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UEFA Women's Euro 2025


Fussball-Europameisterschaft der Frauen 2025Championnat d'Europe féminin de football 2025Campionato europeo di calcio femminile 2025Campiunadi d'Europa da ballape dunna 2025
The Summit of Emotions
Switzerland
2–27 July
16 (from 1 confederation)
8 (in 8 host cities)
England (2nd title)
Spain
31
106 (3.42 per match)
657,291 (21,203 per match)
Esther González(4 goals)
Aitana Bonmatí
Michelle Agyemang
← 2022 2029 →

The 2025 UEFA Women's Championship, commonly referred to as UEFA Women's Euro 2025 or simply Euro 2025, was the 14th edition of the UEFA Women's Championship, the quadrennial international football championship organised by UEFA for the women's national teams of Europe. The tournament was played in Switzerland from 2 to 27 July 2025. This was the third edition since the tournament was expanded to 16 teams. The tournament returned to its usual four-year cycle after the previous tournament was delayed to 2022 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Defending champions England retained the title, defeating Spain in the final via a penalty shootout. It was the first time a country defended their European title since Germany in 2013, and the first time the title was decided via a shootout since the inaugural tournament in 1984.

Record attendance and viewership across Europe caused the tournament to be declared a huge success by UEFA's head of women's football, Nadine Kessler. Every host city has also stated it was a massive success. The tournament broke the total attendance record, previously held by England in 2022, with 657,291 spectators.

Applications were submitted in August 2022, while final submissions were made in October. Switzerland was selected to host the tournament on 4 April 2023 at the UEFA Executive Committee in Lisbon, Portugal. To be appointed as hosts, a majority of votes was needed in the first round. If the first vote did not produce a majority, the two bids with the most votes would advance to a second and final round. As the first round produced a three-way tie for first, a ballot was used to determine which two bidders would proceed to the second round.

Country(s)Votes by round
Switzerland469
Denmark,  Finland,  Norway,  Sweden444
Poland43
France1

Four declarations of interest to host the tournament were received by UEFA before the deadline of 12 October 2022.

  • Poland – On 3 June 2021, Zbigniew Boniek, head of the Polish Football Association, announced that the association had filed its bid at UEFA to host the 2025 Women's Championship, citing women's football as gaining in popularity in many European countries, including Poland.
  • Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden – On 15 October 2021, the Danish Football Association announced that the Nordic countries Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden, with support from Iceland and Faroe Islands, had confirmed their bids to host the UEFA Euro 2025. On 6 April they submitted their application with multiple stadiums in each host country. The government of Sweden declared its support on the 12th. Finland also submitted an application to be part of the 2025 women's football European Championship on 12 October 2022.
  • France – On 3 February 2022, the French Football Federation and its president, Noël Le Graët, confirmed that France had been bidding for the organisation of the competition.
  • Switzerland – On 14 September 2022, the Swiss Football Association officially confirmed the bid and announced Basel, Bern, Geneva, Lucerne, Lausanne (withdrew), Zurich, Thun, St. Gallen, and Sion as their candidate-cities to host the events.

During the bidding process, venues in Lausanne (Stade Olympique de la Pontaise), Neuchâtel (Stade de la Maladière) and Schaffhausen (Stadion Breite) failed to make the cut. Liechtenstein's capital, Vaduz, was also included in the Swiss bid, but due to the capacity of the Rheinpark Stadion not meeting requirements, the idea was scrapped. Right before the vote, Lausanne (with the Stade de la Tuilière as their proposed venue) voluntarily withdrew as a venue to focus on hosting the 2025 Swiss Federal Gymnastics Festival.

On 2 December 2023, the schedule was provisionally announced, with Basel chosen to host the opening match and final. Originally, the eight venues were going to be divided into four pairs (Basel and Lucerne, Zurich and St. Gallen, Bern and Thun, and Geneva and Sion) with each pair hosting one group. However, this was changed instead to having two different geographical clusters. With the exception of the opening match and a group C match, the two different geographical clusters were: Bern, Geneva, Sion and Thun in the west zone, with Basel, Lucerne, St. Gallen and Zurich in the east zone. Previously, Bern wanted to host the final, but after Young Boys raised concerns about the turf being damaged, they were only allowed to use the stadium as far as the quarterfinals.

