Liga de Expansión MX

Liga de Expansión MX
Organising bodyFederación Mexicana de Fútbol (FMF)
Founded2020; 6 years ago (2020)
CountryMexico
ConfederationCONCACAF
Number of clubs15
Level on pyramid2
Promotion toLiga MX
(suspended)
Relegation toLiga Premier
(suspended)
Domestic cupCampeón de Campeones de la Liga de Expansión MX
Current championsJaiba Brava
(2nd title)
Most championshipsAtlante
(3 titles)
Broadcaster(s)AYM Sports
ESPN[1]
Hi Sports
ITV Deportes
Latin American Sports TV
TV Azteca[2]
Websiteligabbvaexpansion.mx
Current: Clausura 2026 Liga de Expansión MX season

Liga de Expansión MX, officially named Liga BBVA Expansión MX for sponsorship reasons, is a professional association football league in Mexico and the second level of the Mexican football league system. The league has 15 participating clubs, the season is divided into two short tournaments (Apertura and Clausura), the champions of each tournament are decided by a final knockout phase, commonly known as liguilla.

The inaugural edition was the Guard1anes 2020 tournament, with Tampico Madero finishing as the first champions in history. In all, eleven editions of the league have been held.

It was founded as part of the FMF's Stabilization Project, which has the primary objective of rescuing the financially troubled clubs from the Ascenso MX and prevent the disappearance of a second level division in Mexico.[3] The project also attempts for Liga MX and former Ascenso MX clubs to consolidate stable projects with strong administration, finances, and infrastructure.

Atlante is the most successful club with three titles, followed by Tapatío and Jaiba Brava with two titles each. In all, seven clubs have won the competition at least once.

History

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On 20 February 2020, the presidents of the Liga MX clubs, the Ascenso MX clubs and the FMF executives had a meeting, in which different topics were discussed with the intent of strengthening the two main leagues in the country.[4]

On 26 June 2020, the league was officially presented, the inaugural tournament had 16 founding clubs: Alebrijes de Oaxaca, Atlante, Atlético Morelia, Cancún, Celaya, Cimarrones de Sonora, Correcaminos UAT, Dorados de Sinaloa, Leones Negros UdeG, Mineros de Zacatecas, Pumas Morelos, Tampico Madero, Tapatío, Tepatitlán, Tlaxcala and Venados.[5][6]

On 22 May 2023, the Liga MX owners assembly approved a reform for the league that should have been carried out in 2024. This reform planned that the 18 member teams of the Liga MX should have had a U-23 team in the Liga de Expansión, which would have represented a merger between the Expansión MX and the Liga MX U–23.[7] However, in May 2024 the proposal was scrapped due to opposition from the owners of the Liga de Expansión teams, as they considered that the project represented a degradation of the participating clubs.[8]

In May 2025, a group of ten league member clubs filed a lawsuit before the Court of Arbitration for Sport seeking the reinstatement of promotion and relegation between the Liga de Expansión and Liga MX;[9] four teams subsequently dropped the lawsuit, the six remaining teams formed an opposing bloc within the league, which was formed with the aim of combating some of the measures that had occurred previously,[10] their first triumph was the rejection of the relocation of Celaya F.C. to Veracruz and the sale of the affiliation certificate between Cimarrones de Sonora and Club Jaiba Brava.[11]

On 4 September 2025, the Court of Arbitration for Sport issued its verdict on the dispute filed by the six Liga de Expansión clubs seeking to reinstate promotion to Liga MX. The ruling established the return of promotion starting with the 2026–27 season;[12] however, the CAS allowed the Mexican Football Federation to retain the authority to establish the requirements for clubs to be promoted to the top flight of Mexican football, returning to a situation similar to that in place before the creation of the Liga de Expansión in 2020.[13]

Competition format

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Regular phase

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Liga de Expansión MX uses a single table of 15 clubs that play two short tournaments each season (Apertura and Clausura), resulting in two champions per year. The season begins with the Apertura (from July to December), and ends with the Clausura (from January to May), similar to the Liga MX calendar. This format corresponds with FIFA's world footballing calendar, which opens in July/August and closes in April/May. The top 8 clubs advances to the final phase for each tournament.

Final phase

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The final phase, commonly known as liguilla, consisting of 8 clubs that qualify for the tournament based on regular phase point total — the eight highest-placed advance to the quarter-finals. The clubs are paired according to seeding, with the highest-seeded club playing with the lowest-seeded. Each tie is played over two legs with the winners on aggregate score advancing to the next round. In case of a tie on aggregate, the highest-seeded club advances, extra time and penalties in case of a tie will only be played in the final. At the end of the season, the two champions of the year (Apertura and Clausura) compete in the Super cup of the division, which is named Campeón de Campeones de la Liga de Expansión MX, similar to the Super cup held for Liga MX.

Participating clubs

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2025–26 season

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The 2025–26 Liga de Expansión MX season has the following 15 participating clubs.

Club Position in Apertura 2025 First season Total seasons First season of current spell Consecutive seasons Titles Last title
Atlante 1st 2020–21 11 2020–21 11 3 Clausura 2024
Atlético La Paz 10th 2022–23 7 2022–23 7 0
Atlético Morelia 7th 2020–21 11 2020–21 11 1 Clausura 2022
Cancún 2nd 2020–21 11 2020–21 11 1 Apertura 2023
Irapuato 4th 2025–26 1 2025–26 1 0
Jaiba Brava 3rd 2020–21 7 2024–25 3 2 Apertura 2025
Oaxaca 13th 2020–21 11 2020–21 11 0
Sinaloa 15th 2020–21 11 2020–21 11 0
Tapatío 11th 2020–21 11 2020–21 11 2 Apertura 2024
Tepatitlán 8th 2020–21 11 2020–21 11 1 Guard1anes 2020
Tlaxcala 12th 2020–21 11 2020–21 11 0
Venados 9th 2020–21 11 2020–21 11 0
UAT 14th 2020–21 11 2020–21 11 0
UdeG 6th 2020–21 11 2020–21 11 1 Clausura 2025
Zacatecas 5th 2020–21 11 2020–21 11 0

Stadiums and locations

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Club City Stadium Capacity
Atlante Zacatepec Agustín "Coruco" Díaz 24,313
Atlético La Paz La Paz Guaycura 5,209
Atlético Morelia Morelia Morelos 35,000
Cancún Cancún Andrés Quintana Roo 18,844
Irapuato[14] Irapuato, Guanajuato Sergio León Chávez 25,000
Jaiba Brava Tampico & Ciudad Madero Tamaulipas 19,667
Oaxaca Oaxaca Tecnológico de Oaxaca 16,000
Sinaloa Culiacán Dorados 20,108
Tapatío Zapopan Akron 45,364
Tepatitlán Tepatitlán Gregorio "Tepa" Gómez 8,085
Tlaxcala Tlaxcala Tlahuicole 11,135
Venados Mérida Carlos Iturralde 15,087
UAT Ciudad Victoria Marte R. Gómez 10,520
UdeG Guadalajara Jalisco 56,713
Zacatecas Zacatecas Carlos Vega Villalba 20,777

Performances

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Rank Club Titles Runners-up Winning years
1 Atlante 3 2 Ape–2021, Ape–2022, Cla–2024
2 Tampico Madero/Jaiba Brava 2 2 Guard–2020, Ape–2025
Tapatío 2 0 Cla–2023, Ape–2024
4 Atlético Morelia 1 2 Cla–2022
UdeG 1 1 Cla–2025
Tepatitlán 1 0 Guard–2021
Cancún 1 0 Ape–2023
8 Celaya1 0 2
Sonora1 0 1
Irapuato 0 1
Notes
  1. Clubs currently in Liga Premier.

Campeón de Campeones

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Campeón de Campeones de la Liga de Expansión MX is the domestic Super cup of the division between the champions of the Apertura and Clausura tournaments, the two champions of each season.

The inaugural edition was held in 2021, with Tepatitlán finishing as the first champions in history. In all, five editions of the trophy have been held.

Tapatío is the most successful club with two titles, followed by Atlante, Tepatitlán and Cancún with one title each. In all, only those four clubs have won the trophy.

Rank Club Titles Runners-up Winning years
1 Tapatío 2 0 2023, 2025
2 Atlante 1 2 2022
Tepatitlán 1 0 2021
Cancún 1 0 2024
5 Atlético Morelia 0 1
Tampico Madero 0 1
UdeG 0 1

Sponsorship

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Since 2020, sponsor of the league.

BBVA México has been the official main sponsor of the league since its founding in 2020, hence it is officially known as Liga BBVA Expansión MX. The official ball of the league is manufactured by Voit.

