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List of English football champions

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FieldValue
aboveList of English football champions
subheader1Football League (1888–1892)
subheader2Football League First Division (1892–1992)
subheader3Premier League (1992–present)
headerstylefont-size: 12px; background: #BFD7FF; text-align:left;
datastyletext-align:left;
header1Country
data2England
header3Founded
data41888
header5Number of teams
data624 winners
header7Current champions
data8Liverpool (20th title) (2024–25)
header9Most successful club(s)
data10Liverpool
Note

men's English football league champions

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Manchester United (20 titles each) The English football champions are the annual winners of the top-tier competition in the English football league system. Following the codification of professional football by the Football Association in 1885, the Football League was established in 1888, after meetings initiated by Aston Villa director William McGregor.

The new league's inaugural season was 1888–89, and the first club to be crowned champions was Preston North End, whose team completed its fixtures unbeaten. In its first four seasons, with only twelve to fourteen clubs involved, the league was a single entity in which all the teams were from the North or the Midlands. Professionalism had been embraced more readily in those areas than in the South of England. The Football League expanded its membership in 1892 when it absorbed the rival Football Alliance. With 28 members, the league was split into two divisions. Most of the former Alliance clubs joined the new Second Division, while the original league became the First Division, with promotion and relegation between the two.

Rules stipulating a maximum wage for players were abolished in 1961. This resulted in a shift of power towards bigger clubs with more financial means. Financial considerations became an even bigger influence from 1992, when the clubs then in the First Division defected to form the FA Premier League, which became the new top tier. A series of progressively larger television contracts has put unprecedented wealth into the hands of top flight clubs.

A total of 24 different clubs have won the English top-flight league since 1888. Only five clubs have won the title in three consecutive seasons: Huddersfield Town, Arsenal, Liverpool, Manchester United (twice) and Manchester City, with the latter being the only club to have won four successive titles.