For commercial reasons, venues in Lucerne (Swissporarena), St. Gallen (Kybunpark) and Thun (Stockhorn Arena) changed their names for the tournament. The four stadiums previously used in UEFA Euro 2008 (St. Jakob-Park, Stadion Wankdorf, Stade de Genève and Stadion Letzigrund) were chosen to host matches.

The following 8 host cities and stadiums were selected for Switzerland's bid:

BaselBernGenevaZurich
St. Jakob-ParkStadion WankdorfStade de GenèveStadion Letzigrund
Capacity: 34,250Capacity: 29,800Capacity: 26,750Capacity: 22,700
Arena St.GallenAllmend Stadion LuzernArena ThunStade de Tourbillon
Capacity: 16,300Capacity: 14,350Capacity: 8,100Capacity: 7,750

Each team chose a "team base camp" for its stay between the matches. The teams trained and resided in these locations throughout the tournament, travelling to games staged away from their bases. The "team base camp" needed to be in Switzerland. UEFA announced the hotels and training sites for each participating team; additional potential sites were later announced on 11 February 2025.

TeamTraining siteHotel
BelgiumStade Saint-Laurent, SaillonLes Bains de Saillon Hôtel, Saillon
DenmarkStade des Buchilles, BoudryHôtel Beaulac Neuchâtel, Neuchâtel
EnglandSportanlage Au, OpfikonDolder Grand, Zurich
FinlandCentre Sportif de Versoix, VersoixInterContinental Geneva, Geneva
FranceSportanlage Bützel, ThalHotel Heiden, Heiden
GermanySportzentrum Buchlern, ZurichFIVE Zurich, Zurich
IcelandSportplatz Zelgli, ThunParkhotel Gunten, Gunten
ItalyThermoplan Arena, WeggisCampus Hotel Hertenstein, Weggis
NetherlandsStadion Lachen, ThunBelvédère Strandhotel, Spiez
NorwayStade des Chézards, ColombierBeau-Rivage Hôtel, Neuchâtel
PolandStadion Herti Allmend, ZugSeminarHotel am Ägerisee, Unterägeri
PortugalStade des Arbères, MeyrinGeneva Marriott Hotel, Geneva
SpainStade Juan-Antonio-Samaranch, LausanneRoyal Savoy Hôtel & Spa, Lausanne
SwedenEizmoos, ChamOn Your Marks, Cham
SwitzerlandFC Dürrenast, ThunHotel Seepark, Thun
WalesSportanlage Güttingersreuti, WeinfeldenWellneshotel Golfpanorama, Lipperswil

Qualified  Did not qualify  Did not enter  Suspended

All 55 UEFA national teams were able to submit an entry for the competition by 23 March 2023. This involved participation in both the inaugural 2023–24 UEFA Women's Nations League and UEFA Women's Euro 2025 qualifying. The Nations League took place between September 2023 and February 2024. The qualification was organised between April and December 2024.

In total, 51 teams entered the qualifying competition. Russia was not permitted to enter the competition, as Russian teams had been suspended indefinitely from UEFA and FIFA competitions in 28 February 2022 due to their country's invasion of Ukraine. In addition, Gibraltar, Liechtenstein and San Marino did not submit an entry.

Of the 16 qualified teams, 14 had taken part in the 2022 edition, while Austria and Northern Ireland missed out, having qualified in 2022. Poland and Wales both made their first appearance in a major finals tournament.

The lowest ranked team to qualify was Wales, ranked 30th, while the highest placed team to not qualify was Austria, positioned 19th.

The following teams qualified for the final tournament alongside host Switzerland.

