| Other names |
|
|---|---|
| Location | Luton,Bedfordshire andWatford,Hertfordshire |
| Teams | |
| First meeting |
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| Latest meeting |
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| Next meeting | TBD |
| Statistics | |
| Meetings total | 124 |
| All-time series | 56–29–39 Luton Town |
| Largest victory |
|
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South-eastern Englishfootball clubsLuton Town andWatford have beenrivals since their respective formations in the late 19th century.[3] The clubs are respectively fromLuton,Bedfordshire, andWatford,Hertfordshire, and for this reason a match between the two teams is sometimes called a "Beds–HertsDerby".[4] Another name occasionally used in the press is "M1 Derby", which comes from theM1 motorway, which passes both towns.[5][6]
Luton currently play atKenilworth Road which has a capacity of 12,000. Watford currently play atVicarage Road, with a capacity of 22,200.
The clubs were both founded during the 1880s, with Watford having been founded in 1881, and Luton Town in 1885. The first recorded game between both teams took place on 5 December 1885, when Watford Rovers beat Luton Town 1–0 in afriendly match at Vicarage Meadow. The two clubs met competitively for the first time in the third round qualifying of the1898–99 FA Cup on 29 October 1898 atDunstable Road. This resulted in a 2–2 draw, with Luton winning the replay 1–0 atCassio Road on 2 November 1898.
In total, there have been 123 meetings between both teams. Luton Town hold the superior record in these matches, with 56 victories to Watford's 38, as well as 29 draws. The most decisive result in a Luton Town – Watford game was Luton Town's 5–0 victory atKenilworth Road in January 1926. There have been three instances of a 4–0 score, with two won by Watford. In September 1929, Luton beat Watford 4–0 atVicarage Road. In October 1997, Watford beat Luton 4–0 at Kenilworth Road, and again 25 years later, in October 2022 at Vicarage Road.
Luton Town and Watford played each other regularly in theSouthern League and, following the formation ofThird Division South in season1920–21, played every season until1936–37, when Luton won promotion toDivision Two. This, and theSecond World War separated the teams from league competition until1963–64 when they met again, this time inDivision Three. The animosity between the clubs, both players and fans, intensified during the late 1960s and the 1970s, and reached a peak during the 1980s, when both teams played in the top-flightFirst Division.[7] Watford were relegated at the end of the1987–88 season, while Luton followedfour years later. The clubs played against each other regularly for six seasons during the 1990s, in both thesecond and third tiers of English football. From the1997–98 season, at the end of which Watford won promotion to the second tier, both teams rarely met, as Watford played in higher divisions than Luton during this time. In the last sixteen seasons there have been only six league meetings between the two teams, played during the2005–06, the2020–21 and the2022–23 seasons. As of the2025–26 in English football season, Watford currently play in theChampionship while Luton Town currently play inEFL League One.
The first match between the two clubs can be dated to 5 December 1885, as Watford Rovers hosted Luton Town in afriendly. Watford beat Luton 1–0 at Vicarage Meadow in the inaugural match. The first match at Luton'sDallow Lane was played on 20 March 1886, where Watford won 3–0. Luton's first success in the fixture came at Vicarage Meadow on 16 October of the same year, where they emerged with a 4–1 victory.[8] Two friendlies between Luton Town and West Herts, as Watford Rovers were now more commonly known, took place during the1891–92 season; West Herts won 4–3 at Luton and the match at West Herts was a draw. Five more friendly matches were played over the next three seasons, all Luton victories.
In the 1930s, aVauxhall plant was speculated to be built in Watford, however due to the popularity of the Luton Body van at the time it was subsequently decided that the plant would be built in Luton.
Luton Town did not join a league until the1894–95 season, where they joined theSouthern League. West Herts also joined the Southern Leaguetwo years later. However, as Luton had left the league the same year, a league meeting did not occur. The first competitive meeting of the two clubs came on 29 October 1898, as Luton drew against Watford in the1898–99FA Cup third qualifying round. The second meeting came soon after, as the 2–2 draw at Luton meant that a replay was needed. Luton won the replay 1–0 at Watford. The next season saw Luton draw against Watford again, this time Luton needed only one attempt to beat Watford 3–2.
