SK Rapid Wien welcome Red Bull Salzburg to the Allianz Stadion on Sunday afternoon, 26 April 2026, in the Austrian Bundesliga championship round, with both sides still chasing serious end-of-season pay-off. Rapid sit fourth in the table on 24 points, still trying to turn a decent campaign into something more tangible, while Salzburg are second on 28 and remain in the title picture. At this stage of the season, every point matters. For Rapid, it’s about holding their position and proving they can mix it with the best in the group. For Salzburg, it’s about keeping pressure on the top end and avoiding any slip that could hand momentum elsewhere.
There’s a bit of recent history to lean on too. These two have already traded blows twice in this championship phase, and Rapid have come out on top both times, winning 1-0 away on 15 March and then 1-0 at home on 8 March. That’s a proper little edge for Johannes Thorup’s side, even if the broader picture still favours Salzburg on quality, depth and league position. Daniel Beichler’s team have the better attacking numbers over the season and the stronger away record. The question is whether they can finally crack a Rapid side that’s been stubborn in this matchup and awkward to handle on their own ground.
This one feels like it should have goals in it. Rapid have been leaking chances at the wrong end and Salzburg have been scoring freely enough to drag games into open territory. Yet the form line isn’t identical on either side. Rapid arrive with frustration in their system after a home defeat to Hartberg, while Salzburg come in on the back of a convincing win over Austria Wien. That contrast matters. So does the fact that both teams have shown a habit of finding the net, but neither has looked remotely watertight.
SK Rapid Wien Form & Analysis
Rapid’s recent run has been messy rather than disastrous. They beat LASK 4-2 at home on 22 March, and for a night it looked like they’d found a proper attacking groove. Since then, though, they’ve gone four games without a win. They drew 1-1 away at Austria Wien, then 2-2 away to Hartberg, and then went down 0-2 at home to Sturm Graz and 0-2 again at home to Hartberg. That last defeat stung. At home, with a chance to put Salzburg under real pressure in the standings, they produced plenty of shots but nothing like enough cutting edge.
The loss to Hartberg on 22 April was a strange one on the numbers. Rapid had 14 shots to Hartberg’s four, hit the target three times, and generated 2.06 xG. That should normally be enough to win a match. It wasn’t. They missed a penalty through Bendegúz Bolla, and once Hartberg had their goals through Jurgen Heil and Elias Havel, Rapid were left chasing shadows despite all that territory and pressure. That’s the problem in a nutshell. They can look lively, even dominant for stretches, without turning it into a result. Three goals in their last four league games is not the sort of return that frightens anybody.
Their home record tells the same story. Rapid’s league form at their ground stands at 6 wins, 2 draws and 6 defeats, with 18 goals scored and 18 conceded. Solid, but far from intimidating. They’ve been much more comfortable when games open up, as shown by the 4-2 win over LASK, yet they’ve also been vulnerable when forced to defend their box for long spells. That balance is fragile. You’d expect them to create chances against Salzburg. You’d also expect them to give Salzburg chances back. That’s been the pattern for most of the season, and nothing in the last few weeks has really changed it.
Red Bull Salzburg Form & Analysis
Salzburg’s form has been more convincing, even if it’s still had the odd wobble. They lost 2-3 at home to LASK on 10 April, and that result showed they’re not immune to being dragged into a scrap. But they’ve responded well. A 2-1 away win at Hartberg was followed by a 1-1 draw at Sturm Graz, then they beat Austria Wien 3-1 at home on 22 April before backing it up with a 3-1 win away in Vienna three days later. That’s a decent sequence. Two wins in a row, three goals scored in each of the last two, and a clear sense that they’re rediscovering their rhythm.
The Salzburg attack is the obvious danger. They’ve scored 53 league goals overall, which is comfortably better than Rapid’s 34, and their away record is strong enough to carry real weight here: 7 wins, 5 draws and only 2 defeats, with 26 goals scored and 15 conceded. That’s the mark of a team that usually travels well and doesn’t blink easily. In the 3-1 win over Austria Wien on 22 April, they were efficient and quick to strike, with Yorbe Vertessen, Jannik Schuster and Reinhold Ranftl all on the scoresheet before an own goal wrapped things up. They didn’t need to dominate every phase. They just needed to punish errors. That’s a dangerous habit.
Still, Salzburg aren’t flawless at the back. Their league total of 34 goals conceded is the same as Rapid’s, which tells you they’re not immune to giving opponents a route into the game. They’ve gone eight matches without a clean sheet in all competitions from this stretch of data, and that leaves the door open for Rapid to nick one. The wider away profile is strong, but not pristine. They can be pressed into mistakes, and if Rapid get on the front foot early, Salzburg’s back line will have to deal with a fair bit of noise. That said, Thorup’s side haven’t exactly been ruthless enough to make that a certainty.
Head-to-Head
Rapid’s recent hold over this fixture is real, even if it’s only a small sample. They’ve beaten Salzburg 1-0 twice already this season, once away in mid-March and once at home earlier that month. That’s a clean, simple message: Salzburg have had the better overall numbers, but Rapid have found a way to make this matchup awkward and narrow.
The broader pattern still leans towards competitive, close games. Salzburg did beat Rapid 2-1 at home in October 2025 and thumped them 4-2 in May 2025, but Rapid have also taken wins at home in recent seasons. This one rarely turns into a stroll for either side. One side scores, the other usually follows. That’s the shape of it.
We Predict: Both Teams To Score
Both Teams To Score at 8/13 looks the strongest angle here. It isn’t a glamorous price, but it fits the game neatly. Salzburg are scoring regularly, away from home as well as in Vienna, while Rapid have been open enough at the back to give opponents a route in. Even their last home match against Hartberg produced a high shot count and plenty of box entries, which tells you they’ll create chances again. The issue is stopping Salzburg creating their own. That’s where this gets hard for Rapid.
The 1-1 correct score feels the right call. Rapid have already shown they can frustrate Salzburg, and their home record suggests they’re good enough to nick something if they stay compact and don’t fold after the first setback. Salzburg should still find a goal. Probably more than one chance. But Rapid have a habit of making this fixture awkward, and the recent head-to-head results point toward another tight night rather than a clean away win. If you wanted a livelier alternative, Salzburg over 0.5 team goals is hard to ignore, though BTTS remains the better play.