OrderTeamQualified asDate of qualificationAppFirstLastStreakBest performanceWR
1SwitzerlandHosts4 April 20233rd201720223Group stage (2017, 2022)23
2GermanyGroup A4 winners4 June 202412th198912Champions (1989, 1991, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2005, 2009, 2013)3
3SpainGroup A2 winners5th19974Semi-finals (1997)2
4IcelandGroup A4 runners-up12 July 20245th20095Quarter-finals (2013)14
5DenmarkGroup A2 runners-up11th19848Runners-up (2017)12
6FranceGroup A3 winners8th1997Semi-finals (2022)10
7EnglandGroup A3 runners-up16 July 202410th19847Champions (2022)5
8ItalyGroup A1 winners13th8Runners-up (1993, 1997)13
9NetherlandsGroup A1 runners-up5th20095Champions (2017)11
10PortugalPlay-off winners3 December 20243rd20173Group stage (2017, 2022)22
11Norway13th198713Champions (1987, 1993)13
12Finland5th20052Semi-finals (2005)26
13Poland1stDebut27
14Sweden12th198420229Champions (1984)6
15Belgium3rd20173Quarter-finals (2022)20
16Wales1stDebut30

The SwissTech Convention Center in Lausanne hosted the draw.

The final draw took place at 17:00 CET on 16 December 2024 at the SwissTech Convention Center in Lausanne. Former footballer, Ian Wright, and Swiss sports presenter, Annette Fetscherin, hosted the draw. The guests for the draw were all footballers who have participated in a men's or women's Euro. Those players were: Leonardo Bonucci, Verónica Boquete, Lara Dickenmann, Sami Khedira, Jill Scott, Caroline Seger, Xherdan Shaqiri and Raphaël Varane. The draw started with the hosts, Switzerland, being assigned to position A1. The draw continued with, in order, pots 1, 2, 3 and 4 being drawn, with each team selected then allocated into the first available group alphabetically. The position for the team within the group would then be drawn (for the purpose of the schedule).

The seeding was according to the UEFA Women's Euro 2025 qualifying ranking.

PosTeam
A1Switzerland
A2Norway
A3Iceland
A4Finland
PosTeam
B1Spain
B2Portugal
B3Belgium
B4Italy
PosTeam
C1Germany
C2Poland
C3Denmark
C4Sweden
PosTeam
D1France
D2England
D3Wales
D4Netherlands
Schedule
Group stageMatchday 12–5 July 2025
Matchday 26–9 July 2025
Matchday 310–13 July 2025
Knockout stageQuarter-finals16–19 July 2025
Semi-finals22–23 July 2025
Final27 July 2025

Each national team had to submit a squad of 23 players, three of whom had to be goalkeepers, by the deadline of 25 June 2025.

On 31 March 2025, UEFA announced the selected match officials for the tournament.

Result of teams participating in UEFA Euro 2025 .mw-parser-output .col-begin{border-collapse:collapse;padding:0;color:inherit;width:100%;border:0;margin:0}.mw-parser-output .col-begin-small{font-size:90%}.mw-parser-output .col-break{vertical-align:top;text-align:left}.mw-parser-output .col-break-2{width:50%}.mw-parser-output .col-break-3{width:33.3%}.mw-parser-output .col-break-4{width:25%}.mw-parser-output .col-break-5{width:20%}@media(max-width:720px){.mw-parser-output .col-begin,.mw-parser-output .col-begin>tbody,.mw-parser-output .col-begin>tbody>tr,.mw-parser-output .col-begin>tbody>tr>td{display:block!important;width:100%!important}.mw-parser-output .col-break{padding-left:0!important}} .mw-parser-output .legend{page-break-inside:avoid;break-inside:avoid-column}.mw-parser-output .legend-color{display:inline-block;min-width:1.25em;height:1.25em;line-height:1.25;margin:1px 0;text-align:center;border:1px solid black;background-color:transparent;color:black}.mw-parser-output .legend-text{}  Winner   Runner-up   Semi-finals   Quarter-finals   Group stage

The provisional match schedule was confirmed by the UEFA Executive Committee during their meeting in Hamburg, Germany on 2 December 2023.

