2026 RFL Championship

Rugby league competition in the United Kingdom From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2026 RFL Championship (officially known as the Betfred Championship for sponsorship reasons) is a professional rugby league club competition. The second tier of the British rugby league system comprises 20 clubs - this is due to the Rugby Football League (RFL) announcing that the Championship and League One competitions were to be combined for the 2026 season.[1]

DurationJanuary – October 2026
Teams20
Points scored1,456
Highest attendance4,380 London Broncos v Widnes Vikings (18 January)
Quick facts Duration, Teams ...
2026 Betfred Championship
DurationJanuary – October 2026
Teams20
Points scored1,456
Highest attendance4,380 London Broncos v Widnes Vikings (18 January)
Lowest attendance300 North Wales Crusaders v Midlands Hurricanes (5 April)
Total attendance28,020
Biggest home winLondon Broncos 106–18 North Wales Crusaders (28 February)
Biggest away winSwinton Lions 6–84 London Broncos (22 February)
Top point-scorerJimmy Meadows (124)
Top try-scorer(s)Edene Gebbie

Morea Morea

Cody Hunter (10)
2027 
Close

Team changes

Due to the merging of the third tier League One with the Championship into one competition, the Championship increased from 13 clubs to 21 for the 2026 season.[2].

The clubs joining the Championship from League One are:

If the two divisions had not been merged, North Wales would have been promoted to the Championship anyway as winners of the 2025 RFL League One season.[3]

On 16 October 2025 the Bradford Bulls were to be promoted to the Super League and were replaced by the Salford Red Devils. Salford were relegated from Super League via the IMG grading system, as was Bradford's elevation.[4] The following day the two teams joining the Super League as a result of its expansion to 14 teams[5] were announced. Toulouse Olympique and the York Knights were promoted via an independent panel.[6]

On 3 December 2025, Salford was liquidated as a result of unpaid debts to HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC), and as a result had their membership with the RFL terminated, and would no longer compete in the Championship.[7] The RFL hoped that a phoenix club could be created to contest the fixtures, with Salford having until 11 December to submit a viable proposal with a decision scheduled for 17 December.[8][9] On 17 December, the timeline was extended.[10] On 22 December, a phoenix club was approved to complete in the 2026 Championship.[11][12]

Featherstone Rovers went into administration in December 2025 and as no satisfactory bid to take over the club emerged by the week before the start of the season, the RFL removed the club from the 2026 season.[13] Further complications arose when Halifax Panthers were wound-up following non-payment of monies due to HMRC on 9 February 2026.[14] The Panthers' membership of the RFL, and therefore the club's permission to participate in the Championship, was withdrawn on 11 February.[15] On 3 March, the RFL granted membership to a new Halifax Panthers club who re-joined the Championship with a 12-point deduction.[16]

Fixtures format

The growth from 13 to an originally-planned 21 teams required the development of a new fixture scheduling format, with 40 fixtures deemed far too many for the calendar.[17] A new format, described as a 'pendulum system', was devised, to retain 24 fixtures as in the previous Championship season. To allocate 20 of the fixtures per club, teams play two matches, home and away, against the 10 clubs that finished closest to them in the previous season.[18]

For example, London Broncos, having finished 10th in the 2025 Championship, will play the teams who finished: 5th to 9th and 11th to 13th in the 2025 Championship; and 1st and 2nd in the 2025 League One. Salford, the highest-ranked team having been relegated from the Super League in 2025, will play the 10 teams who finished 3rd to 12th in the 2025 Championship (clubs in 1st and 2nd having been promoted to the 2026 Super League), while Newcastle Thunder, the lowest-ranked team having finished 10th in 2025 League One, will play the nine teams from the 2025 League One plus the 13th placed team from the 2025 Championship.[18]

The final four fixtures are home and away ties against two teams, primarily based on ensuring local derby matches could take place, and then filling up the fixture list to minimise overall travel.[18] These games only include matches between teams that were not previously scheduled: for example, the three most northerly teams - Whitehaven, Workington and Newcastle - were already due to play each other, and so did not have extra games scheduled between them. Rather, all three were given games against the Cumbrian team Barrow,[18] with Workington being drawn against Widnes, Whitehaven against Sheffield and Newcastle against Batley.

