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Liga de Primera
Professional association football league in Chile
Professional association football league in Chile
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | Liga de Primera | |
| pixels | 200px | |
| country | Chile | |
| confed | CONMEBOL | |
| founded | ||
| teams | 16 | |
| relegation | Primera B | |
| levels | 1 | |
| domest_cup | Copa Chile | |
| confed_cup | Copa Libertadores | |
| Copa Sudamericana | ||
| champions | Coquimbo Unido (1st title) | |
| season | 2025 | |
| most successful club | Colo-Colo (34 titles) | |
| most_appearances | Adolfo Nef (624) | |
| top_goalscorer | Esteban Paredes (221) | |
| tv | {{plainlist | |
| website | ||
| current | 2026 season |
Copa Sudamericana
- Chile
- TNT Sports
- International
- Broadcasters
The Liga de Primera or Campeonato Nacional de la Primera División del Fútbol Profesional Chileno (English: "National Championship of the First Division of Chilean Professional Football") is a professional association football league in Chile and the highest level of the Chilean football league system. Founded in 1933, it is organized by the Asociación Nacional de Fútbol Profesional (ANFP). The league is officially known as the Liga de Primera Itaú due to sponsorship by Brazilian bank Itaú.
Throughout its history, the national championship has had different formats, structures and number of participants. The 2025 season is being contested through a single tournament throughout the calendar year. A total of 16 teams participate in the competition and it works with a system of promotion and relegation with the lower category, the Primera B (category with which it shares the Copa Chile).
A total of 53 clubs have played at least one season in the first division, and 16 have won the title at least once. Its first champion was Deportes Magallanes. Colo-Colo has been the only team to participate in every first division season, as holds the most titles won with 34, followed by Universidad de Chile with 18, Universidad Católica with 16 and Cobreloa with 8, the most titles held by any team outside the capital.
History
Amateurism
Main article: Asociación de Fútbol de Santiago
The Asociación de Fútbol de Santiago (also known as AFS) was the first organization in Chile to formally organize a football tournament. It was formed in 1903 and organized non-professional football in Santiago. Thereafter, it was the organization responsible for running the national professional football league in Chile.
Professionalism
In 1933, eight big clubs at that time, namely, Unión Española, Badminton, Colo-Colo, Audax Italiano, Green Cross, Morning Star, Magallanes and Santiago National F.C., founded the Liga Profesional de Football de Santiago (LPF) on 31 May 1933. The newly formed body was recognised by the Football Federation of Chile on 2 June 1933.
The first edition of professional competition was contested by the eight founding teams and was won by Magallanes after defeating Colo-Colo in a decisive match. In the following year, according to the disposition of Federación de Fútbol de Chile, Liga Profesional returned to integrate with the AFS. As part of the negotiations for reunification, four teams from AFS, namely, Ferroviarios, Carlos Walker, Deportivo Alemán, and Santiago F.C., would join the 1934 professional competition. Moreover, it was also decided that the last six teams in the 1934 competition would be eliminated to form the new second division in 1935. The title of the expanded 1934 edition was again clinched by Magallanes, which won 10 out of the 11 matches that year.
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In 1937, the Santiago Professional Football Association was founded - it would be renamed the Central Football Association (ACF), becoming the first association to operate independently of the amateur sector. The 1937 championship was the debut season for Santiago Wanderers, the first team to compete from outside the capital, however, it had to play all its matches in Santiago and as a guest, which meant that no points were credited to it in the standings. The tournament was finally won by Colo-Colo, who under its number one star went undefeated.
In the 1940 championship, the traditional two-wheel system was restored and Universidad de Chile had a great squad under the leadership of Luis Tirado and with players such as Víctor Alonso, the tournament's top scorer with 20 goals, Abanés Passalacqua and goalkeeper Eduardo Simián, and was crowned professional champions for the first time after only three years in the top division.
In 1947, Colo Colo got their fifth star under the guidance of their coach Enrique Sorrel and who was awarded the title of host of the South American Championship of Champions (a tournament in which the champion clubs of the official leagues of the South American continent participated). In the 1948 tournament, historic Italian players such as goalkeeper Daniel Chirinos, defender Carlos Varela and strikers Juan Zárate and Domingo Romo once again led Audax Italiano to its third professional title.

In 1949, Universidad Católica won its first league title, featuring figures such as Chilean national team member Sergio Livingstone, Andrés Prieto, Raimundo Infante, Fernando Riera and Argentine soccer star José Manuel Moreno. In the decisive match, Católica defeated Audax Italiano 2-1 with a strong performance from Infante. Months earlier, the team had won the Torneo de Consuelo, defeating Bádminton F.C. 3-2.
In the 1950 championship, Everton de Viña del Mar was crowned champion for the first time in its history and in the process broke the capital's hegemony, becoming the first provincial champion after defeating Unión Española in the final match with a solitary goal from its leading striker, René Meléndez. In addition, one of the founding clubs of the First Division, Badminton, merged with Ferroviarios to form Ferrobádminton.
In 1960, Colo-Colo won its eighth title, beating Santiago Wanderers by 6 points and its arch rival, Universidad de Chile, by 9 points. That tournament also marked the beginning of the crisis for Magallanes, when it was relegated for the first time in its history. The Carabelero team were relegated due to the average standings of the preceding three years.

