Dundee United return to Tannadice on Saturday evening with a straightforward job on their hands: beat Livingston and keep their push in the top half moving in the right direction. Jim Goodwin’s side sit seventh in the Scottish Premiership on 37 points, a long way short of the European places but comfortably clear of real trouble, and this is the sort of home fixture they’ll expect to take care of. Livingston, by contrast, are drowning near the foot of the table. Marvin Bartley’s team are 12th on 16 points, with only one league win all season and a survival battle that already looks desperate.
There’s also a gulf in momentum, even if neither side arrives in perfect shape. Dundee United were hammered 4-2 away to Rangers last time out, but that scoreline flattered them more than it should have. Livingston came from 2-0 down to draw 2-2 with Heart of Midlothian, which at least showed some spirit, but they’re still looking for their first league victory in what feels like forever. One side has enough quality to blow teams away on a good day. The other is hanging on by its fingernails. That’s the simple picture here.
Dundee United Form & Analysis
Dundee United’s recent run has had the usual mix of promise and frustration, but the bright spots matter. They stunned Celtic 2-0 at home on 22 March, a result that still stands out as one of the better wins of their season. Before that, they drew 2-2 away to Dundee FC in a derby that swung around in familiar fashion, and they had also beaten St. Mirren 2-1 at Tannadice on 3 March. Sandwiched around those positives was a Scottish Cup exit at Falkirk and a 2-0 defeat at Motherwell. Then came the trip to Rangers, where they lost 4-2 after being exposed too often in open play.
That Rangers game told you plenty about Dundee United’s ceiling and their problems. They can score. They’ve now failed to score only once in their last six league and cup outings, and they’ve regularly found ways to create chances even away from home. But they’re not airtight. In Glasgow, Rangers carved them open far too easily, and the xG split of 3.89 to 1.48 was ugly reading. United did get two goals, which fits a wider pattern of attacking threat, yet their defensive discipline went missing when the game stretched. That’s been their season in miniature at times.
At Tannadice, though, they’ve been decent enough to trust. Their home record reads five wins, six draws and five defeats, with 18 scored and 20 conceded. That’s not the profile of a dominant home team, and it doesn’t scream comfort, but it’s solid enough for a mid-table side. They’re not getting bullied on their own pitch, and they’ve managed to keep the scoring burden manageable. The bigger point is that they’ve been more reliable at home than Livingston have been away. That matters. A lot.
There’s another angle too. Dundee United’s fixtures have tended to open up rather than shut down. They’ve scored in bunches, and they’ve been involved in a fair few games where both sides have found the net. Goodwin won’t love the defensive lapses, but he’ll know this team has enough going forward to punish a Livingston side that rarely keeps things tight for 90 minutes. If United play with the same urgency they showed against Celtic, they should create enough to win this without needing a miracle.
Livingston Form & Analysis
Livingston’s season has been brutal, and the recent run says everything. They’ve gone through another six games without a win, and that’s not a minor wobble — it’s the story of their campaign. The 2-2 draw with Hearts last weekend was a step up in competitiveness, especially after coming from behind twice in the match. Before that, they’d drawn 0-0 at Hibernian and 1-1 at home to St. Mirren, with a 2-0 defeat away to Kilmarnock interrupting a sequence of results that has been stubborn, scrappy and ultimately useless in the biggest sense. They can compete. They just don’t finish the job.
And that’s the issue, isn’t it? Livingston have not won a league match since 9 August 2025, a run that now looks absurd for a Premiership side. They’ve drawn 13 and lost 18 in the league, with a goal difference of 33-63. Even when they get into a decent position, they rarely turn it into three points. The Hearts draw offered some proof of life — Stevie May scored early, then Cláudio Braga and Lewis Smith kept them in the contest — but it also exposed the same flaw. They can contribute to open games. They just can’t control them.
Away from home, the picture is even bleaker. Livingston’s league record on the road is no wins, six draws and ten defeats, with only 12 goals scored and 33 conceded. That’s a shocking return, no way around it. They’ve found a few ways to nick points, but they’ve also been far too easy to play through. When you’re conceding more than two goals a game away from home on average, you’re asking for trouble every single weekend. Tannadice won’t be a comfortable place for that trend to change.
Still, Bartley’s side haven’t been rolled over in every recent game, and that’s why this isn’t a simple write-off. The goalless draw at Hibernian showed some shape and resistance, while the 2-2 with Rangers at home was another reminder that they can frustrate stronger teams for spells. Yet frustration doesn’t win you league points unless you also carry a threat the other way. Livingston have scored 12 away goals all season. That’s thin. Against a Dundee United side that’s usually good for a goal or two at home, they’ll need to be much sharper than usual to even force a share of the spoils.
Head-to-Head
Recent meetings lean Dundee United’s way, and the most relevant one came only in December. United went to Livingston and won 3-1 on 30 December 2025, a comfortable enough away victory that should give Goodwin’s players confidence heading into this return fixture. Before that, the sides drew 1-1 at Tannadice in October, which is a reminder that Livingston can make life awkward when they’re organised and stubborn.
There’s a broader pattern too. These fixtures have often produced goals rather than cagey stalemates, with both teams scoring in five of the last six meetings. That’s the kind of trend you don’t ignore lightly, especially when Dundee United have been regularly involved in higher-scoring matches and Livingston have struggled to shut anyone out. One meeting won’t decide this one, but it does tilt the mood slightly towards goals at both ends.
We Predict: Home Win
We’re backing Dundee United to win this at 8/15. It’s not a glamorous price, but it’s the right one. Livingston’s away record is dire, their winless league run is miles into the distance, and Dundee United have already shown they can beat better sides than this at Tannadice. The 2-0 win over Celtic was no fluke, and even after the Rangers defeat, United’s attacking output still looks strong enough to trouble a defence that’s shipped 33 away goals.
The most likely outcome is a home win with both teams scoring, and 2-1 feels about right. That fits the numbers, the recent head-to-head pattern and the way both sides have been playing. United should have the edge in quality and home advantage, but Livingston have enough about them to nick a goal. If you want a slightly more aggressive angle, Dundee United to win and both teams to score is the one worth a second look.