After Featherstone withdrew, a new round of replacement fixtures were announced for the clubs due to have played Featherstone.[19] This reverted a decision to not schedule new fixtures, which would have shifted the table to being decided by win percentage rather than competition points.[20] No further information regarding the Championship structure was given at this time other than the postponement of the Halifax game against Sheffield scheduled for 15 February.[21]

Clubs

Stadiums and locations

2026 Championship clubs
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20
Workington
20 Workington Town
20 Workington Town
19
Widnes
19 Widnes Vikings
19 Widnes Vikings
18
Whitehaven
18 Whitehaven
18 Whitehaven
17
Swinton
17 Swinton Lions
17 Swinton Lions
16
Sheffield
16 Sheffield Eagles
16 Sheffield Eagles
15
Salford
15 Salford RLFC
15 Salford RLFC
14
Rochdale
14 Rochdale Hornets
14 Rochdale Hornets
13
Oldham
13 Oldham
13 Oldham
12
North Wales
12 North Wales Crusaders
12 North Wales Crusaders
11
Newcastle
11 Newcastle Thunder
11 Newcastle Thunder
10
Midlands
10 Midlands Hurricanes
10 Midlands Hurricanes
9
London
9 London Broncos
9 London Broncos
8
Keighley
8 Keighley Cougars
8 Keighley Cougars
7
Hunslet
7 Hunslet
7 Hunslet
6
Halifax
6 Halifax Panthers
6 Halifax Panthers
5
Goole
5 Goole Vikings
5 Goole Vikings
4
Doncaster
4 Doncaster
4 Doncaster
3
Dewsbury
3 Dewsbury Rams
3 Dewsbury Rams
2
Batley
2  Batley Bulldogs
2  Batley Bulldogs
1
Barrow
1  Barrow Raiders
1  Barrow Raiders
More information Team, 2025 Position ...
Team 2025 Position Head coach Captain Stadium Capacity Grading
Barrow Raiders 9th Paul Crarey Ryan Johnston Craven Park 4,000 B
Batley Bulldogs 12th James Ford Alistair Leak, Dane Manning Mount Pleasant 7,500 B
Dewsbury Rams 4th League One Paul March George Senior Crown Flatt 5,100 C
Doncaster 8th Richard Horne Cory Aston Eco-Power Stadium 15,231 B
Goole Vikings 7th League One Scott Taylor Brett Ferres Victoria Pleasure Grounds 3,000 C
Halifax Panthers 5th Kyle Eastmond Ben Crooks The Shay 10,401 B
Hunslet 13th Kyle Trout Billy Jowitt South Leeds Stadium 3,450 C
Keighley Cougars 9th League One
  • Danny Burton (interim until round 3)
  • Ian Hardman (from round 4)
Matty Beharrell Cougar Park 7,800 [a]
London Broncos 10th Jason Demetriou Reagan Campbell-Gillard Plough Lane 9,215 B
Midlands Hurricanes 5th League One Mark Dunning Jon Luke Kirby Avery Fields 1,500 C
Newcastle Thunder 10th League One Graham Steadman Crow Trees Ground 2,000 [a]
North Wales Crusaders 1st League One
Josh Eaves Eirias Stadium 5,500 C
Oldham 4th Alan Kilshaw Matty Wildie Boundary Park[b] 13,186 B
Rochdale Hornets 6th League One Gary Thornton Ross Whitmore Spotland Stadium 10,249 C
Salford RLFC 12th Super League[c]
  • Mike Grady (until round 7)
  • Dave Hewitt (interim, from round 8)
Brad Dwyer Salford Community Stadium 12,000 B
Sheffield Eagles 11th Craig Lingard Joel Farrell Steel City Stadium 1,320 B
Swinton Lions 3rd League One
  • Paul Wood (until round 8)
  • Anthony Murray (from round 9)
Gavin Rodden Heywood Road 3,387 C
Whitehaven 8th League One
  • Anthony Murray (until round 4)
  • James Newton (interim from round 5)
Jordan Burns Recreation Ground 7,500 C
Widnes Vikings 7th Allan Coleman Jack Owens Halton Stadium 13,350 B
Workington Town 2nd League One Jonty Gorley Stevie Scholey Derwent Park 10,000 C
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  1. Not graded as required information was not submitted to the RFL on time
  2. Oldham are currently playing at Bower Fold due to a dispute over their use of Boundary Park
  3. Position achieved by a previous iteration of the club

