Barca achieves historic perfect home record in LaLiga 2025/26

Published on May 20, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

FC Barcelona has completed a perfect season at the Spotify Camp Nou. With a 3-1 win over Real Betis in the penultimate matchday, Hansi Flick's team earned 57 points out of a possible 57 at home, an unprecedented milestone since LaLiga has 20 teams. The return to the culé stadium has turned the venue into an unbeatable fortress, closing the regular season with a record that is already part of Spanish football history.

photorealistic cinematic scene of Camp Nou stadium interior during a night match, Barcelona players celebrating a goal against Real Betis, green pitch with perfect grass lines, full stadium stands illuminated by floodlights, scoreboard showing 3-1 in background, Hansi Flick on sideline raising fist, red and blue confetti falling, dramatic victory atmosphere, ultra-detailed architecture of renovated stadium, dynamic action shot of player sliding on knees, high contrast lighting with deep shadows, motion blur on running players, technical sports photography style, wide-angle lens perspective, realistic crowd textures, no text or numbers visible

Home fortress as a competitive and tactical advantage 🏟️

Beyond the numerical feat, the data reveals a solid game structure at home. Flick has known how to exploit high pressing and possession to suffocate rivals at Camp Nou. The team has averaged more than three goals per game at home, with a defense that conceded only nine goals in 19 matches. This home performance allows Barça to plan away games with a margin, where the record is less brilliant, and to face European competitions with the confidence of knowing that they do not drop points at home.

Camp Nou, safer than a bank alarm 🔒

In other words, Barça at home is like a high-security lock: no one gets in, and if they do, they leave empty-handed or with a goal against them. The 19 rivals who visited the Spotify Camp Nou left with the same feeling: that they had come to see the stadium and, incidentally, to lose. Real Betis was the last to experience it, although at least they had the consolation of scoring a goal, something only six teams managed. For the rest, the visit was like going to the dentist: painful, expensive, and without anesthesia.