In the 1961 tournament, Universidad de Chile and Universidad Católica tied in points and forced two final matches in which, after a draw in the first leg, the Cruzados team won the return leg by 3-2, with a penalty kick by Alberto Fouillioux at 85 minutes, a score that led it to obtain its third national title. That year, Audax Italiano made a big splash in the transfer market, by bringing in Brazilian national team player and World Cup player Zizinho, who scored only 3 goals in 16 games, and also his compatriot Ceninho, who scored only 8 goals (5 more than Zizinho).
In 1962, Universidad de Chile, who provided the most players to the Chilean national team in the World Cup held in Chile, won the final match of that year's championship against Universidad Católica, semifinalist of the 1962 Copa Libertadores, tieing Católica with three titles up to that point. Thus, Chilean football was marked in that decade by the Clásico Universitario.
The arrival of the 1970s saw Colo-Colo, in the national championship, obtain its tenth star after seven years, by beating Unión Española in a close final, counting on great figures such as Francisco Valdés, Carlos Caszely, Leonel Sánchez (who arrived as a reinforcement for Colo-Colo that year), Humberto Cruz, Juan Carlos Gangas, Víctor Zelada, the Uruguayan José María Piriz and the Brazilian Elson Beyruth.
In 1971, the tournament returned to the round-robin system, with the Unión San Felipe team, coached by Luis Santibáñez, winning the championship. After beating Universidad de Chile in the final stretch, it lifted its first and only title, holding to this day the record of being the only team to win consecutive Second Division and First Division tournaments, respectively.
The 1972 national tournament, with a total attendance of over 3,000,000, holds the record of the season with the largest cumulative attendance in the history of Chilean football. In this tournament, Colo-Colo won its eleventh title relegating Unión Española to second place by three points in the table, using almost the same squad that was champion in 1970, but with the technical figure of Luis Álamos, who currently holds the record of the technical director with the most First Division titles. That year was also marked by Everton's relegation, finishing last in that tournament and the return of Palestino, who won the Second Division title and returned to the top flight after a two year absence.
Present

On 10 February 2021, with the 2020 season postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Universidad Católica won the first three-time championship in its history, obtaining the fifteenth title, and the fifth of the last seven championships in Chile. Near the bottom of the table, Colo-Colo required a playoff to stay in the top flight for the first time in its history, which it managed to overcome beating Universidad de Concepción 1-0, with a goal from Argentine Pablo Solari, in a match that was played on 17 February 2021 at the Estadio Fiscal de Talca.
The 2024 tournament is considered by fans and analysts as the best ever seasons of the long tournament format after a fierce fight between Colo Colo and Universidad de Chile (the first between the two since 1998) putting them almost 20 points ahead of the third place, which was the surprising Deportes Iquique.
Division levels
| Year | Level | Relegation to |
|---|---|---|
| 1933–1934 | (None) | |
| 1935–1942 | Serie B Profesional | |
| 1943–1951 | División de Honor Amateur | |
| 1952–1995 | Segunda División | |
| 1996–present | Primera B |
Format
The current format has been in place since 2018 with 16 teams competing in the league, playing against each other twice, once at home and once away. The team that places first at the end of the season are crowned champions, while the bottom two teams are relegated.
Relegation and promotion
Currently, the two teams that place bottom in the season, are relegated to Primera B de Chile, and replaced by the champions and the playoff winners of the second division.
Qualification for international competitions
Chile is given 8 total berths to CONMEBOL competitions, 4 for Copa Libertadores and 4 for Copa Sudamericana. The league champions qualify for the following year's Copa Libertadores, as well as the runners-up and the third-placed team. The fourth berth is given to the champions of the Copa Chile. The teams placing fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh qualify for the following year's Copa Sudamericana.
Sponsorships
| Year | Sponsor |
|---|---|
| 1933–1992 | (None) |
| 1993–2009 | CHI Banco Estado |
| 2010–2013 | BRA Petrobras |
| 2014–2018 | CAN Scotiabank |
| 2019–2022 | CHI AFP PlanVital |
| 2023 | SWE Betsson |
| 2024–2025 | BRA Itaú |
| 2026–present | ARG Mercado Libre |
Rivalries
- Colo-Colo – Universidad de Chile (National derby)
- Universidad de Chile – Universidad Católica (Universitario derby)
- Colo-Colo – Universidad Católica (Albo-Cruzado derby)
- Colo-Colo – Cobreloa (Loíno-Albo derby)
- Santiago Wanderers – Everton (Porteño derby)
- Unión Española – Audax Italiano – Palestino (Colonias derby)
- Deportes Iquique – San Marcos de Arica (Northern derby)
- Cobreloa – Cobresal (Cobre derby)
- Rangers – Curicó Unido (Maule derby)
Current teams
A total of 54 teams (considering mergers and name changes) have participated throughout the 94 seasons of the Primera División, of which 16 have won the championship.
Colo-Colo is the only team to have played all 94 seasons of Chilean football in the Primera División. In second place is Unión Española, which did not play in 1939 due to the Spanish Civil War, and played in Primera B between 1998 and 1999.
Sixteen teams will take part in the league for the 2026 season.
