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VfL Wolfsburg host Bayern Munich in the Bundesliga on Saturday evening, 9 May 2026, with the two clubs arriving at opposite ends of the table and in very different moods. Wolfsburg are fighting for survival from 16th place on 26 points, and every game now carries the weight of a cup final. Bayern, by contrast, are top with 83 points and have wrapped up another title charge in ruthless fashion. For Vincent Kompany’s side, this is about keeping standards high and finishing the league season with the same bite they’ve shown for most of it.
There’s also a familiar edge to this one. Bayern’s recent dominance of this fixture has been brutal, and Wolfsburg know they’ll need one of their sharper days just to stay in touch. That won’t be easy. The home side have been scrapping for results, while Bayern keep finding goals almost no matter the setting. Even with a Champions League semi-final in the legs, the visitors still look miles stronger.
The meeting comes at a point where the table tells a pretty simple story. Wolfsburg are trying to pull clear of the drop zone, and they need points, not sympathy. Bayern don’t need the title race pressure anymore, but they do need to avoid sloppiness and keep momentum. You’d expect the champions to dominate territory and chances. The only real question is whether Wolfsburg can turn this into a messy, uncomfortable night.
Wolfsburg’s recent run has had the feel of a side trying to hold the line with one hand tied behind its back. They opened this little stretch with a home defeat to Werder Bremen, then went to Bayer Leverkusen and were dragged into a wild 6-3 loss that exposed just how fragile things can get when the game opens up. After that came a home defeat to Eintracht Frankfurt. Not ideal. Not even close.
There has at least been a little resistance since then. The 2-1 away win at Union Berlin on 18 April offered a proper lift, with Wolfsburg showing enough fight to see out a tight game on the road. But the momentum didn’t really last. A goalless home draw with Borussia M'gladbach followed, then a 1-1 draw at Freiburg on 3 May, where Konstantinos Koulierakis put them ahead before Philipp Lienhart levelled late on. That point at Freiburg felt useful, even if the performance wasn’t dominant. Wolfsburg weren’t outplayed, but they still didn’t look like a side in control. Two draws and a win in their last three is better than the run before it, yet the overall picture remains shaky.
At home, the numbers are a concern. Wolfsburg’s league record at their ground is 2 wins, 4 draws and 10 defeats, with 21 scored and 31 conceded. That is relegation-form home output, plain and simple. They’ve only managed one goal a game on average at home and have been far too easy to get at. The wider season record, 42 scored and 67 conceded overall, tells the same story. They can score — especially when the game becomes stretched — but they can’t stop the bleeding for long enough. Their recent xG against Freiburg, 0.83 to 0.94, hints at a more even contest than the final table position suggests, though Wolfsburg still didn’t generate enough to feel genuinely threatening.
The flip side? They’ve at least shown they can hang around in games when the intensity is right. Three unbeaten now if you count the last three, and that matters when a relegation fight starts to squeeze. Still, against Bayern, that margin for error is tiny. Tiny. If they sit deep, they risk being pinned back. If they open up, Bayern can tear through them. That’s the trap.
Bayern’s recent results have been loud, chaotic and often ridiculous — which, for them, is usually a compliment. They were held 1-1 at home by Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League on 6 May, with Harry Kane rescuing a draw deep into stoppage time after Ousmane Dembélé had struck early. Before that came a 3-3 home draw with Heidenheim in the Bundesliga, the sort of result that would irritate most title challengers but barely causes a ripple when you’re top by a distance. It did, though, show there’s no guarantee of control even at the Allianz.
Look a little further back and the away form becomes even more frightening. Bayern won 4-3 at Mainz on 25 April in a thriller, then beat Leverkusen 2-0 in the DFB Pokal and thumped Stuttgart 4-2 in the league. Before the PSG home draw, they had travelled to Paris and lost 5-4 in a knockout tie that was wild enough to make even neutral fans blink. Goals everywhere. No shortage of drama. The pattern is obvious: Bayern are relentlessly productive, but they’ve been leaking far more than usual too. That’s why this game has a slightly different feel from the classic Bayern steamroller. They still score, but they aren’t locking doors the way they once did.
Away from home in the league, though, they’ve been immaculate. Thirteen wins and three draws from 16 away matches, with 53 goals scored and only 17 conceded, is elite stuff. They haven’t lost on the road in the Bundesliga all season. That matters a lot here. If you’re looking for a reason to trust the away win, start there and don’t overcomplicate it. Their overall league record — 26 wins, five draws and just one defeat — is the sort of dominance that makes the rest of the division look small. Bayern have also scored 116 league goals, which is absurd by normal standards and still intimidating even in a season where the defensive edge has dulled a touch.
Mind you, they don’t always cleanly shut games down. The recent run has brought a few too many open matches, and that keeps Wolfsburg’s hopes of nicking something alive for longer than the table suggests. But Bayern’s ability to keep churning out chances, even on a heavy schedule, is the real issue for the hosts. Vincent Kompany’s side don’t need a perfect performance to win this. They just need their usual attacking volume and a bit of composure at the back. That’s usually enough.
This fixture has been heavily one-sided for a long time, and the most recent meeting was a hammer blow for Wolfsburg. Bayern won 8-1 at home on 11 January 2026, a result that said everything about the gap between the sides when Bayern hit top gear. Before that, there was a 3-2 Bayern win in Munich in January 2025, a 3-2 away win for Bayern in Wolfsburg in August 2024, and a 2-0 Bayern victory in May 2024. Wolfsburg have simply struggled to keep pace.
The pattern goes beyond scorelines. Bayern have won seven of the last eight listed meetings and haven’t lost to Wolfsburg in the sequence provided. Wolfsburg also haven’t kept a clean sheet in any of those recent clashes, which is no surprise when Bayern are involved. There’s a familiar rhythm here: Bayern score first, Bayern control the game, and Wolfsburg spend too much of the afternoon chasing shadows. Can that change now? It’ll need a major shift in mentality, not just tactics.
We’re backing Away Win at 4/6 for this clash. If you want a few more angles around correct score tips, our correct score tips page pulls together correct score tips if you want a higher-variance angle built from match state and scoring patterns. Bayern are simply the stronger side by miles, and their away league record is the killer stat here: unbeaten on the road all season, with 13 wins from 16. Wolfsburg’s home numbers are poor enough to make this feel like a very steep hill, and the head-to-head record only piles on the pressure.
There is one wrinkle, of course. Bayern have conceded in plenty of recent games, so Wolfsburg shouldn’t be written off from scoring once. That’s why 1-2 appeals as the correct score. Bayern look far more likely to create the better chances and win the big moments, but Wolfsburg should have enough about them to nick a goal at home. If you wanted a slightly more cautious angle, Bayern to win and both teams to score has a decent case.
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