Managers

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Current managers of Liga de Expansión MX clubs:

Manager Club Appointed Time as manager
Mexico Alfonso Sosa UdeG 7 September 2021 4 years, 162 days
Mexico Marco Antonio Ruiz Jaiba Brava 3 December 2024 1 year, 75 days
Ecuador Miguel Bravo Cancún 22 May 2025 270 days
Argentina Hugo Norberto Castillo Atlético La Paz 31 May 2025 261 days
Mexico Daniel Alcántar Irapuato 14 July 2025 217 days
Spain Nacho Castro Venados 21 August 2025 179 days
Mexico Luis Ángel Muñoz Zacatecas 23 September 2025 146 days
Mexico Paco Ramírez Sinaloa 3 October 2025 136 days
Mexico Mario Ortiz Atlético Morelia 7 October 2025 132 days
Mexico Ricardo Carbajal Atlante 26 November 2025 82 days
Mexico José Luis Meléndez Tapatío 4 December 2025 74 days
Mexico Efrén Hernández Oaxaca 9 December 2025 70 days
Uruguay Gustavo Díaz UAT 9 December 2025 69 days
Argentina Gabriel Pereyra Tepatitlán 9 December 2025 69 days
Brazil Gustavo Leal Tlaxcala 19 January 2026 28 days

Top goalscorers

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Season Player Club Goals
Guard1anes 2020 Mexico Alberto Alvarado Morín
Mexico Lizandro Echeverría
Mexico Guillermo Martínez
Paraguay Gustavo Ramírez
UAT
Atlante
Celaya
Morelia
7
Guard1anes 2021 Mexico Julio Cruz Oaxaca 10
Apertura 2021 Colombia Raúl Zúñiga Sinaloa 12
Clausura 2022 Colombia David Angulo
Mexico Juan Machado
Mexico Óscar Villa
Tepatitlán
Raya2
Sonora
8
Apertura 2022 Mexico Diego Jiménez Sonora 12
Clausura 2023 Mexico Ricardo Marín Celaya 10
Apertura 2023 Mexico Luis Razo Zacatecas 10
Clausura 2024 Colombia José Rodriguez Cancún 9
Apertura 2024 Mexico Vladimir Moragrega Atlante 11
Clausura 2025 Mexico Jesús Ocejo UdeG 13
Apertura 2025 Colombia Juan José Calero Venados 15

See also

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References

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  1. ^ includes ESPN 2, ESPN 3, ESPN+, and Disney+.
  2. ^ Azteca Digital
  3. ^ Enrique Martínez Villar (24 April 2020). "¡Se confirma! No habrá ascenso ni descenso en 6 años; aprueban Liga de Desarrollo". Mediotiempo. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
  4. ^ "Comunicado de la LIGA MX / ASCENSO MX y la FMF". LIGA MX. 20 April 2020. Retrieved 25 April 2020.
  5. ^ "Asamblea Ordinaria de Clubes del 26 de Junio del 2020". Liga BBVA MX (in Spanish). 26 June 2020. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
  6. ^ "Comunicado de la LIGA MX sobre la LIGA de Expansión". Liga BBVA MX (in Spanish). 17 July 2020. Retrieved 17 July 2020.
  7. ^ "Por unanimidad, la Asamblea de Clubes designa a Juan Carlos Rodríguez". ligamx.net (in Spanish). 22 May 2023. Retrieved 25 May 2023.
  8. ^ "Descartan fusión de la Liga de Expansión con la Sub-23". Mediotiempo.com (in Spanish). 22 May 2024. Retrieved 12 July 2024.
  9. ^ "TAS confirma recurso de clubes de Expansión contra FMF por ascenso/descenso". RÉCORD (in Spanish). 21 May 2025. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
  10. ^ "¡No hay unión! Un cuarto club de la Liga de Expansión se baja del barco tras demandar a la FMF ante el TAS para exigir el regreso del ascenso". LatinUS (in Spanish). 10 June 2025. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
  11. ^ "Liga de Expansión MX niega mudanzas de Celaya y Cimarrones a Veracruz y Tampico". TUDN (in Spanish). 9 July 2025. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
  12. ^ "TAS confirma regreso del ascenso y descenso en la Liga MX a partir de 2026-27". TUDN (in Spanish). 4 September 2025. Retrieved 4 September 2025.
  13. ^ "TAS rechaza apelación de clubes de la Liga de Expansión, pero ascenso y descenso en Liga MX ya tiene fecha de REGRESO". Mediotiempo.com (in Spanish). 4 September 2025. Retrieved 4 September 2025.
  14. ^ "Irapuato, nuevo integrante de la Liga BBVA Expansión MX". Liga BBVA Expansión MX (in Spanish). 10 July 2025. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
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