Italy
| # | Team | Pts |
|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
55 |
| 2 |
|
44 |
| 3 |
|
39 |
| 4 |
|
36 |
| 5 |
|
33 |
| 6 |
|
32 |
| 7 |
|
32 |
| 8 |
|
30 |
| 9 |
|
18 |
| 10 |
|
17 |
| 11 |
|
16 |
| 12 |
|
10 |
Serie A Femminile (Serie A Women) is the top division of women's football in Italy (calcio femminile) and one of the most historically significant women's football competitions in Europe. The modern Serie A femminile traces its roots back to 1968, making it one of the oldest organized women's football leagues in the world. The league underwent a dramatic transformation beginning in 2018/19 when the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) mandated that Serie A and Serie B men's clubs establish women's teams, bringing world-famous brands like Juventus, AC Milan, Inter Milan, and AS Roma into the women's game.
The 2025/26 Serie A Femminile season features 12 teams — expanded from 10 after Ternana, Parma, and Genoa earned promotion from Serie B — playing a 22-match regular season from October to May. The league abandoned the previous two-phase Poule Scudetto/Poule Salvezza format in favor of a classic single round-robin (andata e ritorno), matching the structure of the men's Serie A. Juventus are the defending champions.
Juventus Women have been the dominant force in the modern professional era, winning six Serie A Femminile titles. However, the most successful club in the league's entire history is Torres (from Sardinia), with seven championships. AS Roma Women broke Juventus' five-year stranglehold on the Scudetto by winning the 2023/24 title. Other competitive clubs include Fiorentina Women (historically strong), AC Milan Women, Inter Milan Women, and Napoli Femminile.
Italy made history in July 2022 by granting professional athlete status to women's football players competing in Serie A Femminile, ensuring guaranteed minimum contracts, social security contributions, maternity leave, and full employment protections. This landmark professionalization transformed working conditions and the league's appeal to international talent.
Serie A Femminile matches are broadcast on DAZN (primary rights holder), Rai Sport (Italy's public broadcaster), and La7. The top finishers qualify for the UEFA Women's Champions League, with Juventus Women the most successful Italian representatives in European competition.
The 2025/26 Serie A Femminile season features 12 teams, expanded from 10 after three clubs earned promotion from Serie B. The complete list of Serie A Women teams is: AC Milan Women, AS Roma Women, Como Women, Fiorentina Women, Inter Milan Women, Juventus Women, Lazio Women, Napoli Femminile, Ternana Women, Parma Women, Genoa Women, and Sassuolo Women. Sampdoria were relegated from Serie A in 2024/25.
The presence of globally recognized football brands like Juventus, AC Milan, Inter Milan, and AS Roma has significantly raised the league's international profile, attracting international talent and media coverage.
Torres hold the all-time record with seven Serie A Femminile titles, accumulated during the pre-professional era. In the modern era since major clubs entered in 2018/19, Juventus Women have won six Scudetti, including five consecutive championships from 2018/19 through 2022/23.
AS Roma Women broke Juventus' monopoly by winning the 2023/24 Scudetto, marking a major shift in the competitive landscape. Juventus reclaimed the title in 2024/25. Other historically successful clubs include Fiorentina Women and the now-defunct Bardolino Verona, who dominated in the 2000s.
In July 2022, Italy made history by granting professional athlete status to women's football players in Serie A Femminile. Before this, Italian women footballers were technically classified as amateurs — even those earning significant salaries at top clubs like Juventus and Roma.
The professionalization mandate transformed the league: players now receive guaranteed minimum contracts, social security protections, maternity leave, and the same employment rights as male professional athletes. Italy was among the first countries in Europe to take this step, and it has significantly increased Serie A Femminile's appeal to international talent and raised playing conditions to match other top European women's leagues.
Serie A Femminile matches are broadcast on DAZN, which holds the primary rights to Italian women's football and streams all matches live. Select matches are shown on Rai Sport (Italy's public broadcaster) and La7, providing free-to-air coverage for marquee fixtures.
During the 2025/26 season, the league is officially branded as Serie A Women. For international viewers, DAZN's global platform makes Serie A Femminile accessible in many markets. Attendance has grown significantly at major clubs, with Juventus Women regularly drawing over 5,000 fans to Allianz Stadium for big matches.
The top finishers in the Serie A Femminile classifica qualify for the UEFA Women's Champions League, giving Italian clubs the opportunity to compete against Europe's best. Juventus Women have been the most successful Italian club in European competition, regularly reaching the group stages and knockout rounds.
AS Roma Women made a strong Champions League debut following their 2023/24 Scudetto. The growing quality of Serie A Femminile is reflected in Italian clubs' improving European performances, supported by the influx of international talent since professionalization in 2022.
Serie A Femminile has 12 teams in the 2025/26 season, expanded from 10 after Ternana, Parma, and Genoa earned promotion from Serie B. Teams include Juventus, AS Roma, AC Milan, Inter Milan, Fiorentina, Como, Lazio, Napoli, Sassuolo, and the three promoted clubs.
Torres hold the all-time record with 7 titles from the pre-professional era. In the modern era, Juventus Women have won 6 Scudetti. AS Roma Women won in 2023/24, breaking Juventus' five-year streak.
Italy granted professional athlete status to women's football players in July 2022. Players now receive guaranteed contracts, social security, maternity leave, and full employment protections — making Italy one of the first European countries to professionalize women's football.
Serie A Femminile is broadcast on DAZN (all matches live), with select games on Rai Sport and La7. DAZN's global platform makes matches accessible internationally.
The 2025/26 season runs from October 4, 2025 to May 17, 2026. Twelve teams play a 22-match regular season in a classic home-and-away round-robin format, replacing the previous Poule system.
Yes, the top finishers in the Serie A Femminile classifica qualify for the UEFA Women's Champions League. Juventus Women have been the most successful Italian representatives in European competition.
The league expanded from 10 to 12 teams and switched to a classic 22-match round-robin format (andata e ritorno), abandoning the two-phase Poule Scudetto/Poule Salvezza system used in previous seasons.
Top players include Cristiana Girelli (Juventus), Manuela Giugliano (Roma), Barbara Bonansea (Juventus), Valentina Bergamaschi (AC Milan), and a growing number of international signings attracted by the league's professionalization.
Juventus Women are the reigning Serie A Femminile champions, having won the 2024/25 Scudetto — their sixth title in the modern era. AS Roma won the 2023/24 title.
The classifica is the Serie A Femminile league standings table. It shows all 12 teams ranked by points, with goal difference as the tiebreaker. The team finishing top of the classifica wins the Scudetto.
The current Serie A Femminile classifica for the 2025/26 season. The table shows all 12 teams ranked by points, with wins, draws, losses, goals scored and goal difference. Top finishers qualify for the UEFA Women's Champions League.
| # | Team | P | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
22 | 55 |
| 2 |
|
22 | 44 |
| 3 |
|
22 | 39 |
| 4 |
|
22 | 36 |
| 5 |
|
22 | 33 |
| 6 |
|
22 | 32 |
| 7 |
|
22 | 32 |
| 8 |
|
22 | 30 |
| 9 |
|
22 | 18 |
| 10 |
|
22 | 17 |
| 11 |
|
22 | 16 |
| 12 |
|
22 | 10 |
Latest Serie A Femminile risultati from the 2025/26 season. Browse recent match results with final scores across all 12 teams competing in Italy's top women's football division (calcio femminile).
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| 2023/2024 |
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