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Future Event
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| [ Report] | |||||||
| Event | 2025–26 EFL Cup | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Date | 22 March 2026 | ||||||
| Venue | Wembley Stadium, London | ||||||
← 2025 2027 → | |||||||
The 2026 EFL Cup final will be the final match of the 2025–26 EFL Cup. The match will take place on 22 March 2026 at Wembley Stadium in London, England, between rivals Arsenal and Manchester City. The clubs have met in the 2018 EFL Cup Final as well as the 2014 and 2023 FA Community Shields.
This will be Arsenal's ninth League Cup final, the first EFL Cup final since losing to City in 2018, and the first appearance in any final since the 2020 FA Cup Final. They are seeking their first major trophy since winning the 2019–20 FA Cup and a first League Cup title since the 1992–93 edition.
This will be Manchester City's tenth League Cup final and the first EFL Cup final since their most recent win in 2021 to secure their eighth overall and joint-record fourth consecutive title. They are looking for their first major cup competition title since winning the 2022–23 UEFA Champions League.
Route to the final[]
- Main article: 2025–26 EFL Cup
Arsenal[]
| Round | Opposition | Score |
|---|---|---|
| 3 | Port Vale (A) | 2–0 |
| 4 | Brighton & Hove Albion (H) | 2–0 |
| QF | Crystal Palace (H) | 1–1 (8–7 p) |
| SF | Chelsea (A) | 3–2 |
| Chelsea (H) | 1–0 | |
| Key: (H) = Home; (A) = Away | ||
As a Premier League club involved in UEFA competitions, Arsenal entered in the third round and were drawn away to EFL League One club Port Vale. At Vale Park, on 24 September 2025, Arsenal won 2–0 with goals from Eberechi Eze—his first goal for the club—and Leandro Trossard. In the fourth round Arsenal were drawn at home to fellow Premier League club Brighton & Hove Albion. At the Emirates Stadium on 29 October 2025, Arsenal won 2–0 again with goals for the Gunners from Ethan Nwaneri and Bukayo Saka which sent the Gunners through to the quarter-finals. In the quarter-finals Arsenal were drawn against another Premier League club in Crystal Palace. At the Emirates Stadium on 23 December 2025, Arsenal drew 1–1 with a own goal from a Maxence Lacroix was equalised by Marc Guéhi. As the game finished level after regulation time, it went straight to a penalty shoot-out which Arsenal won 8–7 with Martin Ødegaard, Declan Rice, Saka, Trossard, Mikel Merino, Riccardo Calafiori, Jurriën Timber and William Saliba all scoring their spot-kicks for the Gunners and Jean-Philippe Mateta, Justin Devenny, Will Hughes, Borna Sosa, Jefferson Lerma, Adam Wharton and Christantus Uche all converted their penalty kicks; Lacroix missed the decisive penalty kick to send Arsenal through to the semi-finals. In the semi-finals Arsenal were drawn against another fellow Premier League club and rivals Chelsea over two legs. Arsenal won the first-leg 3–2 at Stamford Bridge on 14 January 2026 with two goals for Chelsea from Alejandro Garnacho and goals for Arsenal from Ben White, Viktor Gyökeres and Martín Zubimendi. Arsenal won the second-leg 1–0 at the Emirates Stadium on 3 February 2026 with a goal from former Chelsea player Kai Havertz to give Arsenal a 4–2 aggregate victory and send them through to the final.
Manchester City[]
| Round | Opposition | Score |
|---|---|---|
| 3 | Huddersfield Town (A) | 2–0 |
| 4 | Swansea City (A) | 3–1 |
| QF | Brentford (H) | 2–0 |
| SF | Newcastle United (A) | 2–0 |
| Newcastle United (H) | 3–1 | |
| Key: (H) = Home; (A) = Away | ||
As a Premier League club involved in UEFA competitions, Manchester City entered in the third round and were drawn away to EFL League One club Huddersfield Town. At Kirklees Stadium, on 24 September 2025, Manchester City won 2–0 with goals from Phil Foden and Savinho. In the fourth round, they were drawn away to EFL Championship side Swansea City, played away at Swansea.com Stadium on 29 October 2025. The match finished 3–1 for the visitors, with Gonçalo Franco opening the scoring for Swansea City before three goals from Jérémy Doku, Omar Marmoush and Rayan Cherki for Manchester City. In the quarter-finals, City were drawn at home to fellow Premier League side Brentford, where they won 2–0 at City of Manchester Stadium on 17 December 2025 with goals from Cherki and Savinho. In the two-legged semi-final, City were drawn against cup holders Newcastle United, with the first leg played at St James' Park on 13 January 2026. City won 2–0 courtesy of freshly-signed Antoine Semenyo and Cherki. The second leg was played on 4 February, with Manchester City winning 3–1. Marmoush scored twice and Tijjani Reijnders scored once before Anthony Elanga picked up a consolation goal for Newcastle, giving Manchester City a 5–1 aggregate victory and sending them to the final.
Match[]
Background[]
This will see Arsenal play in their first major cup final since the 2020 FA Cup Final against North-West London derby rivals Chelsea for their first trophy under the management of former Arsenal and Everton player Mikel Arteta. This would see a repeat of the 2018 EFL Cup Final where Arsène Wenger's Arsenal lost 3–0 to City with Arteta as Pep Guardiola's assistant manager. Both Arsenal and Manchester City could still win the quadruple of the EFL Cup, the FA Cup, the UEFA Champions League and the Premier League, which would be the first an English team has achieved such a feat.
The clubs have been rivals since 2008, and competed for the Premier League title in the 2022–23 and 2023–24 seasons, with City coming out on top on both occasions.
Details[]
| 22 March 2026 TBA GMT |
Arsenal | – | Manchester City | Wembley Stadium, London |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ Report] |
See also[]
External links[]
| EFL Cup |
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| Manchester City F.C. matches - 2025–26 |
| 2025–26 Premier League |
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Wolverhampton Wanderers (a) · Tottenham Hotspur (h) · Brighton & Hove Albion (a) · Manchester United (h) · Arsenal (a) · Burnley (h) · Brentford (a) · Everton (h) · Aston Villa (a) · Bournemouth (h) · Liverpool (h) · Newcastle United (a) · Leeds United (h) · Fulham (a) · Sunderland (h) · Crystal Palace (a) · West Ham United (h) · Nottingham Forest (a) · Sunderland (a) · Chelsea (h) · Brighton & Hove Albion (h) · Manchester United (a) · Wolverhampton Wanderers (h) · Tottenham Hotspur (a) · Liverpool (a) · Fulham (h) · Newcastle United (h) · Leeds United (a) · Nottingham Forest (h) · West Ham United (a) · Crystal Palace (h) · Chelsea (a) · Arsenal (h) · Burnley (a) · Everton (a) · Brentford (h) · Bournemouth (a) · Aston Villa (h) |
| 2025–26 FA Cup |
| 2025–26 EFL Cup |
| Huddersfield Town (a) · Swansea City (a) · Brentford (a) · Newcastle United (a) · Newcastle United (h) |
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Napoli (h) · Monaco (a) · Villarreal (a) · Borussia Dortmund (h) · Bayer Leverkusen (h) · Real Madrid (a) · Bodø/Glimt (a) · Galatasaray (h) |





