| Date | R | Home v Away | - |
|---|
CD Cacahuatique
AFC Los Laureles
CD PIPIL
Tiburones de Sonsonate
AD Destroyer FC
AD Juayua
Corinto FC
AD Espartano
AD Batanecos
CD Olimpico Litoral
AD Inter San Salvador
CD Dragon
Zacatecoluca FC
CD Santiagueno
CD Topiltzin
Fuerte San Francisco
CD El Roble
AD Santa Rosa Guachipilin
CD Ilopaneco
AD Brasilia Suchitoto
CD Marte Soyapango
Atletico Marte
CD Platense Zacatecoluca
CD Gerardo Barrios
Brujos Mario Calvo
Municipal Limeno
Sensunte Cabanas FC
AD Masahuat
CD Adet Aruba
Juventud Independiente
Neo Pipil San Juan Nonualco
Cangrejera FC
CD Aspirante
Atletico Sonsonate
CD Liberal
CD El Vencedor
AD Apopa
CD Chaguite
CD Halcones
Juventud Bataneca FC
CD Mar Y Plata
The Segunda División de El Salvador (Second Division of El Salvador) is the second tier of football in El Salvador governed by the Federación Salvadoreña de Fútbol (FESFUT). Teams contest to promote to the Primera División.
The winning sides of the annual Apertura and Clausura contest each other, the winner directly promotes to Primera División.
The losing side of the match contest the last place team of Primera División to trigger promotion and relegation should the Primera División team lose to the Segunda División side.
The Salvadoran Football Federation decided to improve the quality and competitiveness of football.
Segunda División, also called Liga B or Liga de Ascenso, was created in 1950 divided into two groups to contest within each group. The top sides of each group then contested in order that the winner is directly promotes to Primera División.
Category of Ascent was made of 12 teams, four teams in each zone: central, western and eastern.[]
The founding 12 teams in Segunda División were ANTEL, Atlético Marte, Marte Soyapango, Caterpillar de San Salvador, Picapiedra del Plan de la Laguna, Antiguo Cuscatlán, Dragón, Once Municipal, Molino F. C, Ahuachapán and Puertas de Santa Ana y San Rafael.
The inaugural President of the Segunda División was Dr Mauro Alfredo Bernal Silva.
The number of teams increased up to twelve teams per zone (36 teams altogether). In 1986 the Legislative Assembly[] emitted a decree in the Reforms to the Law of Football and the Category of Ascent that Segunda División would be limited to only 24 teams split into two groups.
In 2007, Segunda División adopted an Apertura and Clausura format.