Luton rejoined the Southern League in 1900,[9] and the fixture then became a regular one in the Southern League calendar except for the1903–04,1912–13 and1913–14 seasons that the clubs spent in different divisions. Luton held the superior record, winning 13 Southern League meetings to Watford's eight. The1920–21 season saw both clubs made members ofthe Football League when the Southern League First Division was incorporated as theFootball League Third Division.[10]
Matches occurred regularly in this division until 1937, when Luton Town were promoted to theSecond Division.[11] ASouthern Professional Floodlit Cup meeting during the1956–57 season was won 4–3 by Luton atKenilworth Road, and was the only meeting until Luton dropped back to theThird Division for the1963–64 season.[12] Luton were nearly relegated again, but in the last home game of the season, against Watford, Luton won 2–1 to both ensure survival and deny Watford promotion.[13] Luton were relegated to theFourth Divisiona year later, with Watford winning both matches held over a two-day period at Christmas. The game at Kenilworth Road finished 4–2 to Watford, and two days later Watford won 2–0 at Vicarage Road. Luton were not promoted to the Third Division again until the1967–68 season, thus placing the derby on hold.[14]
The1968–69 season saw Watford promoted as champions of the Third Division, having led the division for almost the entire season. This led to the crowd violence associated with the fixture growing in prominence, and Watford won the first league clash with Luton that season 1–0 at Vicarage Road. The return match at Kenilworth Road was originally intended to take place on Boxing Day, but was abandoned due to fog with the game tied at 1–1. The game was eventually played after several postponements on 30 April 1969, by which time Watford had already been promoted as champions. The match resulted in Luton winning 2–1, and saw three players sent off, two from Luton, one from Watford. After the game, incidents occurred between fans inSt Albans, a town betweenLuton andWatford, home to fans of both sides.[7] Luton were promoted to the Second Division a year later to keep the fixture going. However, Watford's relegation at the end of the1971–72 season ended it once more.

The sides didn't meet again until the1979–80 season, when Watford were promoted back to the second tier. At the end of the1981–82 season, Luton won theSecond Division, with Watford coming second and both teams were promoted to theFirst Division. In their first season in the top flight, Watford finished Runners-Up to ChampionsLiverpool (and so qualified for European football in theUEFA Cup for the following season), beating Luton 5–2 at Vicarage Road along the way. Luton avoided relegation in the last minute of the last match of the season. The match atKenilworth Road on 28 April 1984 intensified the rivalry even further, as despite Watford's 2–1 victory, captainWilf Rostron was sent off after a series of goading tackles from Luton players; meaning that he would miss the1984 FA Cup Final. Despite being favourites on the day, Watford lost 2–0 toEverton. To this day many Watford supporters blame their loss on the absence of Rostron, and therefore on Luton.[7]
The fixture continued until the1987–88 season when Watford were relegated to the second tier. Luton were further relegated at the end of the1991–92 season. Both teams were relegated to the third tier at the end of the1995–96 season. During the1997–98 season, Watford finished as Champions of the third-tier Second Division and won 4–0 at Kenilworth Road along the way, with all four goals coming within the first 32 minutes of play. The match was marred by yet more crowd trouble as Luton fans tried to prevent Watford fans leaving the ground and small pockets of running battles occurred towards the railway station. As a result, the police took no chances for the return fixture at Vicarage Road: a large police presence ensured no return of the October violence. The game ended in a 1–1 draw. With Watford's promotion to the second tier at the end of that season, the fixture was over once more.

ALeague Cup meeting atVicarage Road on 10 September 2002 was marred by hooliganism and saw fighting inWatford town centre, railway station and approaches to the football ground before the match. Before the game, Luton fans invaded the pitch several times leading to the kick-off being delayed by 15 minutes. A minute's silence, intended to mark the first anniversary of the11 September attacks, was also abandoned. When the match finally got under way, Luton went on to win 2–1.[15] After the game, prosecutions were brought against 29 supporters; 25 from Luton, some of whom were banned from all football grounds for life, and four from Watford.