Stadia and locations
| Team | City | Stadium | Capacity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Audax Italiano | Santiago (La Florida) | Bicentenario de La Florida | 11,637 |
| Cobresal | El Salvador | El Cobre | 11,240 |
| Colo-Colo | Santiago (Macul) | Monumental David Arellano | 43,667 |
| Coquimbo Unido | Coquimbo | Francisco Sánchez Rumoroso | 15,809 |
| Deportes Concepción | Concepción | Ester Roa Rebolledo | 30,448 |
| Deportes La Serena | La Serena | La Portada | 17,134 |
| Deportes Limache | Limache | Nicolás Chahuán Nazar | 8,353 |
| Everton | Viña del Mar | Sausalito | 21,754 |
| Huachipato | Talcahuano | Huachipato-CAP Acero | 10,032 |
| Ñublense | Chillán | Nelson Oyarzún Arenas | 11,319 |
| O'Higgins | Rancagua | El Teniente | 12,476 |
| Palestino | Santiago (La Cisterna) | Municipal de La Cisterna | 8,000 |
| Unión La Calera | La Calera | Nicolás Chahuán Nazar | 8,353 |
| Universidad Católica | Santiago (Las Condes) | Claro Arena | 20,249 |
| Universidad de Chile | Santiago (Ñuñoa) | Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos | 46,190 |
| Universidad de Concepción | Concepción | Ester Roa Rebolledo | 30,448 |
;Notes
Season in Primera División
Most seasons
Below is the list of clubs that have appeared in Primera División since its inception in 1933 until the 2025 season. The teams in bold currently compete in Primera División. The year in parentheses represents a club's most recent year of participation at this level.
- 94 seasons: Colo-Colo (2025)
- 91 seasons: Unión Española (2025)
- 88 seasons: Universidad de Chile (2025)
- 85 seasons: Universidad Católica (2025)
- 80 seasons: Audax Italiano (2025)
- 71 seasons: Palestino (2025)
- 69 seasons: Everton (2025)
- 62 seasons: O'Higgins (2025), Santiago Wanderers (2021)
- 52 seasons: Huachipato (2025)
- 50 seasons: Magallanes (2023)
- 46 seasons: Santiago Morning (2011), Rangers (2014)
- 44 seasons: Deportes La Serena (2025)
- 39 seasons: Cobreloa (2024)
- 34 seasons: Cobresal (2024), Deportes Concepción (2008)
- 33 seasons: Deportes Antofagasta (2022)
- 32 seasons: Deportes Temuco (2018)
- 30 seasons: Coquimbo Unido (2025)
- 28 seasons: Unión La Calera (2025)
- 27 seasons: Deportes Iquique (2025)
- 25 seasons: Green Cross (1964)
- 24 seasons: Unión San Felipe (2012)
- 21 seasons: San Luis (2018)
- 18 seasons: Universidad de Concepción (2020)
- 17 seasons: Ñublense (2025), Bádminton (1949), Ferrobádminton (1966)
- 16 seasons: Naval (1990)
- 13 seasons: Lota Schwager (2013)
- 10 seasons: Deportes Puerto Montt (2007), Santiago National (1948)
- 9 seasons: Iberia (1954), Fernández Vial (1992), Provincial Osorno (2008)
- 8 seasons: Curicó Unido (2023)
- 7 seasons: Deportes Aviación (1980), San Marcos de Arica (2016)
- 6 seasons: Regional Atacama (1996)
- 5 seasons: Deportes Melipilla (2021)
- 2 seasons: Deportes Valdivia (1989), Deportes Copiapó (2024), Deportes Ovalle (1977), Morning Star (1934), Santiago (1935), Santiago National Juventus (1941), Trasandino (1984)
- 1 season: Carlos Walker (1934), Ferroviarios (1934), Deportivo Alemán (1934), Metropolitano (1939), Barnechea (2015), Deportes Limache (2025)
List of champions
| Ed. | Season | Champion (title count) | Runner-up | Winning manager | Leading goalscorer(s) | División de Honor | Serie A Profesional | Primera División | Liga de Primera |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1933 | Magallanes (1) | Colo-Colo | CHI Arturo Torres | CHI Luis Carvallo (Colo-Colo; 9 goals) | |||||
| 1934 | Magallanes (2) | Audax Italiano | CHI Arturo Torres | CHI Carlos Giudice (Audax Italiano; 19 goals) | |||||
| 1935 | Magallanes (3) | Audax Italiano | CHI Arturo Torres | CHI Aurelio Domínguez (Colo-Colo; 12 goals) | |||||
| CHI (Magallanes; 12 goals) | |||||||||
| 1936 | Audax Italiano (1) | Magallanes | CHI Carlos Giudice | CRC Hernán Bolaños (Audax Italiano; 14 goals) | |||||
| 1937 | Colo-Colo (1) | Magallanes | CHI Arturo Torres | CRC Hernán Bolaños (Audax Italiano; 16 goals) | |||||
| 1938 | Magallanes (4) | Audax Italiano | CHI Leoncio Veloso | CHI Gustavo Pizarro (Bádminton; 17 goals) | |||||
| 1939 | Colo-Colo (2) | Santiago Morning | HUN Ferenc Plattkó | CHI Alfonso Domínguez (Colo-Colo; 32 goals) | |||||
| 1940 | Universidad de Chile (1) | Audax Italiano | CHI Luis Tirado | CHI (Universidad de Chile; 20 goals) | |||||
| CHI (Magallanes; 20 goals) | |||||||||
| 1941 | Colo-Colo (3) | Santiago Morning | HUN Ferenc Plattkó | ARG José Profetta (Santiago National; 19 goals) | |||||
| 1942 | Santiago Morning (1) | Magallanes | ARG José Luis Boffi | CHI Domingo Romo (Santiago Morning; 16 goals) | |||||
| 1943 | Unión Española (1) | Colo-Colo | CHI Atanasio Pardo | CHI Luis Machuca (Unión Española; 17 goals) | |||||
| CHI Víctor Mancilla Universidad Católica (17 goals) | |||||||||
| 1944 | Colo-Colo (4) | Audax Italiano | CHI Luis Tirado | CHI Juan Alcántara (Audax Italiano; 19 goals) | |||||
| CHI Alfonso Domínguez (Colo-Colo; 19 goals) | |||||||||
| 1945 | Green Cross (1) | Unión Española | CHI Eugenio Soto | URU Ubaldo Cruche (Universidad de Chile; 17 goals) | |||||
| ARG Hugo Giorgi (Audax Italiano; 17 goals) | |||||||||
| ARG Juan Zárate (Green Cross; 17 goals) | |||||||||
| 1946 | Audax Italiano (2) | Magallanes | CHI Raúl Marchant | URU Ubaldo Cruche (Universidad de Chile; 25 goals) | |||||
| 1947 | Colo-Colo (5) | Audax Italiano | CHI Enrique Sorrel | CHI Apolonides Vera (Santiago National; 17 goals) | |||||
| 1948 | Audax Italiano (3) | Unión Española | ARG Salvador Nocetti | ARG Juan Zárate (Audax Italiano; 22 goals) | |||||
| 1949 | Universidad Católica (1) | Santiago Wanderers | CHI Alberto Buccicardi | CHI (Unión Española; 20 goals) | |||||
| 1950 | Everton (1) | Unión Española | ARG | ARG Félix Díaz (Green Cross; 21 goals) | |||||
| 1951 | Unión Española (2) | Audax Italiano | ESP Isidro Lángara | CHI Rubén Aguilera (Santiago Morning; 21 goals) | |||||
| CHI Carlos Tello (Audax Italiano; 21 goals) | |||||||||
| 1952 | Everton (2) | Colo-Colo | ARG | CHI René Meléndez (Everton; 30 goals) | |||||
| 1953 | Colo-Colo (6) | Palestino | HUN Ferenc Plattkó | CHI Jorge Robledo (Colo-Colo; 26 goals) | |||||
| 1954 | Universidad Católica (2) | Colo-Colo | ENG William Burnikell | CHI Jorge Robledo (Colo-Colo; 25 goals) | |||||
| 1955 | Palestino (1) | Colo-Colo | YUG Miodrag Stefanović | ARG Nicolás Moreno (Green Cross; 27 goals) | |||||
| 1956 | Colo-Colo (7) | Santiago Wanderers | URU Enrique Fernández | CHI (O'Higgins; 19 goals) | |||||
| 1957 | Audax Italiano (4) | Universidad de Chile | HUN László Pákozdi | ARG Gustavo Albella (Green Cross; 27 goals) | |||||
| 1958 | Santiago Wanderers (1) | Colo-Colo | ARG | ARG Gustavo Albella (Green Cross; 23 goals) | |||||
| CHI Carlos Verdejo (Deportes La Serena; 23 goals) | |||||||||
| 1959 | Universidad de Chile (2) | Colo-Colo | CHI Luis Álamos | CHI José Benito Ríos (O'Higgins; 22 goals) | |||||
| 1960 | Colo-Colo (8) | Santiago Wanderers | CHI Hernán Carrasco | ARG Juan Falcón (Palestino; 21 goals) | |||||
| 1961 | Universidad Católica (3) | Universidad de Chile | ARG | CHI Carlos Campos (Universidad de Chile; 24 goals) | |||||
| CHI Honorino Landa (Unión Española; 24 goals) | |||||||||
| 1962 | Universidad de Chile (3) | Universidad Católica | CHI Luis Álamos | CHI Carlos Campos (Universidad de Chile; 34 goals) | |||||
| 1963 | Colo-Colo (9) | Universidad de Chile | CHI Hugo Tassara | CHI Luis Hernán Álvarez (Colo-Colo; 37 goals) | |||||
| 1964 | Universidad de Chile (4) | Universidad Católica | CHI Luis Álamos | CHI Daniel Escudero (Everton; 25 goals) | |||||
| 1965 | Universidad de Chile (5) | Universidad Católica | CHI Luis Álamos | ARG Héctor Scandolli (Rangers; 25 goals) | |||||
| 1966 | Universidad Católica (4) | Colo-Colo | CHI Luis Vidal | CHI Carlos Campos (Universidad de Chile; 21 goals) | |||||
| ARG Felipe Bracamonte (Unión San Felipe; 21 goals) | |||||||||
| 1967 | Universidad de Chile (6) | Universidad Católica | ARG Alejandro Scopelli | PAR Eladio Zárate (Unión Española; 28 goals) | |||||
| 1968 | Santiago Wanderers (2) | Universidad Católica | ARG | CHI Carlos Reinoso (Audax Italiano; 21 goals) | |||||
| 1969 | Universidad de Chile (7) | Rangers | CHI Ulises Ramos | PAR Eladio Zárate (Unión Española; 22 goals) | |||||
| 1970 | Colo-Colo (10) | Unión Española | CHI Francisco Hormazábal | CHI Osvaldo Castro (Deportes Concepción; 36 goals) | |||||
| 1971 | Unión San Felipe (1) | Universidad de Chile | CHI Luis Santibáñez | PAR Eladio Zárate (Universidad de Chile; 25 goals) | |||||
| 1972 | Colo-Colo (11) | Unión Española | CHI Luis Álamos | CHI Fernando Espinosa (Magallanes; 25 goals) | |||||
| 1973 | Unión Española (3) | Colo-Colo | CHI Luis Santibáñez | CHI Guillermo Yávar (Unión Española; 21 goals) | |||||
| 1974 | Huachipato (1) | Palestino | CHI Pedro Morales | CHI Julio Crisosto (Colo-Colo; 28 goals) | |||||
| 1975 | Unión Española (4) | Deportes Concepción | CHI Luis Santibáñez | CHI Victor Pizarro (Santiago Morning; 27 goals) | |||||
| 1976 | Everton (3) | Unión Española | CHI Pedro Morales | ARG CHI Óscar Fabbiani (Palestino; 23 goals) | |||||
| 1977 | Unión Española (5) | Everton | CHI Luis Santibáñez | ARG CHI Óscar Fabbiani (Palestino; 34 goals) | |||||
| 1978 | Palestino (2) | Cobreloa | CHI Caupolicán Peña | ARG CHI Óscar Fabbiani (Palestino; 35 goals) | |||||
| 1979 | Colo-Colo (12) | Cobreloa | CHI Pedro Morales | CHI Carlos Caszely (Colo-Colo; 20 goals) | |||||
| 1980 | Cobreloa (1) | Universidad de Chile | ARG Vicente Cantatore | CHI Carlos Caszely (Colo-Colo; 26 goals) | |||||
| 1981 | Colo-Colo (13) | Cobreloa | CHI Pedro García | CHI Victor Cabrera (San Luis; 20 goals) | |||||
| CHI Carlos Caszely (Colo-Colo; 20 goals) | |||||||||
| CHI Luis Marcoleta (Magallanes; 20 goals) | |||||||||
| 1982 | Cobreloa (2) | Colo-Colo | ARG Vicente Cantatore | URU Jorge Luis Siviero (Cobreloa; 18 goals) | |||||
| 1983 | Colo-Colo (14) | Cobreloa | CHI Pedro García | URU Washington Olivera (Cobreloa; 29 goals) | |||||
| 1984 | Universidad Católica (5) | Cobresal | CHI Ignacio Prieto | CHI Victor Cabrera (Regional Atacama; 18 goals) | |||||
| 1985 | Cobreloa (3) | Everton | CHI Jorge Toro | CHI Ivo Basay (Magallanes; 19 goals) | |||||
| 1986 | Colo-Colo (15) | Palestino | CHI Arturo Salah | CHI Sergio Salgado (Cobresal; 18 goals) | |||||
| 1987 | Universidad Católica (6) | Colo-Colo | CHI Ignacio Prieto | CHI Osvaldo Hurtado (Universidad Católica; 21 goals) | |||||
| 1988 | Cobreloa (4) | Cobresal | CHI Miguel Hermosilla | ARG Gustavo De Luca (Deportes La Serena; 18 goals) | |||||
| PER Juan José Oré (Deportes Iquique; 18 goals) | |||||||||
| 1989 | Colo-Colo (16) | Universidad Católica | CHI Arturo Salah | CHI Rubén Martínez (Cobresal; 25 goals) | |||||
| 1990 | Colo-Colo (17) | Universidad Católica | YUG Mirko Jozić | CHI Rubén Martínez (Colo-Colo; 22 goals) | |||||
| 1991 | Colo-Colo (18) | Coquimbo Unido | CRO Mirko Jozić | CHI Rubén Martínez (Colo-Colo; 23 goals) | |||||
| 1992 | Cobreloa (5) | Colo-Colo | CHI José Sulantay | CHI Aníbal González (Colo-Colo; 24 goals) | |||||
| 1993 | Colo-Colo (19) | Cobreloa | CRO Mirko Jozić | CHI Marco Antonio Figueroa (Cobreloa; 18 goals) | |||||
| 1994 | Universidad de Chile (8) | Universidad Católica | CHI Jorge Socias | ARG Alberto Acosta (Universidad Católica; 33 goals) | |||||
| 1995 | Universidad de Chile (9) | Universidad Católica | CHI Jorge Socias | ARG Gabriel Caballero (Deportes Antofagasta; 18 goals) | |||||
| CHI Aníbal González (Palestino; 18 goals) | |||||||||
| 1996 | Colo-Colo (20) | Universidad Católica | PAR Gustavo Benítez | CHI Mario Véner (Santiago Wanderers; 30 goals) | |||||
| 1997 | Apertura | Universidad Católica (7) | Colo-Colo | CHI Fernando Carvallo | ARG David Bisconti (Universidad Católica; 15 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Colo-Colo (21) | Universidad Católica | PAR Gustavo Benítez | PAR Richart Báez (Universidad de Chile; 10 goals) | |||||
| CHI Rubén Vallejos (Deportes Puerto Montt; 10 goals) | |||||||||
| 1998 | Colo-Colo (22) | Universidad de Chile | PAR Gustavo Benítez | CHI Pedro González (Universidad de Chile; 23 goals) | |||||
| 1999 | Universidad de Chile (10) | Universidad Católica | CHI César Vaccia | CHI Mario Núñez (O'Higgins; 34 goals) | |||||
| 2000 | Universidad de Chile (11) | Cobreloa | CHI César Vaccia | CHI Pedro González (Universidad de Chile; 26 goals) | |||||
| 2001 | Santiago Wanderers (3) | Universidad Católica | CHI Jorge Garcés | CHI Héctor Tapia (Colo-Colo; 24 goals) | |||||
| 2002 | Apertura | Universidad Católica (8) | Rangers | CHI Juvenal Olmos | CHI Sebastián González (Colo-Colo; 18 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Colo-Colo (23) | Universidad Católica | CHI Jaime Pizarro | CHI Manuel Neira (Colo-Colo; 14 goals) | |||||
| 2003 | Apertura | Cobreloa (6) | Colo-Colo | URU CHI Nelson Acosta | PAR Salvador Cabañas (Audax Italiano; 18 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Cobreloa (7) | Colo-Colo | URU Luis Garisto | URU Gustavo Biscayzacú (Unión Española; 21 goals) | |||||
| 2004 | Apertura | Universidad de Chile (12) | Cobreloa | CHI Héctor Pinto | CHI Patricio Galaz (Cobreloa; 23 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Cobreloa (8) | Unión Española | URU CHI Nelson Acosta | CHI Patricio Galaz (Cobreloa; 19 goals) | |||||
| 2005 | Apertura | Unión Española (6) | Coquimbo Unido | CHI Fernando Díaz | CHI Joel Estay (Everton; 13 goals) | ||||
| CHI Álvaro Sarabia (Deportes Puerto Montt; 13 goals) | |||||||||
| CHI Héctor Mancilla (Huachipato; 13 goals) | |||||||||
| Clausura | Universidad Católica (9) | Universidad de Chile | CHI Jorge Pellicer | CHI Cristián Montecinos (Deportes Concepción; 13 goals) | |||||
| CHI Gonzalo Fierro (Colo-Colo; 13 goals) | |||||||||
| CHI César Díaz (Cobresal; 13 goals) | |||||||||
| 2006 | Apertura | Colo-Colo (24) | Universidad de Chile | ARG Claudio Borghi | CHI Humberto Suazo (Colo-Colo; 19 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Colo-Colo (25) | Audax Italiano | ARG Claudio Borghi | CHI Leonardo Monje (Universidad de Concepción; 17 goals) | |||||
| 2007 | Apertura | Colo-Colo (26) | Universidad Católica | ARG Claudio Borghi | CHI Humberto Suazo (Colo-Colo; 18 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Colo-Colo (27) | Universidad de Concepción | ARG Claudio Borghi | CHI Carlos Villanueva (Audax Italiano; 20 goals) | |||||
| 2008 | Apertura | Everton (4) | Colo-Colo | URU CHI Nelson Acosta | ARG Lucas Barrios (Colo-Colo; 19 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Colo-Colo (28) | Palestino | ARG CHI Marcelo Barticciotto | ARG Lucas Barrios (Colo-Colo; 18 goals) | |||||
| 2009 | Apertura | Universidad de Chile (13) | Unión Española | URU Sergio Markarián | CHI Esteban Paredes (Santiago Morning; 17 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Colo-Colo (29) | Universidad Católica | ARG Hugo Tocalli | ARG Diego Rivarola (Santiago Morning; 13 goals) | |||||
| 2010 | Universidad Católica (10) | Colo-Colo | ARG ESP Juan Antonio Pizzi | CHI Milovan Mirosevic (Universidad Católica; 19 goals) | |||||
| 2011 | Apertura | Universidad de Chile (14) | Universidad Católica | ARG Jorge Sampaoli | ARG Matías Urbano (Unión San Felipe; 12 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Universidad de Chile (15) | Cobreloa | ARG Jorge Sampaoli | CHI Esteban Paredes (Colo-Colo; 14 goals) | |||||
| 2012 | Apertura | Universidad de Chile (16) | O'Higgins | ARG Jorge Sampaoli | ARG Enzo Gutiérrez (O'Higgins; 11 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Huachipato (2) | Unión Española | CHI Jorge Pellicer | ARG Sebastián Sáez (Audax Italiano; 13 goals) | |||||
| 2013 | Unión Española (7) | Universidad Católica | CHI José Luis Sierra | ARG Javier Elizondo (Deportes Antofagasta; 14 goals) | |||||
| ARG Sebastián Sáez (Audax Italiano; 14 goals) | |||||||||
| 2013–14 | Apertura | O'Higgins (1) | Universidad Católica | ARG Eduardo Berizzo | ARG Luciano Vázquez (Ñublense; 11 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Colo-Colo (30) | Universidad Católica | CHI Héctor Tapia | CHI Esteban Paredes (Colo-Colo; 16 goals) | |||||
| 2014–15 | Apertura | Universidad de Chile (17) | Santiago Wanderers | URU Martín Lasarte | CHI Esteban Paredes (Colo-Colo; 12 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Cobresal (1) | Colo-Colo | ARG Dalcio Giovagnoli | CHI Jean Paul Pineda (Unión La Calera; 11 goals) | |||||
| CHI Esteban Paredes (Colo-Colo; 11 goals) | |||||||||
| 2015–16 | Apertura | Colo-Colo (31) | Universidad Católica | CHI José Luis Sierra | ARG Marcos Riquelme (Palestino; 11 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Universidad Católica (11) | Colo-Colo | CHI Mario Salas | CHI Nicolás Castillo (Universidad Católica; 11 goals) | |||||
| 2016–17 | Apertura | Universidad Católica (12) | Deportes Iquique | CHI Mario Salas | CHI Nicolás Castillo (Universidad Católica; 13 goals) | ||||
| Clausura | Universidad de Chile (18) | Colo-Colo | ARG Guillermo Hoyos | CHI Felipe Mora (Universidad de Chile; 13 goals) | |||||
| 2017 | Colo-Colo (32) | Unión Española | ARG Pablo Guede | CHI Bryan Carrasco (Audax Italiano; 10 goals) | |||||
| 2018 | Universidad Católica (13) | Universidad de Concepción | ESP Beñat San José | CHI Esteban Paredes (Colo-Colo; 19 goals) | |||||
| 2019 | Universidad Católica (14) | Colo-Colo | ARG BOL Gustavo Quinteros | ARG Lucas Passerini (Palestino; 14 goals) | |||||
| 2020 | Universidad Católica (15) | Unión La Calera | ARG Ariel Holan | ARG Fernando Zampedri (Universidad Católica; 20 goals) | |||||
| 2021 | Universidad Católica (16) | Colo-Colo | ARG Cristian Paulucci | ARG Gonzalo Sosa (Deportes Melipilla; 23 goals) | |||||
| ARG Fernando Zampedri (Universidad Católica; 23 goals) | |||||||||
| 2022 | Colo-Colo (33) | Ñublense | ARG BOL Gustavo Quinteros | ARG Fernando Zampedri (Universidad Católica; 18 goals) | |||||
| 2023 | Huachipato (3) | Cobresal | ARG Gustavo Álvarez | ARG Fernando Zampedri (Universidad Católica; 17 goals) | |||||
| 2024 | Colo-Colo (34) | Universidad de Chile | ARG Jorge Almirón | ARG Fernando Zampedri (Universidad Católica; 19 goals) | |||||
| 2025 | Coquimbo Unido (1) | Universidad Católica | CHI Esteban González | CHI Fernando Zampedri (Universidad Católica; 16 goals) |
Source (not for goalscorers): rsssf.com
Titles by club
- Teams in bold compete in the Primera División as of the 2025 season.
- Italics indicates clubs that no longer exist or disaffiliated from the ANFP. Source:
| Rank | Club | Winners | Runners-up | Winning years | Runners-up years |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Colo-Colo | 34 | 22 | 1937, 1939, 1941, 1944, 1947, 1953, 1956, 1960, 1963, 1970, 1972, 1979, 1981, 1983, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1996, 1997 Clausura, 1998, 2002 Clausura, 2006 Apertura, 2006 Clausura, 2007 Apertura, 2007 Clausura, 2008 Clausura, 2009 Clausura, 2014 Clausura, 2015 Apertura, 2017 Transición, 2022, 2024 | 1933, 1943, 1952, 1954, 1955, 1958, 1959, 1966, 1973, 1982, 1987, 1992, 1997 Apertura, 2003 Apertura, 2003 Clausura, 2008 Apertura, 2010, 2015 Clausura, 2016 Clausura, 2017 Clausura, 2019, 2021 |
| 2 | Universidad de Chile | 18 | 9 | 1940, 1959, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1967, 1969, 1994, 1995, 1999, 2000, 2004 Apertura, 2009 Apertura, 2011 Apertura, 2011 Clausura, 2012 Apertura, 2014 Apertura, 2017 Clausura | 1957, 1961, 1963, 1971, 1980, 1998, 2005 Clausura, 2006 Apertura, 2024 |
| 3 | Universidad Católica | 16 | 22 | 1949, 1954, 1961, 1966, 1984, 1987, 1997 Apertura, 2002 Apertura, 2005 Clausura, 2010, 2016 Clausura, 2016 Apertura, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021 | 1962, 1964, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1989, 1990, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997 Clausura, 1999, 2001, 2002 Clausura, 2007 Apertura, 2009 Clausura, 2011 Apertura, 2013 Transición, 2013 Apertura, 2014 Clausura, 2015 Apertura, 2025 |
| 4 | Cobreloa | 8 | 8 | 1980, 1982, 1985, 1988, 1992, 2003 Apertura, 2003 Clausura, 2004 Clausura | 1978, 1979, 1981, 1983, 1993, 2000, 2004 Apertura, 2011 Clausura |
| 5 | Unión Española | 7 | 10 | 1943, 1951, 1973, 1975, 1977, 2005 Apertura, 2013 Transición | 1945, 1948, 1950, 1970, 1972, 1976, 2004 Clausura, 2009 Apertura, 2012 Clausura, 2017 Transición |
| 6 | Audax Italiano | 4 | 8 | 1936, 1946, 1948, 1957 | 1934, 1935, 1938, 1940, 1944, 1947, 1951, 2006 Clausura |
| Magallanes | 4 | 4 | 1933, 1934, 1935, 1938 | 1936, 1937, 1942, 1946 | |
| Everton | 4 | 2 | 1950, 1952, 1976, 2008 Apertura | 1977, 1985 | |
| 9 | Santiago Wanderers | 3 | 4 | 1958, 1968, 2001 | 1949, 1956, 1960, 2014 Apertura |
| Huachipato | 3 | — | 1974, 2012 Clausura, 2023 | — | |
| 11 | Palestino | 2 | 4 | 1955, 1978 | 1953, 1974, 1986, 2008 Clausura |
| 12 | Cobresal | 1 | 3 | 2015 Clausura | 1984, 1988, 2023 |
| Coquimbo Unido | 1 | 2 | 2025 | 1991, 2005 Apertura | |
| Santiago Morning | 1 | 2 | 1942 | 1939, 1941 | |
| O'Higgins | 1 | 1 | 2013 Apertura | 2012 Apertura | |
| Green Cross | 1 | — | 1945 | — | |
| Unión San Felipe | 1 | — | 1971 | — |
Titles by region
| Region | Nº of titles | Clubs | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [[Image:Flag of the Metropolitan Region, Chile.svg | 25px | border]] Metropolitana | 87 | Colo-Colo (34), Universidad de Chile (18), Universidad Católica (16), Unión Española (7), Magallanes (4), Audax Italiano (4), Palestino (2), Santiago Morning (1), Green Cross (1) |
| [[Image:Flag of Antofagasta Region, Chile.svg | 25px | border]] Antofagasta | 8 | Cobreloa (8) |
| [[Image:Flag of Valparaiso Region, Chile.svg | 25px | border]] Valparaíso | 8 | Everton (4), Santiago Wanderers (3), Unión San Felipe (1) |
| [[Image:Flag of Biobío Region, Chile.svg | 25px | border]] Biobío | 3 | Huachipato (3) |
| [[Image:Flag of Atacama, Chile.svg | 25px | border]] Atacama | 1 | Cobresal (1) |
| [[Image:Flag of O'Higgins Region, Chile.svg | 25px | border]] O'Higgins | 1 | O'Higgins (1) |
| [[Image:Flag of Coquimbo Region, Chile.svg | 25px | border]] Coquimbo | 1 | Coquimbo Unido (1) |
All-time goalscorers
| Rank | Country | Player | Goals | Years |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CHL | Esteban Paredes | 221 | 2000-2022 |
| 2 | CHL | Francisco Valdés | 215 | 1961-1983 |
| 3 | CHL | Pedro González | 214 | 1985-2006 |
| 4 | CHL | Honorino Landa | 193 | 1959-1974 |
| 5 | ARG | Óscar Fabbiani | 188 | 1974-1987 |
| 6 | CHL | Marcelo Corrales | 188 | 1990-2007 |
| 7 | CHL | Carlos Campos | 184 | 1956-1969 |
| 8 | CHL | Jaime Riveros | 175 | 1990-2011 |
| 9 | CHL | Atilio Cremaschi | 174 | 1941-1960 |
| 10 | CHL | Carlos Caszely | 171 | 1967-1986 |
| 11 | CHL | José Fernández | 171 | 1948-1961 |
| 12 | CHL | Luis Hernán Álvarez | 168 | 1958-1969 |
| 13 | CHL | Juan Soto | 166 | 1957-1969 |
| 14 | CHL | Leonel Sánchez | 161 | 1953-1970 |
| 15 | CHL | Anibal González | 156 | 1983-2001 |
| 16 | CHL | Julio Crisosto | 154 | 1969-1983 |
References
References
- [Los grandes récords del fútbol chileno], ''as chile'', 25 September 2015.
- [Los grandes récords del fútbol chileno], ''as chile'', 25 Sep 2015
- (24 November 2023). "Betsson queda en el pasado: la ANFP cierra al nuevo sponsor del Campeonato Nacional para la temporada 2024". [[La Tercera]].
- [https://www.rsssf.org/tablesc/chile34.html Chilean League 1934]
- "Sergio Livingstone junto al entrenador Alberto Buccicardi y jugadores del plantel de Universidad Católica celebrando el título de campeón del torneo de Primera División, revista Estadio, 27 de noviembre de 1949 - Memoria Chilena".
- (15 February 2019). "AFP PlanVital, el nuevo socio comercial de la Primera División del fútbol chileno". ANFP.
- (18 January 2023). "Campeonato Betsson: ANFP anuncia el nuevo auspiciador de la Primera División". [[TNT Sports (Chilean TV channel).
- (26 January 2025). "Una nueva era: El Campeonato Nacional del fútbol chileno cambia de nombre y logo para el 2025". RedGol.
- (12 December 2025). "Millonario acuerdo: la Liga de Primera cambia de nombre para el 2026 con nuevo patrocinador". RedGol.
- Andrés, Juan Pablo. (December 11, 2009). "Chile – List of Topscorers".
- Juan Pablo Andrés and Eric Boesenberg. (11 December 2014). "Chile – List of Champions and Runners Up".
- Juan Pablo Andrés and Eric Boesenberg. (23 December 2015). "Chile - List of Champions and Runners Up".
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