Manchester United vs Liverpool Prediction, Odds & Tips
Manchester United vs Liverpool Prediction and Tips
Manchester United beat Liverpool 3-2 at Old Trafford in a Premier League match where our model backed the home win at 42 percent probability, a pick that landed. United had won their last outing before this fixture, while Liverpool arrived on the back of a defeat. The two sides had met once recently with United taking that contest. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Liverpool vs Manchester United Prediction, Odds and Betting Tips
Our AI analyses form, head-to-head records, squad news and odds to provide data-driven predictions for Liverpool vs Manchester United. All tips are for informational purposes only and do not constitute betting advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. You must be 18 or over to gamble. Please gamble responsibly. For help, visit begambleaware.org.
Our pick
Manchester United to win
Result
Manchester United v Liverpool
AI Prediction Result
Past performance does not guarantee future results. 18+ | BeGambleAware.org
Expected goals (xG)
Match xG total 4.08
Goals, Vulnerabilities and a Rivalry That Still Matters: Manchester United vs Liverpool Preview
Marcus Vale Β· 18 April 2026
There is a version of this fixture that gets reduced to history and noise, to decades of rivalry and the weight of previous meetings. That version is not particularly useful. What is useful is looking at what the data actually shows about two sides who have both scored freely and conceded regularly this season, and asking what that combination is likely to produce when they meet at Old Trafford on Sunday.
Where Both Sides Stand in the Table
Manchester United sit third in the Premier League, which represents a creditable position, but the underlying numbers complicate the picture somewhat. United have scored 57 goals in the league this season, which is a genuinely impressive return and places them among the division's more dangerous attacking sides. The interesting thing is that their defensive record tells a completely different story. Forty-five goals conceded is a total that you would not associate with a side finishing in the top three, and it suggests that the structure behind United's attacking play has been far less reliable than the attacking play itself.
Liverpool come into this fixture fifth, with 52 goals scored and 42 conceded. The goal difference is slightly better than United's, which means Liverpool have been marginally more balanced across the season, but the defensive figures still represent a side that has given opponents genuine opportunities. Fifty-two goals scored is an excellent return, and it confirms that Liverpool's attacking threat is real and sustained rather than the product of a small sample size of good performances against weaker opposition.
What we have, then, is a fixture between two sides who have collectively scored 109 league goals this season and conceded 87. That is not a coincidence of style. It reflects something structural about how both teams have approached the campaign, and it shapes how you should think about Sunday's game.
The Attacking Case for Both Sides
United's 57 goals represents the stronger attacking output of the two, and when you watch how they have built those numbers across the season, you see a side that is capable of generating high volumes of progressive play through the lines. Their build-up has been fluid in the better performances, and they have shown a consistent ability to manufacture goal-scoring situations at Old Trafford in particular, where the crowd and the space that opponents sometimes leave on the counter have both worked in their favour.
Liverpool's 52 goals is a number that reflects a side who have found consistent ways to hurt teams, and the gap between their tally and United's is smaller than the league position difference might suggest. The interesting thing about Liverpool's attacking output is that it has come against a variety of defensive structures, which means it is not simply a product of facing weaker sides in a run of favourable fixtures. It reflects genuine attacking quality that will carry a threat into Old Trafford regardless of the occasion.
The Defensive Problem Both Sides Share
Forty-five goals conceded for United and 42 for Liverpool are numbers that will concern both sets of coaching staff, and they should concern anyone trying to assess where each club's ceiling is in this campaign. The difference between the two figures is small enough that neither side can claim a meaningful defensive advantage over the other going into this fixture.
What this tells you on a practical level is that the pressing triggers and transitional moments in this game carry significant weight. Both sides have shown this season that when their shape becomes disorganised during transitions, they are vulnerable to giving up chances that better-organised defences would not concede. The team that controls the tempo and forces the other into hurried build-up play is more likely to exploit those vulnerabilities.
And that is the problem for both managers heading into Sunday. The defensive frailties are baked into the season-long data. One game does not change underlying tendencies, which means the attacking players on both sides should have genuine opportunities if the game opens up, as the numbers suggest it is quite likely to do.
What Old Trafford Changes
The home advantage dimension matters here because United's 57 goals and Liverpool's 52 are season totals that include both home and away performances. United playing at Old Trafford is a meaningful variable in any analysis of this fixture, because home sides in high-profile matches tend to see more of the ball in the early stages, which suits a United side that has shown they can use that possession effectively to build into games.
Liverpool's away record in terms of goals scored and conceded is embedded in those season totals, and without a specific home-away split available, it would be incorrect to draw firm conclusions about how their numbers break down on the road. What the aggregate data does confirm is that Liverpool have been productive enough throughout the campaign that their attacking output should not be expected to simply disappear because they are travelling to Old Trafford.
The Analytical Verdict
The honest analytical position here is that both sides have the attacking quality to hurt the other and the defensive record to suggest they can be hurt in return. United's position in third gives them a slight psychological foothold in terms of where they see themselves relative to a Liverpool side sitting fifth, and Old Trafford provides a structural advantage in terms of how United are likely to approach the opening exchanges.
But Liverpool's 52 goals is a figure that commands respect, and their goals conceded total of 42 shows that they have been only marginally less exposed defensively than United across the full campaign. The gap between these sides in the table is two places, and the gap in their underlying numbers is similarly narrow. This is a fixture between two sides who are closer in quality than a simple glance at the standings might suggest, which makes the match itself genuinely difficult to call.
What the data actually shows is a game with real potential for goals from both ends, a contest that will likely be decided by which side can impose its shape more effectively during the transitional phases, and a result that will have meaningful implications for where both clubs finish when the final standings are confirmed. Sunday 3 May at Old Trafford matters. The numbers confirm it.
Read full preview
There is a version of this fixture that gets reduced to history and noise, to decades of rivalry and the weight of previous meetings. That version is not particularly useful. What is useful is looking at what the data actually shows about two sides who have both scored freely and conceded regularly this season, and asking what that combination is likely to produce when they meet at Old Trafford on Sunday.
Where Both Sides Stand in the Table
Manchester United sit third in the Premier League, which represents a creditable position, but the underlying numbers complicate the picture somewhat. United have scored 57 goals in the league this season, which is a genuinely impressive return and places them among the division's more dangerous attacking sides. The interesting thing is that their defensive record tells a completely different story. Forty-five goals conceded is a total that you would not associate with a side finishing in the top three, and it suggests that the structure behind United's attacking play has been far less reliable than the attacking play itself.
Liverpool come into this fixture fifth, with 52 goals scored and 42 conceded. The goal difference is slightly better than United's, which means Liverpool have been marginally more balanced across the season, but the defensive figures still represent a side that has given opponents genuine opportunities. Fifty-two goals scored is an excellent return, and it confirms that Liverpool's attacking threat is real and sustained rather than the product of a small sample size of good performances against weaker opposition.
What we have, then, is a fixture between two sides who have collectively scored 109 league goals this season and conceded 87. That is not a coincidence of style. It reflects something structural about how both teams have approached the campaign, and it shapes how you should think about Sunday's game.
The Attacking Case for Both Sides
United's 57 goals represents the stronger attacking output of the two, and when you watch how they have built those numbers across the season, you see a side that is capable of generating high volumes of progressive play through the lines. Their build-up has been fluid in the better performances, and they have shown a consistent ability to manufacture goal-scoring situations at Old Trafford in particular, where the crowd and the space that opponents sometimes leave on the counter have both worked in their favour.
Liverpool's 52 goals is a number that reflects a side who have found consistent ways to hurt teams, and the gap between their tally and United's is smaller than the league position difference might suggest. The interesting thing about Liverpool's attacking output is that it has come against a variety of defensive structures, which means it is not simply a product of facing weaker sides in a run of favourable fixtures. It reflects genuine attacking quality that will carry a threat into Old Trafford regardless of the occasion.
The Defensive Problem Both Sides Share
Forty-five goals conceded for United and 42 for Liverpool are numbers that will concern both sets of coaching staff, and they should concern anyone trying to assess where each club's ceiling is in this campaign. The difference between the two figures is small enough that neither side can claim a meaningful defensive advantage over the other going into this fixture.
What this tells you on a practical level is that the pressing triggers and transitional moments in this game carry significant weight. Both sides have shown this season that when their shape becomes disorganised during transitions, they are vulnerable to giving up chances that better-organised defences would not concede. The team that controls the tempo and forces the other into hurried build-up play is more likely to exploit those vulnerabilities.
And that is the problem for both managers heading into Sunday. The defensive frailties are baked into the season-long data. One game does not change underlying tendencies, which means the attacking players on both sides should have genuine opportunities if the game opens up, as the numbers suggest it is quite likely to do.
What Old Trafford Changes
The home advantage dimension matters here because United's 57 goals and Liverpool's 52 are season totals that include both home and away performances. United playing at Old Trafford is a meaningful variable in any analysis of this fixture, because home sides in high-profile matches tend to see more of the ball in the early stages, which suits a United side that has shown they can use that possession effectively to build into games.
Liverpool's away record in terms of goals scored and conceded is embedded in those season totals, and without a specific home-away split available, it would be incorrect to draw firm conclusions about how their numbers break down on the road. What the aggregate data does confirm is that Liverpool have been productive enough throughout the campaign that their attacking output should not be expected to simply disappear because they are travelling to Old Trafford.