List of champions by season

#Winning team won the Continental Treble (League title, FA Cup and European Cup/Champions League)
  • (In bracket, title count):
Ed.SeasonChampions (number of titles)Runners-upThird placeFootball League (1888–1892)Football League First Division (1892–1992)Premier League (1992–present)
1888–89Preston North End (1)Aston Villa (1)Wolverhampton Wanderers
1889–90Preston North End (2)Everton (1)Blackburn Rovers
1890–91Everton (1)Preston North End (1)Notts County
1891–92Sunderland (1)Preston North End (2)Bolton Wanderers
1892–93Sunderland (2)Preston North End (3)Everton
1893–94Aston Villa (1)Sunderland (1)Derby County
1894–95Sunderland (3)Everton (2)Aston Villa
1895–96Aston Villa (2)Derby County (1)Everton
1896–97Aston Villa (3)Sheffield United (1)Derby County
1897–98Sheffield United (1)Sunderland (2)Wolverhampton Wanderers
1898–99Aston Villa (4)Liverpool (1)Burnley
1899–00Aston Villa (5)Sheffield United (2)Sunderland
1900–01Liverpool (1)Sunderland (3)Notts County
1901–02Sunderland (4)Everton (3)Newcastle United
1902–03The Wednesday (1)Aston Villa (2)Sunderland
1903–04The Wednesday (2)Manchester City (1)Everton
1904–05Newcastle United (1)Everton (4)Manchester City
1905–06Liverpool (2)Preston North End (4)The Wednesday
1906–07Newcastle United (2)Bristol City (1)Everton
1907–08Manchester United (1)Aston Villa (3)Manchester City
1908–09Newcastle United (3)Everton (5)Sunderland
1909–10Aston Villa (6)Liverpool (2)Blackburn Rovers
1910–11Manchester United (2)Aston Villa (4)Sunderland
1911–12Blackburn Rovers (1)Everton (6)Newcastle United
1912–13Sunderland (5)Aston Villa (5)The Wednesday
1913–14Blackburn Rovers (2)Aston Villa (6)Middlesbrough
1914–15Everton (2)Oldham Athletic (1)Blackburn Rovers
1915–16 to 1918–19League suspended due to the First World War
1919–20West Bromwich Albion (1)Burnley (1)Chelsea
1920–21Burnley (1)Manchester City (2)Bolton Wanderers
1921–22Liverpool (3)Tottenham Hotspur (1)Burnley
1922–23Liverpool (4)Sunderland (4)Huddersfield Town
1923–24Huddersfield Town (1)Cardiff City (1)Sunderland
1924–25Huddersfield Town (2)West Bromwich Albion (1)Bolton Wanderers
1925–26Huddersfield Town (3)Arsenal (1)Sunderland
1926–27Newcastle United (4)Huddersfield Town (1)Sunderland
1927–28Everton (3)Huddersfield Town (2)Leicester City
1928–29The Wednesday (3)Leicester City (1)Aston Villa
1929–30Sheffield Wednesday (4)Derby County (2)Manchester City
1930–31Arsenal (1)Aston Villa (7)Sheffield Wednesday
1931–32Everton (4)Arsenal (2)Sheffield Wednesday
1932–33Arsenal (2)Aston Villa (8)Sheffield Wednesday
1933–34Arsenal (3)Huddersfield Town (3)Tottenham Hotspur
1934–35Arsenal (4)Sunderland (5)Sheffield Wednesday
1935–36Sunderland (6)Derby County (3)Huddersfield Town
1936–37Manchester City (1)Charlton Athletic (1)Arsenal
1937–38Arsenal (5)Wolverhampton Wanderers (1)Preston North End
1938–39Everton (5)Wolverhampton Wanderers (2)Charlton Athletic
1939–40 to 1945–46League suspended due to the Second World War
1946–47Liverpool (5)Manchester United (1)Wolverhampton Wanderers
1947–48Arsenal (6)Manchester United (2)Burnley
1948–49Portsmouth (1)Manchester United (3)Derby County
1949–50Portsmouth (2)Wolverhampton Wanderers (3)Sunderland
1950–51Tottenham Hotspur (1)Manchester United (4)Blackpool
1951–52Manchester United (3)Tottenham Hotspur (2)Arsenal
1952–53Arsenal (7)Preston North End (5)Wolverhampton Wanderers
1953–54Wolverhampton Wanderers (1)West Bromwich Albion (2)Huddersfield Town
1954–55Chelsea (1)Wolverhampton Wanderers (4)Portsmouth
1955–56Manchester United (4)Blackpool (1)Wolverhampton Wanderers
1956–57Manchester United (5)Tottenham Hotspur (3)Preston North End