Regular season

Results

Table

More information Pos, Pld ...
Pos Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts Qualification
1 London Broncos 8 8 0 0 455 70 +385 16 League Leaders Shield and qualify for Qualifying Finals
2 Midlands Hurricanes 10 7 1 2 262 210 +52 15 Qualifying Finals
3 Doncaster 8 7 0 1 317 92 +225 14 Qualifying Semi-Finals
4 Barrow Raiders 8 7 0 1 227 80 +147 14
5 Newcastle Thunder 9 6 0 3 312 162 +150 12
6 Oldham 8 6 0 2 248 115 +133 12
7 Widnes Vikings 9 6 0 3 206 186 +20 12 Eliminators
8 Sheffield Eagles 8 5 0 3 153 192 39 10
9 Dewsbury Rams 9 4 0 5 186 177 +9 8
10 Rochdale Hornets 10 4 0 6 161 258 97 8
11 Keighley Cougars 9 3 1 5 260 210 +50 7
12 Batley Bulldogs 8 3 0 5 179 185 6 6
13 Hunslet 9 3 0 6 214 246 32 6
14 North Wales Crusaders 9 3 0 6 228 398 170 6
15 Salford 9 3 0 6 130 362 232 6
16 Workington Town 9 2 1 6 164 222 58 5
17 Whitehaven 9 2 1 6 134 267 133 5
18 Goole Vikings 9 2 0 7 160 287 127 4
19 Swinton Lions 8 0 0 8 86 354 268 0
20 Halifax Panthers 6 3 0 3 134 143 9 6[a]
Close
Updated to match(es) played on 12 April 2026. Source: RFL
Notes:
  1. A 12-point deduction was applied upon re-instatement to the league[22]

Play-offs

A 10 team play-off structure based on the McIntyre system which allows higher qualified teams to lose more games before being eliminated compared to lower qualified teams was introduced for this year.[23]

Team bracket

Qualifying Semi-Finals and EliminatorsQualifying and Elimination FinalsSudden Death Play-OffsPreliminary FinalsGrand Final
QSF1QF1
31
5Highest ranked winner of QSF1&2
QSF2QF2SD1PF1
42Highest ranked loser of QF1&2Highest ranked winner of QF1&2
6-Lowest ranked winner of QSF1&2Lowest ranked winner of EF1&2Lowest ranked winner of SD1&2
Highest ranked winner of PF1&2
E1EF1SD2PF2
Lowest ranked winner of PF1&2
7Highest ranked loser of QSF1&2Lowest ranked loser of QF1&2Lowest ranked winner of QF1&2
10Lowest ranked winner of E1&2Highest ranked winner of EF1&2Highest ranked winner of SD1&2
E2EF2
8Lowest ranked loser of QSF1&2
9Highest ranked winner of E1&2

Player statistics

Top 10 try scorers

Top 10 goal scorers

Top 10 point scorers

More information Rank, Player (s) ...
Close

As of 14 April 2026[24]

Discipline

Yellow cards

More information Rank, Player (s) ...
Rank Player (s) Club Cards
1 England Dan Coates Dewsbury Rams 2
England Brad Dwyer Salford RLFC
3 England Felix Ellis Batley Bulldogs
England Bradley Graham Dewsbury Rams
England Bailey O'Connor
England Jacob Parkinson
England Luke Briscoe Doncaster RLFC
England Brett Ferres Goole Vikings
England Zak Lloyd Hunslet RLFC
England Alfie Dean Keighley Cougars
Scotland Izaac Farrell
England David Foggin-Johnston
Republic of Ireland Lachlan Lanskey
Papua New Guinea Epel Kapinias London Broncos
Republic of Ireland Oliver Roberts Midlands Hurricanes
Fiji King Vuniyayawa Newcastle Thunder
England Josh Eaves North Wales Crusaders
England Jordy Gibson
New Zealand Mark Ioane
England Dec Patton
England Junior Westwood
England Matty Ashurst Oldham RLFC
England Ted Chapelhow
England Harry Bowes Sheffield Eagles
England Josh Hodson
England Martyn Reilly
England Deane Meadows Swinton Lions
England Louie Roberts
England George Roby
England Jay Chapelhow Widnes Vikings
Close

Red cards

More information Rank, Player (s) ...
Rank Player (s) Club Cards
1 Democratic Republic of the Congo Samuel Kibula Swinton Lions 1
Close

As of 11 April 2026[25][failed verification]

Notes

References

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