The two clubs were briefly in the same division when Luton were promoted to theChampionship and played each other during the2005–06 season. Watford won 2–1 atKenilworth Road on 2 January 2006, and the return fixture was a 1–1 draw atVicarage Road on 9 April. Watford ended the season with promotion to thePremier League, while Luton finished 10th. Although Watford were relegated back to theChampionship at the end of the2006–07 season, Luton were concurrently relegated back toLeague One. Luton were further relegated at the end of the2007–08 season toLeague Two; and another relegation end of the2008–09 season saw Luton in theNational League, known at the time as the Conference Premier. This was largely due to docked points throughout these seasons as a result of financial mismanagement.[16]
The league rivalry between the two clubs reignited during the2020–21 season for the first time in 16 seasons as Luton battled to remain in theChampionship, and Watford had been relegated from thePremier League. However, fans were not able to attend the matches due to theCOVID-19 pandemic. Watford won the first fixture 1–0 atVicarage Road on 26 September 2020 with a goal fromJoão Pedro (35').[17] In the reverse fixture atKenilworth Road on 17 April 2021, Luton won the game 1–0 with a penalty fromJames Collins (78').[18] Watford were promoted back to thePremier League at the end of the season, temporarily placing the rivalry on hold.[19]
Watford were relegated from thePremier League at the end of the2021–22 season, resuming the rivalry for the duration of the2022–23Championship season. The first fixture was played atVicarage Road on 23 October 2022 in front of a crowd of 19,282. It marked the first time supporters of either club had been able to attend the derby in 16 years. Watford won the fixture 4–0 which saw goals fromKeinan Davis (3'),William Troost-Ekong (45'),João Pedro (57') andIsmaïla Sarr (79'). Luton'sGabriel Osho performed a late challenge onKen Sema which saw him get a straight red card (83'). A police presence kept the rival supporters apart, and no arrests were made. The reverse fixture took place atKenilworth Road on 1 April 2023 and saw a 2–0 Luton win, with goals fromGabe Osho (28') andAllan Campbell (90+1').[20] Luton were promoted to thePremier League through theChampionship play-offs at the end of the2022–23 season, placing the rivalry on hold.[21]
Ahead ofColdplay's headline performance atBBC Radio 1's Big Weekend atStockwood Park in Luton on 26 May 2024, locals campaigned to change the song "Yellow" (Watford's colour) to "Orange" (Luton's colour).[22] In the event, Coldplay performed the original lyrics of "Yellow" but also closed the show with "Orange", a tribute to Luton Town F.C. written byChris Martin the day before.[23]
Following Luton Town's relegation from the Premier League, the derby was resumed for the2024–25 Championship season. On 19 October 2024, Luton and Watford met again at Kenilworth Road. Luton secured a decisive 3–0 victory over their rivals, with goals fromJordan Clark (11'),Carlton Morris (47'), and a stoppage-time strike byJacob Brown (90+1').[24] This result further bolstered Luton Town’s dominance over Watford at home in recent seasons.[25]

Up to and including 19 October 2024, when Luton won 3–0 in a league match. There have been 123 competitive first-class meetings between the two teams since the first non-friendly meeting in 1898.[26][27]
| Match result | Football League | Southern League | FA Cup | League Cup | Others | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Luton Town win | 35 | 13 | 5 | 2 | 1 | 56 |
| draw | 19 | 5 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 29 |