1957–58Wolverhampton Wanderers (2)Preston North End (6)Tottenham Hotspur
1958–59Wolverhampton Wanderers (3)Manchester United (5)Arsenal
1959–60Burnley (2)Wolverhampton Wanderers (5)Tottenham Hotspur
1960–61Tottenham Hotspur (2)Sheffield Wednesday (1)Wolverhampton Wanderers
1961–62Ipswich Town (1)Burnley (2)Tottenham Hotspur
1962–63Everton (6)Tottenham Hotspur (4)Burnley
1963–64Liverpool (6)Manchester United (6)Everton
1964–65Manchester United (6)Leeds United (1)Chelsea
1965–66Liverpool (7)Leeds United (2)Burnley
1966–67Manchester United (7)Nottingham Forest (1)Tottenham Hotspur
1967–68Manchester City (2)Manchester United (7)Liverpool
1968–69Leeds United (1)Liverpool (3)Everton
1969–70Everton (7)Leeds United (3)Chelsea
1970–71Arsenal (8)Leeds United (4)Tottenham Hotspur
1971–72Derby County (1)Leeds United (5)Liverpool
1972–73Liverpool (8)Arsenal (3)Leeds United
1973–74Leeds United (2)Liverpool (4)Derby County
1974–75Derby County (2)Liverpool (5)Ipswich Town
1975–76Liverpool (9)Queens Park Rangers (1)Manchester United
1976–77Liverpool (10) †Manchester City (3)Ipswich Town
1977–78Nottingham Forest (1)Liverpool (6)Everton
1978–79Liverpool (11)Nottingham Forest (2)West Bromwich Albion
1979–80Liverpool (12)Manchester United (8)Ipswich Town
1980–81Aston Villa (7)Ipswich Town (1)Arsenal
1981–82Liverpool (13)Ipswich Town (2)Manchester United
1982–83Liverpool (14)Watford (1)Manchester United
1983–84Liverpool (15) †Southampton (1)Nottingham Forest
1984–85Everton (8)Liverpool (7)Tottenham Hotspur
1985–86Liverpool (16)Everton (7)West Ham United
1986–87Everton (9)Liverpool (8)Tottenham Hotspur
1987–88Liverpool (17)Manchester United (9)Nottingham Forest
1988–89Arsenal (9)Liverpool (9)Nottingham Forest
1989–90Liverpool (18)Aston Villa (9)Tottenham Hotspur
1990–91Arsenal (10)Liverpool (10)Crystal Palace
1991–92Leeds United (3)Manchester United (10)Sheffield Wednesday
1992–93Manchester United (8)Aston Villa (10)Norwich City
1993–94Manchester United (9)Blackburn Rovers (1)Newcastle United
1994–95Blackburn Rovers (3)Manchester United (11)Nottingham Forest
1995–96Manchester United (10)Newcastle United (1)Liverpool
1996–97Manchester United (11)Newcastle United (2)Arsenal
1997–98Arsenal (11)Manchester United (12)Liverpool
1998–99Manchester United (12) #Arsenal (4)Chelsea
1999–00Manchester United (13)Arsenal (5)Leeds United
2000–01Manchester United (14)Arsenal (6)Liverpool
2001–02Arsenal (12)Liverpool (11)Manchester United
2002–03Manchester United (15)Arsenal (7)Newcastle United
2003–04Arsenal (13)Chelsea (1)Manchester United
2004–05Chelsea (2)Arsenal (8)Manchester United
2005–06Chelsea (3)Manchester United (13)Liverpool
2006–07Manchester United (16)Chelsea (2)Liverpool
2007–08Manchester United (17) †Chelsea (3)Arsenal
2008–09Manchester United (18)Liverpool (12)Chelsea
2009–10Chelsea (4)Manchester United (14)Arsenal
2010–11Manchester United (19)Chelsea (4)Manchester City
2011–12Manchester City (3)Manchester United (15)Arsenal
2012–13Manchester United (20)Manchester City (4)Chelsea
2013–14Manchester City (4)Liverpool (13)Chelsea
2014–15Chelsea (5)Manchester City (5)Arsenal
2015–16Leicester City (1)Arsenal (9)Tottenham Hotspur
2016–17Chelsea (6)Tottenham Hotspur (5)Manchester City
2017–18Manchester City (5)Manchester United (16)Tottenham Hotspur
2018–19Manchester City (6) ₮Liverpool (14)Chelsea
2019–20Liverpool (19)Manchester City (6)Manchester United
2020–21Manchester City (7)Manchester United (17)Liverpool
2021–22Manchester City (8)Liverpool (15)Chelsea
2022–23Manchester City (9) #Arsenal (10)Manchester United
2023–24Manchester City (10)Arsenal (11)Liverpool
2024–25Liverpool (20)Arsenal (12)Manchester City

