| Swedish Division 5 |
|---|
| Nation |
| Number of Sections |
| 53 (10–12 teams in each) |
| Promotion to |
| Division 4 |
| Relegation to |
| Division 6 |
| Swedish football league structure |
|---|
| Allsvenskan (Tier 1) |
| Superettan (Tier 2) |
| Ettan (Tier 3) |
| Division 2 (Tier 4) |
| Division 3 (Tier 5) |
| Division 4 (Tier 6) |
| Division 5 (Tier 7) |
| Division 6 (Tier 8) |
| Division 7 (Tier 9) |
| Division 8 (Tier 10) |
Division 5 is the seventh level in the league system of Swedish football and comprises 47 sections with 9 to 16 football teams in each.
The competition
There are 47 groups of 9 to 16 teams each representing a local geographical area. During the course of a season (starting in April and ending in October) each club plays the others twice, once at their home ground and once at that of their opponents, for a total of 18 to 22 games depending on the number of teams. The top team in each Division 5 group is promoted to Division 4 and the second placed teams may also be promoted or participate in the promotion/relegation play-offs. The bottom two teams in each Division 5 group are normally relegated to Division 6.[1]
Administration
The District Football Associations are responsible for the administration of Division 5. The Swedish Football Association is responsible for the administration of Division 3 and the higher tiers of the Swedish football league system.
References
- ↑ "Division 5 – Fotbollsserier 2010 – Fotboll". everysport.com. Retrieved 2010-12-03.