The Roar
The Roar

NRL ladder: 2025 season standings and table

Nathan and Ivan Cleary after the 2021 Grand Final win. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

The 2025 NRL regular season is underway. Here is how the ladder looks.

2025 NRL ladder

Pos. Club W D L F/A Points
1st Canterbury Bulldogs 8 0 1 106 18
2nd New Zealand Warriors 7 0 2 1 16
3rd Melbourne Storm 6 0 3 140 14
4th Canberra Raiders 7 0 3 48 14
5th Cronulla Sharks 6 0 4 65 12
6th North Queensland Cowboys 4 1 4 -14 11
7th Brisbane Broncos 5 0 5 46 10
8th Manly Sea Eagles 4 0 5 20 10
9th Sydney Roosters 4 0 5 -42 10
10th Wests Tigers 5 0 5 -44 10
11th South Sydney Rabbitohs 5 0 5 -62 10
12th Dolphins 4 0 6 10 8
13th St George Illawarra Dragons 3 0 6 -15 8
14th Newcastle Knights 3 0 6 -52 8
15th Gold Coast Titans 3 0 6 -84 8
16th Penrith Panthers 3 1 6 -2 7
17th Parramatta Eels 2 0 7 -121 6

The NRL has a simple points system: victorious teams earn two points for a victory, while losing teams earn zero for a loss. There are two points for a bye.

If a match is tied at the end of 80 minutes of regulation time, there are two five-minute halves of golden point, where any score will be the match-deciding one, be it a field goal, try, or penalty goal. The match immediately ends at that stage.

If the two teams play out a scoreless golden point period, the match will be declared a draw, with both teams earning one point.

The teams with the most points will finish higher on the NRL ladder.

Teams who finish on equal on competition points after 26 rounds will have their fate decided by for and against, which is calculated by subtracting the number of points scored against the team from the points the team scores over the course of the season.

NRL ladder history

The current system sees the first week have top four sides face each other, and the second four (bottom half of the top eight) play each other. The winners in the top four clashes go straight to the third week of the finals, while the losers face the winner of the second four.

The losers in the matches between the second four sides are eliminated, while the winners face the losers from the top four.

The previous system was the McIntyre, the team that finished first would play eighth, second would play seventh, and so on, with the two highest-ranked losers getting a second chance. This was abandoned in favour of the current system in 2011.