TheSlovenian PrvaLiga (Slovene:Prva slovenska nogometna liga,pronounced[ˈpərʋaslɔˈʋeːnskanɔɡɔˈmɛtnaˈliːɡa]), currently named Prva liga Telemach due to sponsorship reasons, also known by the abbreviation 1. SNL, is the top level of theSlovenian football league system. Contested by ten clubs, it operates on a system of promotion and relegation with theSlovenian Second League (2. SNL). Seasons typically run from July to May with each team playing 36 matches.
The competition was founded in 1991, after Slovenia became an independent country. From 1920 until the end of the 1990–91 season, theSlovenian Republic League was a lower division within the Yugoslav league system, although the top Slovenian clubs usually competed in the highest levels of the Yugoslav league system. The league is governed by theFootball Association of Slovenia.Celje andMaribor are the only two founding clubs that have never been relegated from the league since its foundation in 1991.
Matjaž Kek won the PrvaLiga title as a footballer and manager.[4]
In 1991, theFootball Association of Slovenia separated from theFootball Association of Yugoslavia and established its own competitions, where Slovenian clubs competed for the title of Slovenian national champions.[2][3] As of 2025,Celje and Maribor remain the only two founding clubs that have never been relegated from the league since the inaugural 1991–92 edition.[5] The competition format and the number of clubs in the league have changed over time, ranging from 21 clubs in the first season to 10 clubs in its present form.[1][3]
Olimpija won the first title.[1] They had a long tradition of playing in the Yugoslav First League and their squad was still composed of players from that era.[3] Olimpija dominated the league and won a further three championships beforeGorica won their first in the1995–96 season.[1] Following Gorica's success, Maribor won their first championship in1997.[1] This started a record-breaking streak of seven successive league championships which came to an end when Gorica won their second title in the2003–04 season.[1] The club fromNova Gorica went on to win an additional two titles, becoming the third club to win three consecutive championships.[1] During the2006–07 season,Domžale won their first title, a feat they repeated the following season.[1] Between2008–09 and2018–19, Maribor became a major force in Slovenian football for the second time, winning 8 out of 11 titles in that period, including five in a row from 2011 to 2015.[1]
Maribor is the most successful club; they have won the championship 16 times.[1] Seven of Maribor's titles came during the late 1990s and early 2000s when the club was led alternately bymanagersBojan Prašnikar,Ivo Šušak andMatjaž Kek.[6][7]Darko Milanič has led the club to four championships between 2009 and 2013.[8] Olimpija have won four titles, all in successive years between 1992 and 1995.[1] Tied with four championships are Gorica, which first won the title in 1996 and an additional three in consecutive years between 2004 and 2006,[1] andOlimpija Ljubljana, aphoenix club of Olimpija, which won its first title in 2016. They are followed by Celje and Domžale with two titles each.Koper andMura have won one title each, in 2010 and 2021, respectively.[1] Maribor have won the mostdoubles, winning the league and theSlovenian Cup four times in the same season.[9]
PrvaLiga is contested on around-robin basis. Each team play against each other four times, twice at home and twice away, for a total of 36 rounds. Teams receive three points for a win, one point for a draw, and no points for a loss. Teams are ranked according to the total sum of points and if two teams are tied, head-to-head score is used as the first classification criteria. At the end of the season, the top three clubs qualify for theUEFA Champions League and theUEFA Conference League qualifying rounds, with the ninth-placed team being qualified for the relegation play-offs and the bottom one being relegated to theSlovenian Second League.
The current system is in use since 2005. Between 1993 and 1995, a regular double round-robin format with 16 clubs was used, before being replaced with the current ten-club system for three seasons until 1998. Triple round-robin with twelve clubs and two direct relegations was then used between 1998 and 2003. In the next two seasons, in 2003–04 and 2004–05, the league was divided into the championship and relegation groups after the end of the regular season.
Correct as of 6 June 2025.[15] The table shows the position of the Slovenian PrvaLiga, based on its UEFA coefficient country ranking, and the four leagues closest to the PrvaLiga's position (two leagues with a higher coefficient and two with a lower coefficient).
The current trophy is being presented since the 2012–13 season and was designed byMirko Bratuša, a sculptor fromNegova. It depicts a ball with eleven star-shaped holes and inside there are eleven players holding together and looking at the sky. It is made of brass, bronze and gold, and weighs 13 kilograms (29 lb; 2 st 1 lb).[17]
The first Player of the Year awards were presented by Slovenian newspaperDnevnik in the early 1990s. Between 1996 and 1999, they were presented byEkipa, and since 2004, the awards have been organized by the Union of Professional Football Players of Slovenia (SPINS).
During the early years, the league was broadcast only by the nationalpublic broadcasting television,RTV Slovenija. From 2008 until 2012, they had joint broadcasts withŠport TV, and from 2013 until 2015 withPlanet TV.[13] In the 2015–16 and 2016–17 seasons, the league was broadcast exclusively onKanal A.[44] In the 2017–18 season, the league was broadcast jointly by Kanal A and Šport TV. In the first round of the season, all five games were broadcast live for the first time in league's history.[45]
Between 2018–19 and 2020–21, the league was broadcast jointly by Planet TV and RTV Slovenija.[46][47] With the start of the 2019–20 season, one match per week is also broadcast on localSportklub channels in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia.[48] From 2021–22 onwards, the league is being broadcast by Sportklub and Šport TV; all five matches per round are broadcast live, with Sportklub broadcasting four matches and Šport TV one.[49] From the 2022–23 season, the league is also broadcast in Poland on Sportklub Polska.[50]
^"Statistični pregled (vse sezone)" [Statistical overview (all seasons)] (in Slovenian). Slovenian PrvaLiga.Archived from the original on 26 May 2019. Retrieved30 May 2023.