Internacional and Grêmio renew one of Brazilian football’s fiercest rivalries on Sunday morning, 12 April 2026, with both sides meeting at the same awkward crossroads in the Brasileirão Betano. Internacional are 13th on 12 points, Grêmio sit 11th on the same tally. Neither side is sprinting away from trouble, and neither can afford to drift much longer in a league table that already feels tight and unforgiving.
For Paulo Pezzolano’s Internacional, this is about turning a decent little run into something more durable. For Luís Castro’s Grêmio, it’s a chance to stop the slide before it turns into a proper rut. The derby context adds its own heat, of course. That’s never in short supply. But there’s also something more practical here: both clubs need a result that says they’re moving in the right direction rather than just treading water.
The journey to this one has been bumpy for both. Internacional arrive after a narrow win at Corinthians and a home draw with São Paulo, while Grêmio have stumbled through a frustrating mix of domestic draws and losses, then carried that baggage into their Sudamericana trip to Montevideo City Torque. These teams know each other well too — maybe too well — and recent meetings have swung wildly enough to keep everyone guessing.
Internacional Form & Analysis
Internacional’s latest stretch has been a proper mixed bag, but there’s a little more steel in it than the raw results might first suggest. They started with a 1-0 away win at Corinthians on 6 April, a tight contest settled late by Alexandro Bernabei after Vitinho’s assist. Before that, São Paulo had held them to a 1-1 draw at home on 2 April, a result that didn’t flatter either side but at least kept Internacional unbeaten. Step back a bit further and the picture gets a bit brighter: they beat Chapecoense 2-0 at home, then won 2-1 away at Santos. That’s a decent backbone, even if the early-March defeats to Bahia and Atlético Mineiro still sit there like warning signs.
The Corinthians game showed both sides of Internacional in one evening. They didn’t dominate the shot count or the big chances, and the xG numbers were modest at 0.37 to 1.35. Still, they found a way. That matters. Teams chasing rhythm often need results that don’t look pretty. This was one of them. Their broader league return — 9 goals scored and 10 conceded from 10 matches — tells you they’re not a free-scoring side, but they’re not brittle either. Four games unbeaten now is the right kind of trend. Not spectacular. Just useful.
At home, though, Internacional still have work to do. Their league record at this ground is only 1 win, 1 draw and 3 defeats, with 4 goals scored and 6 conceded. That’s 19th in the home table, which is ugly no matter how you dress it up. They’ve had flashes at home, but too many matches have drifted away from them. The good news for Pezzolano is that Internacional do tend to keep games tight. Their recent run has featured plenty of low-scoring football, and they’ve shown a knack for dragging opponents into that sort of scrap. That’s a handy trait in a derby. You don’t need style points here. You need control. And maybe a bit of nerve.
Grêmio Form & Analysis
Grêmio’s form is more troubling. Their last six have brought just one win, and that feels like a lifetime ago now. They beat Vitória 2-0 at home on 20 March, which looked like the start of something better. It wasn’t. Since then, they’ve drawn 1-1 away to Chapecoense, lost 2-1 away at Vasco da Gama, gone down 2-1 at Palmeiras, and then been held 0-0 at home by Remo before losing 1-0 away to Montevideo City Torque in the Sudamericana. That’s four matches without a win, and the mood around the side has darkened quickly.
The latest defeat in Uruguay was especially annoying because it wasn’t a complete collapse. Grêmio actually posted a decent enough attacking shape on paper, with 0.88 xG and two big chances, but they didn’t finish the job and got punished by Eduardo Agüero’s goal early in the second half. There was also a cancelled penalty and a red-card decision wiped out by VAR, which added a messy edge to the night. Still, the bottom line is simple: they lost, and they’re now carrying a run that makes the derby feel even more awkward. Confidence won’t be booming.
Their league numbers are more respectable on the surface than Internacional’s, with 14 goals scored and 14 conceded from 10 matches, but that balance is deceptive. Away from home, Grêmio have been poor. Very poor. One point from five league trips, with no wins, one draw and four defeats, plus nine goals conceded. They’ve only scored four on the road. That’s the kind of record that leaves you little room for optimism before a derby at a hostile ground. They can’t point to any away momentum, and that’s a problem because this fixture rarely gives you time to settle. If Grêmio sit deep and hope to nick it, they’ll need a far cleaner showing than they’ve managed so far.
The flip side? They do have enough individual attacking threat to make this awkward if Internacional switch off. Their overall scoring record is better than the hosts’, and they’ve been involved in open games away from home, even if the results haven’t gone their way. But the defensive figures on the road are the real concern. Conceding nine in five away league matches is the sort of return that asks for trouble in a derby. And trouble usually arrives.
Head-to-Head
This fixture has been livelier than the league table suggests. The two drew 1-1 on 8 March 2026 in the Gaúcho, before Grêmio turned the screw with a 3-0 win on 1 March. Internacional had their own response earlier in the year, beating Grêmio 4-2 on 25 January. Go back into 2025 and you find more of the same pendulum swing: Grêmio won 3-2 in the Brasileirão Betano in September, then the sides shared a 1-1 draw in Porto Alegre in April, before Internacional got the upper hand with a 2-0 win in the Gaúcho that March.
There’s a clear pattern in those meetings. They rarely feel controlled for long, and they’ve produced goals on both sides with regularity. Five of the last six have seen both teams score. That’s not a coincidence. These matches tend to break open somewhere, even when one side starts well. Still, recent derby history can be deceptive. Form matters, and right now Internacional look a little steadier while Grêmio look shakier, especially away from home.
We Predict: Double Chance 1X
Double Chance 1X at 2/9 looks the safest call here, even if the price is short. Internacional are unbeaten in four, they’ve just picked up an away win at Corinthians, and their home numbers still point to a side that’s hard to trust for goals but not easy to beat when the game turns scrappy. Grêmio, meanwhile, have gone four without a win and have taken only one point from five away league matches. That combination is hard to ignore.
The derby setting does open the door to a tense, low-margin contest, and the 1-1 correct score appeals more than a clean home win. That’s the tension in this one. Grêmio have enough to nick a goal, and the head-to-head record says these matches often don’t finish quietly. But Internacional should have enough control at home to avoid defeat. 1-1 feels about right, with the hosts perhaps edging the territory battle and Grêmio doing just enough to make life uncomfortable. If you want a slightly spicier angle, both teams to score has some appeal, but the safer route is Internacional not to lose.