| Watford win | 28 | 8 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 39 |
| Team | Number of top-flight seasons | Best top-flight finish | FA Cup | Football League Cup | UEFA Cup |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Luton Town | 17 (1955–60,1974–75, 1982–92, 2023–24) | 7th (1986–87) | Finalists (1) (1958–59) Semi-finalists (4) | Winners (1) (1987–88) Finalists (2)(1988–89) | [note 1] |
| Watford | 14 | 2nd (1982–83) | Finalists (2) Semi-finalists (7) | Semi-finalists (2) | 3rd round (1983–84) |
Luton Town at home[edit]
|
| Date | Venue | Score | Competition |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 November 1898 | Market Street | 0–1 | FA Cup |
| 12 January 1901 | Cassio Road | 2–0 | Southern League Div. 1 |
| 16 November 1901 | Cassio Road | 1–2 | FA Cup |
| 22 February 1902 | Cassio Road | 2–0 | Southern League Div. 1 |
| 22 November 1902 | Cassio Road | 0–1 | Southern League Div. 1 |
| 21 April 1905 | Cassio Road | 3–0 | Southern League Div. 1 |
| 13 April 1906 | Cassio Road | 1–1 | Southern League Div. 1 |
| 29 March 1907 | Cassio Road | 2–2 | Southern League Div. 1 |
| 17 April 1908 | Cassio Road | 2–1 | Southern League Div. 1 |
| 9 April 1909 | Cassio Road | 0–3 | Southern League Div. 1 |
| 22 September 1909 | Cassio Road | 1–1 | Southern League Div. 1 |
| 26 December 1910 | Cassio Road | 1–0 | Southern League Div. 1 |
| 26 December 1911 | Cassio Road | 0–1 | Southern League Div. 1 |
| 2 April 1915 | Cassio Road | 2–4 | Southern League Div. 1 |
| 2 April 1920 | Cassio Road | 4–2 | Southern League Div. 1 |
| 25 March 1921 | Cassio Road | 1–0 | Third Division South |
| 8 April 1922 | Cassio Road | 4–1 | Third Division South |
| 18 November 1922 | Vicarage Road | 2–1 | Third Division South |
| 10 November 1923 | Vicarage Road | 0–0 | Third Division South |
| 25 December 1924 | Vicarage Road | 1–1 | Third Division South |
| 12 September 1925 | Vicarage Road | 2–0 | Third Division South |
| 30 October 1926 | Vicarage Road | 2–1 | Third Division South |
| 24 September 1927 | Vicarage Road | 1–0 | Third Division South |
| 20 October 1928 | Vicarage Road | 3–2 | Third Division South |
| 14 September 1929 | Vicarage Road | 0–4 | Third Division South |
| 20 September 1930 | Vicarage Road | 1–0 | Third Division South |
| 13 December 1930 | Vicarage Road | 3–1 | FA Cup |
| 13 April 1932 | Vicarage Road | 3–1 | Third Division South |
| 22 October 1932 | Vicarage Road | 4–1 | Third Division South |
| 3 March 1934 | Vicarage Road | 0–1 | Third Division South |
| 23 March 1935 | Vicarage Road | 2–2 | Third Division South |
| 9 November 1935 | Vicarage Road | 1–3 | Third Division South |
| 20 February 1937 | Vicarage Road | 1–3 | Third Division South |
| 19 October 1963 | Vicarage Road | 2–0 | Third Division |
| 28 December 1964 | Vicarage Road | 2–0 | Third Division |
| 5 October 1968 | Vicarage Road | 1–0 | Third Division |
| 12 December 1970 | Vicarage Road | 0–1 | Second Division |
| 13 November 1971 | Vicarage Road | 2–1 | Second Division |
| 26 December 1979 | Vicarage Road | 0–1 | Second Division |
| 11 November 1980 | Vicarage Road | 0–1 | Second Division |
| 20 February 1982 | Vicarage Road | 1–1 | Second Division |
| 4 April 1983 | Vicarage Road | 5–2 | First Division |
| 26 November 1983 | Vicarage Road | 1–2 | First Division |
| 10 January 1984 | Vicarage Road | 4–3 | FA Cup |
| 6 March 1985 | Vicarage Road | 2–2 | FA Cup |
| 19 March 1985 | Vicarage Road | 3–0 | First Division |
| 23 November 1985 | Vicarage Road | 1–2 | First Division |
| 21 April 1987 | Vicarage Road | 2–0 | First Division |
| 12 December 1987 | Vicarage Road | 0–1 | First Division |
