Fluminense and Flamengo meet in a heavyweight Brasileirão Betano derby on Monday morning, 13 April 2026, with both sides sitting inside the early title picture. Fluminense are third with 20 points from 10 matches, one place and three points clear of Flamengo, who are fourth on 17. That gap is small, but in a race this tight every meeting between the big sides matters. It’s not just about pride in Rio. It’s about staying attached to the top and keeping the pressure on the pack above.
For Luis Zubeldia’s Fluminense, this is a chance to protect a perfect home record and keep their strong start humming. Leonardo Jardim’s Flamengo arrive with plenty of momentum too, and with a fixture list that has already asked plenty of them in league and Libertadores play. Both teams have been busy, both have been scoring, and neither looks like backing down. You’d expect a proper derby. Tense? Absolutely. Open? Probably more than the league table would suggest.
The backdrop is simple enough. Fluminense have been hard to beat at home and Flamengo have the sort of firepower that can flip a match in a flash. With both clubs also juggling continental commitments, this one carries the feel of a test of depth as much as quality. Who handles the pressure better? That’s the key question.
Fluminense Form & Analysis
Fluminense come into this derby unbeaten in four, and that’s the first thing that jumps out. They haven’t been flawless, but they’ve steadied after that 3-2 loss away to Vasco da Gama on 19 March. Since then, there’s been a 3-2 home win over Athletico, a 1-0 home victory against Atlético Mineiro, a 3-1 win over Corinthians at home, a 1-1 draw at Coritiba, and then a goalless trip to Deportivo La Guaira in the Libertadores. That’s a decent body of work. Not flashy every week, but solid enough to keep them near the top.
The home record is where Fluminense really separate themselves. Five wins from five at their ground, 10 goals scored and only four conceded. That’s the record of a side that knows how to control its own stadium. They’ve been front-foot at home, with goals coming regularly and opponents finding it hard to get a foothold. Even the tighter games have tended to tilt their way. The 1-0 over Atlético Mineiro was the sort of result title chasers live on. The 3-1 against Corinthians was more expansive. Either way, they’ve been getting the job done.
There’s a slight pause in their attacking flow after the 0-0 in Venezuela, but that was away from home and came with decent underlying numbers, even if the finishing wasn’t there on the night. At home, though, it’s been a different story. Fluminense have been quick to take control, and the unbeaten run at their own ground is a serious weapon. Flamengo will know it too. They won’t want this becoming a slick, rhythmic Fluminense performance.
Flamengo Form & Analysis
Flamengo arrive with a strong recent run of their own. They responded to the 3-0 league defeat at Red Bull Bragantino with two wins, first beating Santos 3-1 at home and then travelling to Cusco FC in the Libertadores and coming away 2-0 winners. Before that setback, they’d already collected a 1-1 draw at Corinthians, a 3-0 home win over Remo, and a 3-0 away win at Botafogo. That’s a proper sequence. One bad afternoon at Bragantino hasn’t derailed them.
Away from home, the picture is a bit less commanding. Flamengo’s league away record sits at 6th, with two wins, one draw and two defeats, and they’ve scored seven and conceded seven on the road. That’s not bad, but it’s not elite either. They can travel, yet they aren’t shutting teams out with the same ease they show in Rio. The 3-0 loss at Red Bull Bragantino is a reminder that when they don’t manage the game properly, they can look vulnerable. The 1-1 at Corinthians was respectable, while the 3-0 win at Botafogo shows the ceiling is high when they click. The flip side? There’s a swing factor to them away from home.
Leonardo Jardim will still be pleased with the overall pattern. Flamengo are producing goals, and they’ve done it against a spread of opposition. Their last six include five wins, and their most recent performance in Cusco was controlled enough: 19 shots, 10 on target, and two goals without looking overextended. That’s the sort of away display coaches love. Still, this derby asks for more than control. It asks for resilience, a bit of bite, and a willingness to absorb pressure when Fluminense come on strong at home. Can they keep it up on the road? That’s the doubt.
Head-to-Head
These two know each other very well, and the recent meetings have been anything but dull. The most recent clash, on 8 March 2026, finished Fluminense 4-5 Flamengo in the Carioca — a wild, punchy game that underlined how little either side minds a scrap when the tempo goes up. Before that, Fluminense beat Flamengo 2-1 on 25 January 2026, and they also won 2-1 in the Brasileirão on 20 November 2025. Flamengo, though, took a 1-0 league win at home on 20 July 2025.
The pattern isn’t one of caution. These fixtures often produce goals, and there’s usually a spell where momentum flips more than once. That said, the balance has been fairly even, with both clubs landing punches in the recent run. One H2H angle stands out from the meeting history: over 4.5 cards has landed in six of the last seven. That fits the derby mood perfectly.
We Predict: Over 1.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 1.5 Goals at 8/15 here. It’s not a price that’ll set your pulse racing, but it’s the right kind of line for a match with this much attacking potential and this much local tension. Fluminense have scored 17 league goals already and Flamengo 16, while both teams have shown enough going forward in recent weeks to make a low-scoring stalemate look less likely than the market might first think.
Fluminense’s perfect home record gives them the platform to push the game, and Flamengo’s recent away results suggest they won’t simply sit back and survive. A 2-1 Fluminense win is the call, with the hosts’ home strength just edging a derby that should open up at points. If you want a slightly bolder angle, both teams to score has obvious appeal too, but the safer play is the goal line. One or two goals should come. Three wouldn’t surprise anyone.