The Analytical Verdict
The honest analytical position here is that both sides have the attacking quality to hurt the other and the defensive record to suggest they can be hurt in return. United's position in third gives them a slight psychological foothold in terms of where they see themselves relative to a Liverpool side sitting fifth, and Old Trafford provides a structural advantage in terms of how United are likely to approach the opening exchanges.
But Liverpool's 52 goals is a figure that commands respect, and their goals conceded total of 42 shows that they have been only marginally less exposed defensively than United across the full campaign. The gap between these sides in the table is two places, and the gap in their underlying numbers is similarly narrow. This is a fixture between two sides who are closer in quality than a simple glance at the standings might suggest, which makes the match itself genuinely difficult to call.
What the data actually shows is a game with real potential for goals from both ends, a contest that will likely be decided by which side can impose its shape more effectively during the transitional phases, and a result that will have meaningful implications for where both clubs finish when the final standings are confirmed. Sunday 3 May at Old Trafford matters. The numbers confirm it.
Manchester United
Manchester United won 3-2 at home, extending their unbeaten run to 5 matches with 4 victories. The hosts scored 3 goals and conceded 2 in an open contest. Their recent form showed 1 win in the last 5 games before this fixture, though they had won their previous 3 matches consecutively. The result kept them in 3rd position.
Liverpool
Liverpool suffered a 2-3 defeat away from home, their second loss in their last 5 games. They conceded 3 goals and managed none in response. The visitors' recent record included 1 loss in their last 5 outings, with 0 clean sheets across that span. The result left them in 4th position.
Run-in & context
Manchester United's victory moved them to 3 points clear in the table, consolidating 3rd place. Liverpool dropped further back to 4th, their form deteriorating with consecutive defeats. The result marked a significant swing; United's winning momentum continued while Liverpool's inconsistency deepened. Our model flagged the attacking vulnerability in Liverpool's recent performances.
Injury impact
Manchester United have a near-full squad available.
Liverpool have a near-full squad available.
Venue
Old Trafford
Manchester, England
Weather
Weather data unavailable for this venue.
Set pieces
- Manchester United8.0 corners / g
- LiverpoolUnavailable
Match Probabilities
Full-Time Result
Both Teams to Score
Over/Under 2.5 Goals
Goals Markets
More Markets
Double Chance
Half-Time Result
BTTS in Both Halves
Probabilities are model estimates, not guarantees. Past performance does not guarantee future results. 18+ | BeGambleAware.org
Match Centre
Lineups, live stats, full odds comparison, and in-depth match data for Liverpool vs Manchester United.
SSR Ratings
| Metric | ||
|---|---|---|
| Overall | 1497 | 1587 |
| Attack | 1640 | 1641 |
| Defence | 1310 | 1404 |
| Goals Index | 1579 | 1581 |
| BTTS Index | 1553 | 1609 |
π Post-Match Analysis
Manchester United 3-2 Liverpool: Old Trafford Delivers a Season-Defining Three Points
Manchester United beat Liverpool 3-2 in a five-goal thriller at Old Trafford, a result that carries genuine weight in the context of a Premier League title race that is far from settled with three gam...
Form Guide (Last 5)
Head-to-Head
2 meetings| Market | Count | Rate | Streak |
|---|---|---|---|
| BTTS (Yes) | 2/2 | 100% | 2 |
| Over 2.5 | 2/2 | 100% | 2 |
| Over 1.5 | 2/2 | 100% | - |
| Under 2.5 | 0/2 | 0% | - |
| Liverpool Clean Sheet | 0/2 | 0% | - |
| Manchester United Clean Sheet | 0/2 | 0% | - |
Match History
Match facts at a glance
- Kickoff
- Venue
- Old Trafford, Manchester Β· capacity 76,212
- Competition
- Premier League
- Last meeting
- Manchester United 3-2 Liverpool (3 May 2026)
- Head-to-head record
- Manchester United 1W Β· 0D Β· 0L Liverpool (1 meetings)
- Top scorer Β· Liverpool
- Federico Chiesa (2 goals)
- Most yellows Β· Manchester United
- J. Fletcher (2 YC)
- Most yellows Β· Liverpool
- Federico Chiesa (9 YC)
- BTTS this season Β· Manchester United
- 60%
- BTTS this season Β· Liverpool
- 100%
- Our prediction
- Manchester United to win (42%)
Frequently Asked Questions
Curious how this prediction was produced? See our methodology.
18+ | Gambling involves risk. Only gamble with money you can afford to lose. For information and advice about problem gambling, visit BeGambleAware.org.
All predictions and analysis on this page are provided for informational purposes only and should not be construed as betting advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Odds displayed are sourced from third-party bookmakers and are subject to change. SportSignals may receive commission from bookmaker links on this page.
Last updated 11 minutes ago Β·


