MTK Budapest welcome Kisvárda FC to the Hidegkuti Nándor Stadion on Saturday evening in NB I, and both sides arrive with something to chase. MTK are stuck in 10th on 32 points, too close to the wrong end of the table for comfort, while Kisvárda sit seventh on 40 points and are still trying to turn a decent season into something a bit more secure. Neither side is completely safe from pressure. That gives this one a bit of bite.
For MTK, it’s about getting away from the scrap at the bottom and building some breathing room before the run-in gets nasty. For Kisvárda, the aim is different but just as clear: stay in touch with the pack above them and stop away results from dragging them back. The margin between a respectable mid-table finish and a nervy finish isn’t huge. Three points would matter plenty to both camps.
There’s also a decent attacking undertow to this fixture. MTK have been involved in a string of open games, while Kisvárda’s road record has been leaky enough to keep opponents interested. Their previous meetings haven’t exactly encouraged caution either. Goals tend to turn up when these two see each other.
MTK Budapest Form & Analysis
MTK arrive on the back of their best result in weeks, a lively 3-0 home win over Zalaegerszegi TE on 11 April. That was the sort of performance they’ve been needing for a while. Zalán Kerezsi scored twice, Gábor Jurek added the third late on, and the numbers told the same story as the scoreline: MTK created 2.23 expected goals, allowed only 0.36, and won the big-chance count 4-0. It was controlled, direct, and far more convincing than anything they produced during the flat spell that came before it.
Before that, though, the picture was a lot messier. They drew 2-2 away at Újpest on 4 April, which at least showed a bit of resilience after going through a tough patch. There was the 0-2 home defeat to Paksi FC on 20 March, a result that exposed how vulnerable they can look when their attacking rhythm goes missing. Then came three draws in a row — 0-0 away to ETO FC Győr, 1-1 at home to Diósgyőri VTK and 2-2 away at Debreceni VSC. That’s a fairly clear pattern. MTK are hard to shut out completely, but they’ve also been too generous at the other end. They’ll usually give you a game. They’ll also usually give you a chance.
At home, MTK have been decent without being dominant. Their league record at this ground stands at six wins, three draws and six defeats, with 34 scored and 27 conceded. That’s not a bad attacking return at all, and it tells you why this team can be dangerous in front of their own supporters. The problem is the balance. They’ve scored plenty, but they haven’t protected leads cleanly enough, and the fact they’ve been first to concede so often recently only adds to the concern. Still, there’s enough punch in their forward play to keep them in most games. If they get the tempo right early, they can make life awkward.
Kisvárda FC Form & Analysis
Kisvárda’s recent run has been more frustrating than dramatic, but it’s not exactly the sign of a team full of momentum. They were held to a 0-0 draw at home by Debreceni VSC on 13 April, a game in which they managed only one shot on target and failed to create a single big chance. That came after a 2-0 away defeat to Zalaegerszegi TE on 4 April, and before that they drew 1-1 at home to Ferencváros on 22 March, which was a decent result on paper even if it didn’t move them much. The away loss to Újpest on 14 March followed a 1-0 home win over Puskás Akadémia and a 2-1 home victory against Paksi FC. In other words, there was a short burst of promise, then the road form started to wobble again.
That away record is the biggest reason to be wary of Kisvárda here. Their league numbers on the road read four wins, three draws and seven defeats, with only 13 goals scored and 24 conceded. That’s a poor attacking return away from home, and the defence hasn’t held up well either. Can they keep MTK quiet for long? It doesn’t feel likely. Kisvárda have gone four matches without a win, and while they’ve still been competitive in spells, they don’t look especially sharp in the final third once they leave their own ground.
What’s more, their broader profile points to a team that can be dragged into a looser game than they’d prefer. They don’t score away with any regularity, but they do concede enough to leave the door open. That’s a bad combination against an MTK side that has just put three past Zalaegerszeg and has scored 34 home league goals already. Mind you, Kisvárda aren’t without threat. They beat Puskás Akadémia and Paksi FC at home in February and early March, so they can still spring a surprise when the game stays compact. The issue is that this one probably won’t stay compact for long.
Head-to-Head
These two have been producing goals for a while, and the recent meetings point in one direction. MTK won the most recent clash 3-2 away at Kisvárda on 24 January 2026, and before that they hammered them 4-0 in Budapest on 28 September 2025. Go back a little further and the pattern is still pretty clear: MTK beat Kisvárda 2-1 at home in March 2024, while Kisvárda edged a cup tie 3-2 in April of that year.
There’s a long-run edge to the scoring trend too. Four of the last five meetings have seen both teams score, and all five have gone over 2.5 goals. That’s a strong marker. You don’t ignore a run like that.
We Predict: Over 2.5 Goals
We’re backing Over 2.5 Goals at 4/5 for this one. It’s the cleanest angle on the match. MTK have just come off a 3-0 home win, Kisvárda have been vulnerable away from home, and the head-to-head record has been very friendly to goals. Put those things together and you get a game where chances should arrive at both ends.
The xG projection points the same way, with MTK at 1.3 and Kisvárda at 1.2, which sits neatly around a 2-1 type of contest. That’s the scoreline to lean into. MTK have enough home edge to nick it, but Kisvárda’s ability to make life awkward — even in a limited way — should keep the total moving. If you wanted a slightly sharper angle, both teams to score has a fair case too, but Over 2.5 is the stronger call.