Balzers play at Sportplatz Rheinau which is situated right next to the Rhine next to the border with Switzerland where the town of Trübbach lies.
In 1973, the club won its second Liechtenstein Cup after beating FC Ruggell 2–1 in the final.
In 1975, the 1964-65 Bundesliga top goalscorer Rudolf Brunnenmeier joined Balzers, and the team was promoted to the 1.
Liga, the club signed former Bundesliga professional Michael Nushöhr as a player-manager.
The club were eliminated from the competition after losing 11–1 on aggregate against Bulgarian side CSKA Sofia.
This was scored by club captain Marco Büchel, forcing the game into extra time.
Ligue[2] (eighth tier of the Swiss football league system), and also compete in the Liechtenstein Cup.
In the 2015-16 Liechtenstein Cup, they reached the semifinals (2 rounds further than the 1st team), losing 5–3 on penalties after a 2–2 draw against FC Schaan.
[3] The team's final appearance in the Liechtenstein Cup was a 4–1 defeat against FC Ruggell 2.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply.