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List of association football clubs playing in the league of another country
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This is a list of association football clubs playing in the league of another country i.e. a country other than the one where they are based.
Premise
Conditions for competing in a "foreign" league, as well as in a continental/confederational competition, are set case-by-case by FIFA, the international association football federation, as well as the respective continental confederations and national football associations involved.
Clubs that are located in defunct nations that merged with others, or new nations separated from others, or which stopped competing in a nation's league system because their localation was transferred to another nation, are not included in this article.
United Kingdom

As a result of the history of football in the United Kingdom, the United Kingdom has four FIFA member countries instead of one. Therefore, clubs that play outside what would be regarded as their 'home country' are included.
Clubs from Bermuda are included in the Americas section of the article.
Akrotiri and Dhekelia
Clubs based in Akrotiri and Dhekelia play in the league system of Cyprus.
Wales

Then Swansea City won the 2012–13 Football League Cup, and are the first Wales-based club to qualify through the English system.
Merthyr Town F.C. is under the jurisdiction of the Football Association of Wales for disciplinary and administration purposes. Cardiff City, Swansea City, Wrexham, and Newport County previously had the same governance until an arrangement was made with the English FA for the 2011–12 season onwards which sees Welsh clubs playing in the top four divisions of English football under the governance of the English FA.
Liverpool Reserves have played home matches at the Deva Stadium mentioned below and also the Racecourse Ground, home of Wrexham AFC.
Deva Stadium home of Chester FC and previously Chester City is located almost entirely in Wales. However, the club is still listed as based in England.
Crown Dependencies
The Guernsey Football Association, Jersey Football Association, and the Isle of Man Football Association have no international recognition; they have county status within the English Football Association.
Table of clubs
| Club | League system | Period | Current/Last League | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ENG Berwick Rangers | SCO Scottish football league system | 1951–Present | Scottish Lowland League | |
| ENG Tweedmouth Rangers | 2016–present | East of Scotland Third Division | ||
| SCO Annan Athletic | EnglandEnglish football league system | 1952 - 1977 | SPFL League Two | |
| Scotland Gretna | 1947 - 2002 | Scottish Premier League | Defunct; 2008 | |
| Wales Cardiff City | 1920–present | EFL League One | ||
| Wales Swansea City | 1920–present | EFL Championship | ||
| Wales Wrexham | 1921–present | EFL Championship | Reserves played in Wales second tier until 1995 | |
| Wales Newport County | 1920–present | EFL League Two | ||
| Wales Merthyr Town F.C | 2010–present | National League North | ||
| Wales Caernarfon Town | 1992 - 1995 | Cymru Premier | ||
| Wales Barry Town | 1992 - 1993 | Cymru Premier | ||
| Wales Colwyn Bay | 1992 - 2019 | Cymru Premier | ||
| Wales Merthyr Tydfil F.C. | 1992 - 2010 | Southern League Premier Division | Defunct; 2010 | |
| Guernsey Guernsey F.C. | 2011–present | Southern Combination Premier Division | ||
| Jersey Jersey Bulls F.C. | 2018–present | Isthmian League South Division | ||
| Isle of Man F.C. Isle of Man | 2019–present | North West Counties League Premier Division | ||
| England The New Saints | Wales Welsh football league system | 1992–present | Cymru Premier | Previously they played in the Welsh village of Llansantffraid-ym-Mechain, and in 2010 were planning on playing in Chester. |
| England Newcastle (Shropshire) | Montgomeryshire Amateur League | |||
| England Trefonen | Montgomeryshire Amateur League | |||
| England Bishop's Castle Town | 1992 - 2010; | |||
| 2016 - present | Central Wales League Northern Division | |||
| England Morda United | 1992 - 1994; | |||
| 2014–2017 | Shropshire County Premier Division | Folded; 2018, Reformed; 2020, Folded; 2025 | ||
| England Llanymynech | 2011 - 2022 | Shropshire County Premier Division | ||
| England Clun Valley F.C. | 1992 - 1996 | Mid-Wales League | Defunct; 1996 | |
| England Bucknell F.C. | 1992 - 2015 | Shropshire County Premier Division | Defunct; 2015 | |
| England Chirk Town F.C. | 2019 - 2022 | North East Wales League Premier Division | Defunct; 2022 | |
| England Oswestry Town | 1993 - 2003 | Welsh Premier League | Merged with Total Network Solutions, later The New Saints; 2003 |
Continental Europe
Table of clubs
| Club | League system | Current / last league | Period | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Northern Ireland Derry City | Ireland Irish football league system | League of Ireland Premier Division | 1985–present | They previously played in the Irish League from 1928 to 1972. They have won the title in Northern Ireland in 1964–65 and in the Republic of Ireland twice - 1988–89 and 1996–97. |
| Andorra FC Andorra | Spain Spanish football league system | Segunda División | 1942–present | |
| Austria SV Kleinwalsertal | Germany German football league system | B-Klasse Allgäu 8 | 1960s - 2018 | |
| Bosnia and Herzegovina FK Borac Banja Luka | FR Yugoslavia Yugoslav football league system | 1992 - 1995 | Technically, the club stayed Yugoslav and continued to participate in Yugoslav competition until 1995, despite Bosnia and Herzegovina having been recognised as independent in 1992. | |
| Cyprus Olympiakos Nicosia | Greece Greek football league system | 1967 – 68, 1969 – 70, 1971 – 72 | From 1967 to 1974, the champion of the Cypriot First Division was promoted to the Greek First Division. | |
| Cyprus AEL Limassol | 1968 – 69 | |||
| Cyprus EPA Larnaca FC | 1970 – 71 | |||
| Cyprus AC Omonia | 1972 – 73 | |||
| Cyprus APOEL F.C. | 1973 – 74 | |||
| Finland IF Fram | Sweden Swedish football league system | 1999 – 2011 | All clubs are based in Åland, an autonomous region of Finland with an indigenous ethnic Swedish population. | |
| Finland IF Östernäskamraterna | 2004 – 2007 | |||
| Finland Eckerö IF | 2005 – 2009 | |||
| Finland Jomala IK | 2000 – 2005 | |||
| Finland IF Finströms Kamraterna | 2002 – 2003 | |||
| Finland IF Start | 2004 | |||
| Finland Lemlands IF | 2011 – 2021 | |||
| Finland Hammarlands IK | 2014 – 2023 | |||
| Russia Volna Kaliningrad | Lithuania Lithuanian League system | 2000 – 2001 | Folded | |
| Germany FC Büsingen | SUI Swiss Football League | 4. Liga – Group 5 | 1924–present | Büsingen am Hochrhein is a German exclave surrounded by Switzerland. |
| Italy AP Campionese | 5. Liga – Group 1 | 1978–present | Campione d'Italia is an Italian exclave surrounded by Switzerland. The club did not compete during the COVID pandemic. | |
| SUI FC Chiasso | Italy Italian football league system | 1914 - 1923 | ||
| San Marino San Marino Calcio | ItalyItalian football league system | Eccellenza | 2021–present | The home league of San Marino was established only in 1985. Before that year, other Sammarinese teams have competed in the Italian system, though only San Marino Calcio was allowed to take part in the system and also to Coppa Italia exclusively. |
| Liechtenstein FC Balzers | SUI Swiss Football League | All clubs in Liechtenstein play in the Swiss Football League system, as Liechtenstein has no properly recognized league of its own. These clubs also compete in the Liechtenstein Football Cup, which is effectively the championship of Liechtenstein, with the winners representing Liechtenstein in the corresponding UEFA club competition (the Cup Winners’ Cup through the 1998–99 season, thereafter the UEFA Cup/UEFA Europa League through the 2020–21 season, and currently the UEFA Europa Conference League). The cup winners are the only club representing Liechtenstein in Europe, as without a league they do not have a club in the UEFA Champions League. Liechtenstein clubs also do not play in the Swiss Cup, and are not eligible for qualification to European competitions via the Swiss league system. | ||
| Liechtenstein USV Eschen/Mauren | ||||
| Liechtenstein FC Ruggell | ||||
| Liechtenstein FC Schaan | ||||
| Liechtenstein FC Triesen | ||||
| Liechtenstein FC Triesenberg | ||||
| Liechtenstein FC Vaduz | 1932–present | FC Vaduz has had three stints in the top flight in Switzerland: the first in the 2008–09 season, the second running from 2014 to 2017, and the most recent was in 2020–21. They are the only Liechtenstein club to have ever played in the Swiss Super League. In the 2022–23 UEFA Europa Conference League, they qualified for the group stage, becoming the first team from Liechtenstein to play in the group stage of a UEFA club competition. | ||
| Monaco AS Monaco FC | France French football league system | Ligue 1 | 1933–present | Monaco does not have a professional league and the Monégasque Football Federation, which has no international recognition, was not formed until 2000. They are one of the most successful clubs in France having won eight Ligue 1, five Coupe de France and one Coupe de la Ligue titles, and have also represented France in European competitions, reaching the final of the now-defunct UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1992 and of the UEFA Champions League in 2004. |
| ESP UE Bossòst | Occitanie League, Haute-Garonne District, D2 | 1927–present | In the first years of the team, they could not cross to the other side of the valley because of the snow, for this reason the football team of the Aran Valley plays in France. In fact, until they built the Vielha tunnel, they could not cross into Catalan territory during the winter. | |
| Saarland 1. FC Saarbrücken | French Div 2 | 1947/48 |
Transnistria
Transnistria → Moldova : Transnistrian in Moldova
Transnistria is a break away state that does not operate its own league system
- FC Sheriff Tiraspol
Kosovo
Kosovo → Serbia : Kosovar in Serbia Kosovo is still only a partially recognised state and the government of Serbia still claims the territory as its own.
Due to Serbian refusal of Kosovo institutions, Serbs in North Kosovo act independently in sport. For example, the Football First League of North Kosovo was primarily formed of Serbian clubs from four of North Kosovo's municipalities. Both governments agreed upon creating a Community of Serb Municipalities.
In 2016, Kosovo became the 55th member of UEFA, and therefore Football Federation of Kosovo's Football Superleague of Kosovo became a recognised independent league.
From 2010 to 2015, the Football First League of North Kosovo was the top football regional league in North Kosovo, ranked fifth in the Serbian league system. The league was formed primarily of Serbian football clubs that come from four of North Kosovo's municipalities such as Leposavić, Zvečan, Zubin Potok and Northern Kosovska Mitrovica.
The league was formed in protest to the establishment of the Kosovo Super League by the Republic of Kosovo; the Serbian clubs from North Kosovo refuse to enter the Republic of Kosovo's institutions as per the Assembly of the Community of Municipalities of the Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija.
- FK Ibar Leposavić
- FK Kopaonik Lešak
- FK Moša Banje
- FK Rudar Kosovska Mitrovica
- FK Zvečan[[File:Haupttrib%C3%BCne mit Gebirge.JPG|thumb|[[Rheinpark Stadion]], home of [[FC Vaduz]], the only Liechtensteiner team to have ever played top-flight football in Switzerland]]
- FK Radnik Prilužje (until 2013)
- FK Sočanica (until 2014)
There are two other clubs from North Kosovo, which compete in different leagues:
- FK Mokra Gora plays in the national Serbian League West
- FK Trepča play in the Morava Zone League
Ukraine
Ukraine (Crimea) → Russia : Ukrainian in Russia
- FC SKChF Sevastopol (reconstituted based on FC Sevastopol)
- FC TSK Simferopol (reconstituted based on SC Tavriya Simferopol)
- FC Zhemchuzhina Yalta (revived based on same club that was disqualified from Ukrainian competitions)
The three clubs are from Crimea, a territory recognized by Ukraine and a majority of countries as part of Ukraine, but have been under effective Russian control as the Republic of Crimea since the annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation.
FC Sevastopol and SC Tavriya Simferopol last played in the 2013–14 Ukrainian Premier League, and were dissolved after the completion of the season. The three clubs were reformed as football organizations of the Russian Federation and joined the Russian Professional Football League starting from the 2014–15 season, after approval from the Russian Football Union.
The inclusion of Crimean clubs in Russian competitions have not been approved by either FIFA or UEFA, and the Football Federation of Ukraine have lodged a complaint.
On 22 August 2014, UEFA decided "that any football matches played by Crimean clubs organised under the auspices of the Russian Football Union will not be recognised by UEFA until further notice", and on 4 December 2014, decided to prohibit Crimean clubs to play in competitions organised by the Russian Football Union as from 1 January 2015 and for the region to be considered as a "special zone" for football purposes until further notice.
Africa
| Club | League system | Current / last league | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Western Sahara JS Massira | Morocco Moroccan football league system | Botola 2 | JS Massira is from the city of El Aaiún in the territory that the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic claims but does not hold |
| Sudan Al-Hilal S.C. | Rwanda Rwandan football league system | Rwanda Premier League | Temporary relocation due to the Sudanese civil war. The two clubs competed in Mauritania's Super D1 during the 2024-25 season. |
| Sudan Al-Merrikh SC |
Americas
Main article: List of Canadian soccer clubs in American leagues
Many North American sports leagues are made up of teams from different countries—three of the four largest professional leagues have teams representing cities on both sides of the U.S.-Canada border. The same is true for soccer leagues. Although foreign clubs can and do participate in leagues based in the United States, no such team is eligible to participate in the U.S. Open Cup, which is only open to teams affiliated with the United States Soccer Federation (U.S. Soccer).
Previously, Canadian teams playing in Major League Soccer (MLS) were not eligible to qualify for the CONCACAF Champions League through the MLS regular season or playoffs; their only method of qualification was through the Canadian Championship, the cup competition run by the Canadian Soccer Association. However, starting from the 2023 MLS season, Canadian teams can qualify for the expanded 2024 CONCACAF Champions League through the MLS regular season or playoffs, or through the Leagues Cup, a competition run by MLS and Liga MX.
Those teams that do participate in U.S. leagues also participate in various competitions under their local federations to gain entry into the Champions League and the now defunct CONCACAF League.
| Club | Current / last league | Period | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Antigua and Barbuda Antigua Barracuda FC | USL Championship | 2011 - 2013 | The team was forced to play its entire 2013 schedule on the road due to issues with its home stadium, normally a cricket ground, and folded after that season. |
| Bermuda Bermuda Hogges | USL League Two | 2006 - 2013 | The team began as a member of the USL Second Division (the effective predecessor to today's USL Championship), but self-relegated to the PDL after the 2009 season. Many of the players appeared for the Bermuda national team. The club folded after the 2013 PDL season. |
| Bermuda FC Bascome Bermuda | Unknown | The club joined the USL League Two in time for the 2020 season; however, its debut was postponed due to the 2020, 2021 and 2022 COVID-19 pandemic and consequent travel restrictions. The club did not take part also to the 2023 USL League Two season; it still remains indexed as a member of that league in the USL site. | |
| Canada Toronto FC | MLS | 2007–present | |
| Canada Vancouver Whitecaps FC | 2011–present | The Whitecaps played in the USL First Division until 2009 and in the temporary USSF Division 2 in 2010. | |
| Canada CF Montréal | 2012–present | Montreal Impact was the same as their predecessors, as it had played the previous three seasons in three different US-based leagues: the USL First Division in 2009, the temporary USSF Division 2 in 2010, and the new NASL in 2011. | |
| Canada Toronto FC II | MLS Next Pro | 2014–present | They previously played in the USL Championship (both clubs) and USL League One (Toronto FC II). |
| Canada Whitecaps FC 2 | |||
| Canada Thunder Bay Chill | USL League Two | 2000–present | |
| Canada FC Manitoba | 2020–present | Formerly known as WSA Winnipeg. | |
| Puerto Rico Puerto Rico Islanders | North American Soccer League | 2003 - 2012 | The Islanders had played in the first two NASL seasons of 2011 and 201, as well as in the USL First Division in 2009 and USSF D2 Pro League in 2010. |
| Puerto Rico Puerto Rico FC | 2016 - 2017 | ||
| Puerto Rico Sevilla FC Puerto Rico | USL Pro | Initially were going to play in the 2011 season, but were removed due to severe economic difficulties; moved to Puerto Rican leagues. | |
| Puerto Rico Club Atlético River Plate Puerto Rico | |||
| Puerto Rico Puerto Rico United | |||
| Puerto Rico Puerto Rico Capitals | Women's Premier Soccer League | 2008 - 2010 | Even though Puerto Rico is a dependent territory of the United States, it has a separate football federation, the Puerto Rican Football Federation. The highest level of competition within Puerto Rico is the Puerto Rico Soccer League, and teams can qualify domestically as Puerto Rican entrants in the Caribbean Club Championship and the CONCACAF Champions League. |
Asia and Oceania
| Club | League system | Current / last league | Period | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AUS Perth Kangaroos IFC | SIN Singaporean football league system | Singapore Premier League | 1994 | They placed first and second, respectively. |
| AUS Darwin Cubs | ||||
| MAS Harimau Muda A | 2012 - 2015 | As part of a two-way arrangement with the Football Association of Singapore. | ||
| AUS South Melbourne FC | AUS Australian soccer league system | OFC Professional League | 2026 - | Participates in the Australian Championship, the second tier of Australian soccer and in the OFC Pro League. |
| Brunei DPMM FC | MAS Malaysian football league system | Malaysia Premier League | 2006 | Expelled from the MSL for the 2008 season. Returned in 2025 season for initial three seasons. |
| Malaysia Super League | 2007 - 2008 | |||
| 2025–present | ||||
| Brunei Brunei M-League Team | 2005 Liga Premier | 1979 - 2005 | Malaysia Cup winners in 1999 | |
| SIN Singapore Lions | Malaysia Super League | 1921 - 1994 | ||
| SIN LionsXII | 2011 - 2015 | |||
| KOR Seoul Phoenix FC | Malaysia A1 Semi-Pro League | 2025 - | Formerly known as FC Sejong and previously played in the K4 League. | |
| Brunei DPMM FC | SIN Singaporean football league system | Singapore Premier League | 2009–2025 | DPMM were also invited to take part in the Singapore Cup from 2004. After the FIFA ban on the Brunei FA in 2009, DPMM FC suspended their participation starting the 2010 season and resumed it only in 2012. |
| China Xiangxue Pharmaceutical | Hong Kong Hong Kong football league system | Hong Kong First Division League | 2001 - 2005 | While Hong Kong is a special administrative region of China, it has its own football federation (Hong Kong Football Association) and professional league (Hong Kong Premier League). Xiangxue Pharmaceutical was named as Guangdong Mingfeng and Guangzhou Xiangxue. The club was a reserve team of Guangzhou F.C. and Hunan Shoking during 2002-04 and 2004-05 seasons respectively. |
| China Dongguan Nancheng | 2003 - 2004 | Dongguan Nancheng was based in Dongguan, Guangdong, China. | ||
| China Sunray Cave | 2003 - 2005 | Sunray Cave was a satellite team of Guangdong Sunray Cave. | ||
| China Lanwa FC | 2005 - 2008 | Lanwa FC was formerly named as Dongguan Dongcheng F.C. After an unsuccessful season that the club has relegated to China League Two, the club has switched to participate in the Hong Kong First Division League. | ||
| China Chengdu Sheffield United | 2008 - 2009 | Both teams were reserve teams of mainland Chinese clubs, but played their home games in Hong Kong. | ||
| China Xiangxue Eisiti | ||||
| JPN Yokohamha F.C. Hong Kong | 2012 - 2013 | Yokohamha F.C. Hong Kong was a satellite team of Yokohama F.C., a professional club in the J. League. | ||
| China R&F | Hong Kong Premier League | 2016 - 2020 | R&F was a satellite team of Guangzhou R&F F.C., a top-level professional club in the Super League; after failing to win a trophy in four years, R&F officially announced withdrawal from the league on 14 October 2020. | |
| MAC MFA Development | PRC Chinese football league system | China Chinese Champions League | 2018 | Not eligible for promotion to the Chinese third-tier. |
| MAC Chao Pak Kei | 2023 | |||
| MAC Macau U23 | 2025 | |||
| MAS Harimau Muda A | AUS Australian soccer league system | National Premier Leagues Queensland | 2014 | Played their games in Australia. |
| NZL Wellington Phoenix | A-League Men | 2007–present | As New Zealand is a member of OFC and Australia is a member of AFC since moving from OFC in 2006, Auckland and Wellington Phoenix are playing in the league of a member of another football confederation. As per agreement with FIFA, AFC and OFC, both teams are not allowed to participate in the AFC Champions League, regardless of their results in the A-League or the Australia Cup. They also do not participate in the OFC Champions League, as New Zealand is represented by clubs from its football league, the New Zealand National League (NZNL). Wellington Phoenix and Auckland FC are the only extant professional football teams in New Zealand; the NZNL is semi-professional. The reserve team of Wellington Phoenix began play in the NZ Championship in 2014–15, and have featured in every season since. | |
| NZL Auckland FC | 2024–present | |||
| NZL Wellington Phoenix Women | A-League Women | 2021–present | ||
| NZL New Zealand Knights | National Soccer League | 1999 - 2004 | As "Football Kingz FC" | |
| A-League | 2005 - 2007 |

Satellite teams in Singapore
A number of teams in the S.League played their home games in Singapore but are satellite teams of foreign clubs:
| Satelite club | Affiliated club | Affiliated league |
|---|---|---|
| Albirex Niigata Singapore FC | JPN Albirex Niigata | JPN J. League |
| Beijing Guoan Talent Singapore FC | CHN Beijing Guoan F.C | CHN Super League |
| Dalian Shide Siwu FC | CHN Dalian Haichang | |
| Liaoning Guangyuan FC | CHN Liaoning FC |
In 2024, Albirex Niigata Singapore underwent localisation with players now predominantly Singaporean. This as well as the exit of DPMM FC means that from the 2025–26 season, all participants of the Singapore Premier League are local clubs.
In recent years, foreign clubs from other countries have also been invited to participate in the Singapore Cup. The most recent entrant was BG Pathum United of the Thai League 1 at the 2024–25 Singapore Cup.
References
References
- "Omonia denied use of Achna Forest stadium by British bases". Cyprus Mail.
- (24 April 2008). "FA approves Cardiff for Uefa Cup".
- Scott, Matt. (6 May 2011). "Football Association breaks Welsh jurisdiction over Cardiff and Swansea". [[The Guardian]].
- "Chester end Liverpool reserves stay at Deva".
- "Liverpool Reserves home games switch to Wrexham". Guardian.
- (9 March 2010). "Chester City seek Welsh Premier spot". BBC.
- "Football Club History Database - Wrexham reserves".
- (10 February 2010). "The New Saints look at moving to Chester's Deva Stadium". BBC Sport.
- (11 July 2020). "Border football club ready to rise from the ashes".
- (26 May 2022). "Wales' oldest football club requests permission to move to English league system".
- "Andorra, el país de los Pirineos... ¡y el fútbol!".
- [http://www.bfv.de/tabelle.verein.do?id=00ES8GNJE400000EVV0AG08LVUPGND5I&staffel=020503PDNK000000VS54898DVUL01S6C-G BK Allgäu 8] BFV website, accessed: 5 August 2019
- "They refused to represent Russia, asked to play for Poland, and instead moved to Lithuania. Why did a Russian club decide to do this?".
- (2018-10-30). "AP Campionese Calcio Campione Calcio Svizzera".
- (2017-08-21). "Cuando el fútbol cruza fronteras".
- (2018-10-30). "Saar - Final Tables 1948/49-1950".
- "Sheriff Tiraspol: Champions League team from an unrecognised state". BBC.
- (13 August 2014). "Crimean clubs to play in Russian second division from next season". Inside World Football.
- (15 August 2014). "Ukraine crisis: Russia's claim on Crimea's football clubs". BBC Sport.
- (22 August 2014). "UEFA Emergency Panel decision on Crimean clubs". UEFA.org.
- (4 December 2014). "UEFA Nations League format and schedule confirmed". UEFA.org.
- "FC Bermuda Bascome".
- (14 October 2020). "港超︱富力R&F落實棄戰港超 稱退出因現時香港足球氛圍". [[Ming Pao]].
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20180120182208/http://www.the-afc.com/en/tournaments/clubs/afc-champions-league/29884-afc-ad-hoc-committee-for-professional-clubs Ad hoc Committee for Professional Clubs]
- (22 August 2014). "Phoenix reserve team to play in national league". Stuff.co.nz.
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