took control early through Casemiro, doubled the lead via Benjamin Šeško before half-time, and even after Brentford pulled one back late on, United held firm enough to close it out. It wasn’t a perfect performance — Brentford had their moments and the shot count was close enough to keep things honest — but it was another sign that United can do the business at home when they get on the front foot.
Look back a little further and the pattern is fairly clear. They beat Chelsea 1-0 away on 18 April, which was a proper away-day effort, then stumbled at home to Leeds United in a 2-1 defeat on 13 April. Before that, they drew 2-2 at Bournemouth, beat Aston Villa 3-1 at Old Trafford and lost 2-1 away to Newcastle. That’s not the run of a flawless side, but it is the run of a team that generally finds ways to create chances and stay in games. They’ve scored in five of their last six league matches, and at home they’ve been especially productive.
United’s home record is one of the clearest reasons they’re still sitting third. They’ve taken 36 points from 17 home league matches, with 11 wins, three draws and only three defeats. They’ve scored 33 and conceded 20 at Old Trafford, which is a decent balance rather than a dominant one. That’s the key point. They’re not shutting teams out every week, but they are usually good for goals. There’s also a familiar trend here: United tend to get on the scoresheet first. They’ve done that in four of their last five and, at home, they carry enough tempo and attacking threat to force the issue.
The flip side is obvious enough. This isn’t a side that locks games down. Leeds found a way through, Bournemouth scored twice, Newcastle won at St James’ Park and even Brentford were threatening late on. United’s defence is good enough to survive, not good enough to feel serene. That matters against Liverpool, because Slot’s team rarely need many invitations.
Liverpool Form & Analysis
Liverpool’s latest result was a 3-1 home win over Crystal Palace on 25 April, and it was a match that told two stories at once. They won, which is the main thing, but they were outshot, outworked in several phases and needed a late Florian Wirtz goal in added time to put a nicer gloss on it. Alexander Isak and Andy Robertson both scored in the first half, and Liverpool always looked capable of finding moments going forward. Still, the underlying numbers from that game were a bit messy, and Palace certainly had enough chances to make life uncomfortable.
Before that, Liverpool beat Everton 2-1 away from home on 19 April, which was a more satisfying result from a derby perspective and a useful reminder that they can still dig out road wins when needed. But the run around it has been uneven. They lost 2-0 at home to Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League on 14 April, went down 2-0 away in the first leg on 8 April, and were hammered 4-0 by Manchester City in the FA Cup on 4 April. That’s a mixed batch, to put it mildly. The league form is decent enough, but the bigger picture says this team can be exposed when the intensity rises and the game becomes a fight.
Their away record gives that concern a bit more weight. Liverpool have won seven, drawn three and lost seven league matches on the road, scoring 25 and conceding 26. That’s not disastrous, but it’s hardly the mark of a side that travels with authority. Sixth in the away table tells the story. They can score away from home, and they usually carry enough quality to get chances, but they’ve also been too open. One clean sheet in the last few weeks would have been nice. They’re still waiting for that kind of security to become a habit.
That said, Liverpool’s attacking ceiling is still high enough to worry anyone. They’ve scored in their recent league wins, and the presence of players like Isak, Wirtz and Robertson in the goal return against Palace is a reminder that they don’t rely on one route to goal. If they can turn this into a fast, stretched game, they’ll fancy their chances. If it becomes a more structured Old Trafford contest, their away wobbles come into play. Can they keep it tight for 90 minutes? That’s the real question.
Head-to-Head
This fixture usually brings noise, drama and a few goals. The most recent meeting at Liverpool in October 2025 ended 2-1 to Manchester United, which was a notable away win for Carrick’s side and one that should give them confidence heading into this one. Before that, the teams shared a 2-2 draw at Anfield in January 2025, while Liverpool won 3-0 at Old Trafford in September 2024. There was also a 2-2 draw at Old Trafford in April 2024 and that wild 4-3 FA Cup tie at the same ground in March 2024. These games don’t tend to drift quietly to a conclusion.
The longer pattern is hard to ignore. There have been goals, plenty of them, and both teams have generally found a way to land punches. Liverpool’s huge 7-0 win in March 2023 still sits in the background, but that result has been balanced out by tighter, more competitive meetings since then. Old Trafford has often produced a proper contest between these two. No one should expect a cagey afternoon.
We Predict: Double Chance 1X
Double Chance 1X at 2/5 looks the right call here. If you want to dig a bit deeper here, the hedge betting guide breaks down hedge betting if you want to understand how traders manage exposure later in the cycle. United’s home record is strong, they’ve taken 36 points from 17 league games at Old Trafford, and they’ve been tougher to beat there than Liverpool have been away from home. Add in the fact that Liverpool have already dropped seven away league matches and you’ve got a decent base for backing the hosts not to lose.
The goal angle leans the same way. United’s home matches have produced 33 goals for and 20 against, Liverpool’s away games have seen 25 scored and 26 conceded, and the head-to-head has repeatedly delivered open football. A 2-1 Manchester United win feels the cleanest scoreline from here. If you want a slightly bigger price, Both Teams to Score is the natural alternative, but 1X is the safer play and it fits the shape of the game.