List of champion clubs by titles won

24 clubs which have won the English top level title, including 7 which have won the Premier League (1992–present). The most recent to join the list were Leicester City (2015–16 champions) and before that, Nottingham Forest (1977–78) and Derby County (1971–72).

Seven teams have at some point held first or joint first place in the number of titles won: Preston North End (1889–1895), Sunderland (1893–1899 and 1936–1953), Aston Villa (1897–1953), Arsenal (1948–1976), Liverpool (1966–1971, 1973–2011, 2025–present), Manchester United (1967–1971 and 2009–present) and Everton (1970–1971).

Eight teams have finished as runners-up without ever finishing top: Bristol City (1906–07), Oldham Athletic (1914–15), Cardiff City (1923–24), Charlton Athletic (1936–37), Blackpool (1955–56), Queens Park Rangers (1975–76), Watford (1982–83) and Southampton (1983–84). Of these, Cardiff City came closest to winning the league, matching champions Huddersfield Town in points but losing out on goal average (goals scored divided by goals conceded), the precursor to goal difference.

RankClubWinnersRunners-upWinning seasons
1Manchester United20171907–08, 1910–11, 1951–52, 1955–56, 1956–57, 1964–65, 1966–67, 1992–93, 1993–94, 1995–96, 1996–97, 1998–99, 1999–2000, 2000–01, 2002–03, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2008–09, 2010–11, 2012–13
Liverpool20151900–01, 1905–06, 1921–22, 1922–23, 1946–47, 1963–64, 1965–66, 1972–73, 1975–76, 1976–77, 1978–79, 1979–80, 1981–82, 1982–83, 1983–84, 1985–86, 1987–88, 1989–90, 2019–20, 2024–25
3Arsenal13121930–31, 1932–33, 1933–34, 1934–35, 1937–38, 1947–48, 1952–53, 1970–71, 1988–89, 1990–91, 1997–98, 2001–02, 2003–04
4Manchester City1061936–37, 1967–68, 2011–12, 2013–14, 2017–18, 2018–19, 2020–21, 2021–22, 2022–23, 2023–24
5Everton971890–91, 1914–15, 1927–28, 1931–32, 1938–39, 1962–63, 1969–70, 1984–85, 1986–87
6Aston Villa7101893–94, 1895–96, 1896–97, 1898–99, 1899–1900, 1909–10, 1980–81
7Sunderland651891–92, 1892–93, 1894–95, 1901–02, 1912–13, 1935–36
Chelsea641954–55, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2009–10, 2014–15, 2016–17
9Newcastle United421904–05, 1906–07, 1908–09, 1926–27
Sheffield Wednesday411902–03, 1903–04, 1928–29, 1929–30
11Wolverhampton Wanderers351953–54, 1957–58, 1958–59
Leeds United351968–69, 1973–74, 1991–92
Huddersfield Town331923–24, 1924–25, 1925–26
Blackburn Rovers311911–12, 1913–14, 1994–95
15Preston North End261888–89, 1889–90
Tottenham Hotspur251950–51, 1960–61
Derby County231971–72, 1974–75
Burnley221920–21, 1959–60
Portsmouth201948–49, 1949–50
20Sheffield United121897–98
West Bromwich Albion121919–20
Ipswich Town121961–62
Nottingham Forest121977–78
Leicester City112015–16

By region

RegionChampionshipsClubs
North West66Manchester United (20), Liverpool (20), Manchester City (10), Everton (9), Blackburn Rovers (3), Preston North End (2), Burnley (2)
London21Arsenal (13), Chelsea (6), Tottenham Hotspur (2)
Yorkshire11Sheffield Wednesday (4), Huddersfield Town (3), Leeds United (3), Sheffield United (1)
West Midlands11Aston Villa (7), Wolverhampton Wanderers (3), West Bromwich Albion (1)
North East10Sunderland (6), Newcastle United (4)
East Midlands4Derby County (2), Leicester City (1), Nottingham Forest (1)
South East2Portsmouth (2)
East1Ipswich Town (1)
South West0
Wales0

By historic county

Historic CountyChampionshipsClubs
Lancashire66Manchester United (20), Liverpool (20), Manchester City (10), Everton (9), Blackburn Rovers (3), Preston North End (2), Burnley (2)
Middlesex21Arsenal (13), Chelsea (6), Tottenham Hotspur (2)
Yorkshire11Sheffield Wednesday (4), Huddersfield Town (3), Leeds United (3), Sheffield United (1)
Warwickshire7Aston Villa (7)
County Durham6Sunderland (6)
Northumberland4Newcastle United (4)
Staffordshire4Wolverhampton Wanderers (3), West Bromwich Albion (1)
Derbyshire2Derby County (2)
Hampshire2Portsmouth (2)
Suffolk1Ipswich Town (1)
Nottinghamshire1Nottingham Forest (1)
Leicestershire1Leicester City (1)

By city/town

City / TownChampionshipsClubs
Manchester30Manchester United (20), Manchester City (10)
Liverpool29Liverpool (20), Everton (9)
London21Arsenal (13), Chelsea (6), Tottenham Hotspur (2)
Birmingham7Aston Villa (7)
Sunderland6Sunderland (6)
Sheffield5Sheffield Wednesday (4), Sheffield United (1)
Newcastle4Newcastle United (4)
Blackburn3Blackburn Rovers (3)
Huddersfield3Huddersfield Town (3)
Leeds3Leeds United (3)
Wolverhampton3Wolverhampton Wanderers (3)
Burnley2Burnley (2)
Derby2Derby County (2)
Portsmouth2Portsmouth (2)
Preston2Preston North End (2)
Ipswich1Ipswich Town (1)
Leicester1Leicester City (1)
Nottingham1Nottingham Forest (1)
West Bromwich1West Bromwich Albion (1)

Notes

References

Specific

Sources

General

References

  1. "The History of the Football League". The Football League.
  2. Titford, Roger. (November 2005). "Football League, 1888–89". When Saturday Comes.
  3. Goldblatt, David. (2007). "The Ball is Round: A Global History of Football". Penguin.
  4. Dart, Tom. (25 May 2009). "Burnley: little town, big traditions". The Times.
  5. "A History of The Premier League". Premier League.
  6. Harris, Nick. (7 February 2009). "£1.78bn: Record Premier League TV deal defies economic slump". The Independent.
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