| 15 September 1992 | Vicarage Road | 0–0 | Anglo-Italian Cup |
| 3 April 1993 | Vicarage Road | 0–0 | First Division |
| 31 August 1993 | Vicarage Road | 2–1 | Anglo-Italian Cup |
| 19 December 1993 | Vicarage Road | 2–2 | First Division |
| 17 September 1994 | Vicarage Road | 2–4 | First Division |
| 21 November 1995 | Vicarage Road | 1–1 | First Division |
| 29 October 1996 | Vicarage Road | 1–1 | Second Division |
| 14 February 1998 | Vicarage Road | 1–1 | Second Division |
| 10 September 2002 | Vicarage Road | 1–2 | League Cup |
| 9 April 2006 | Vicarage Road | 1–1 | Championship |
| 26 September 2020 | Vicarage Road | 1–0 | Championship |
| 23 October 2022 | Vicarage Road | 4–0 | Championship |
| 23 February 2025 | Vicarage Road | 2–0 | Championship |
| Luton Town wins | Draws | Watford wins |
|---|---|---|
| 18 | 15 | 29 |
The Rigby-Taylor Cup was a competition played between 1953 and 1962 in order to give "the friendly rivalry between Luton Town and Watford an organised and competitive basis".[35] The annual contest came about when floodlights were installed at Watford'sVicarage Road ground in 1953;[35] to mark the occasion, the decision was made to play a match under the new lights against Luton Town, against whom the club had not contested a competitive match since 1937.[36] A home-and-away system was agreed upon, and the first match, billed as the first leg of the "Watford F.C. Invitation Cup", took place on 13 October 1953: a 1–1 draw at Vicarage Road. The competition had been renamed "The Rigby-Taylor Cup" after Watford's chairman, T. Rigby-Taylor, by the time of the second leg on 24 March 1954, atKenilworth Road; Luton beat Watford 4–1 to win 5–2 on aggregate and thus claim the inaugural title.[35]
After the first season, the two-legged basis was abandoned in favour of a single match at Vicarage Road. The competition was then suspended from 1958 to 1961 due to FA Cup and League engagements. After returning for two seasons, the1962–63 fixture was abandoned due to harsh weather – the annual match never returned.[35]
There were seven matches played over the course of six editions of the competition: the first (1953–54) was a two-legged competition, while the remaining five consisted of a single match. Of the seven matches, four were Luton victories, two were wins for Watford and one was a draw. Luton Town won the competition four times to Watford's two; the trophy, a silver, 12 inches (30 cm) tall, two-handled cup, was last won by Watford, who have since retained it.[35]
| Season | Date | Venue | Home | Score | Away |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1953–54 | 13 October 1953 | Vicarage Road | Watford | 1–1 | Luton Town |
| 24 March 1954 | Kenilworth Road | Luton Town | 4–1 | Watford | |
| Luton Town win 5–2 on aggregate | |||||
| 1954–55 | 14 March 1955 | Vicarage Road | Watford | 0–2 | Luton Town |
| 1955–56 | 12 March 1956 | Vicarage Road | Watford | 0–2 | Luton Town |
| 1956–57 | 26 January 1957 | Vicarage Road | Watford | 3–4 | Luton Town |
| 1957–58 | Competition suspended due to fixture congestion | ||||
| 1958–59 | |||||
| 1959–60 | |||||
| 1960–61 | 20 March 1961 | Vicarage Road | Watford | 2–1 | Luton Town |
| 1961–62 | 30 April 1962 | Vicarage Road | Watford | 2–0 | Luton Town |
| 1962–63 | Competition abandoneddue to snow | ||||
The competition saw 23 goals scored, 14 for Luton and 9 for Watford; the individual player who scored the most goals was Luton Town'sGordon Turner, who appeared in all seven matches and scored five goals.[35]
Luton Town[edit]
| Watford[edit]
|
[A] UEFA Cup spot is ... offered to the [League Cup] winner