In the group stage, teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria would be applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings:

  1. Points in head-to-head matches among tied teams;
  2. Goal difference in head-to-head matches among tied teams;
  3. Goals scored in head-to-head matches among tied teams;
  4. If more than two teams were tied, and after applying all head-to-head criteria above, a subset of teams were still tied, all head-to-head criteria above would be reapplied exclusively to this subset of teams;
  5. Goal difference in all group matches;
  6. Goals scored in all group matches;
  7. Lower disciplinary points (red card = 3 points, yellow card = 1 point, expulsion for two yellow cards in one match = 3 points);
  8. Position in the Women's European Qualifiers overall phase rankings.

However, these criteria do not apply if two teams tied on points, goal difference and goals scored drew against each other in their final group match with knockout stage implications, and no other team in the group finished with the same number of points; in that case, the tie is broken by a penalty shoot-out.

All times are local, CEST (UTC+2).

In the knockout stage, extra time and a penalty shoot-out were used to decide the winner if necessary.

There were 106 goals scored in 31 matches, for an average of 3.42 goals per match.

4 goals

3 goals

2 goals

1 goal

1 own goal

UEFA Team of the Tournament

UEFA's technical observer team was given the objective of naming a team of the best eleven players from the tournament. Four players from the winning England squad were named in the team as well as four from runners-up Spain.

GoalkeeperDefendersMidfieldersForwards
Hannah HamptonFranziska Kett Elena Linari Irene Paredes Lucy BronzeAlexia Putellas Patricia Guijarro Aitana BonmatíChloe Kelly Alessia Russo Jule Brand

Player of the Tournament

The Player of the Tournament award was given to Aitana Bonmatí, who was chosen by UEFA's technical observers.

  • Aitana Bonmatí

Young Player of the Tournament

The Young Player of the Tournament award was open to players born on or after 1 January 2003. The award was given to Michelle Agyemang, as chosen by UEFA's technical observers.

  • Michelle Agyemang

Top Scorer

The top scorer award, sponsored by Grifols, was given to the top goalscorer in the tournament. Esther González won the award with four goals scored in the tournament.

  • Esther González (4 goals)

Goal of the Tournament

The Goal of the Tournament was decided by UEFA's Technical Observer panel. On 28 July 2025, UEFA announced that France forward Delphine Cascarino's goal against the Netherlands had been named the goal of the tournament.

  • Delphine Cascarino (vs Netherlands)

The Technical Observer panel ranked a list of the top ten goals of the tournament, four of which were scored by Spain:

RankPlayerMatchGoal
Delphine Cascarinovs Netherlands3–2
2Caroline Graham Hansenvs Finland2–1
3Alexia Putellasvs Portugal3–0
4Jule Brandvs Poland1–0
5Cristiana Girellivs Portugal1–0
6Aitana Bonmatívs Germany1–0
7Athenea del Castillovs Italy1–1
8Alessia Russovs Spain1–1
9Clàudia Pinavs Belgium5–2
10Vivianne Miedemavs Wales1–0

Maddli and Konektis displayed during the tournament at the National Football Museum

On 29 November 2024, the official mascot was unveiled. Her name is Maddli, a Saint Bernard puppy. On 16 December 2024, the official ball was announced, named Konektis.

UEFA Women's Football global sponsorsNational partners
Adidas
Amazon
Axa
Booking.com
EA Sports
Euronics
Grifols
Heineken
Hublot
Just Eat Takeaway.com
Lidl
PepsiCo
PlayStation
Unilever
Visa
VolkswagenMiele
PHW Group (Wiesenhof)
Swisscom
Swissquote
Yuh

Switzerland stated that their goal was to sell out every game at the tournament, and increase the benchmark for women's sporting events.

On 8 March 2024, to celebrate 500 days to go before the tournament starts, the Swiss Football Association organised a kick off event in Bern. During the event, they launched their slogan for the tournament, Summit of Emotions.

Despite being skeptical about the money involved, Lucerne funded the tournament for 4 million francs, organising an event exactly a year before the tournament started. The Security Commission in Bern approved a loan of 1.2 million francs for sports promotion after the tournament. The Finance Committee of the Council of States applied for a loan of 5 million francs for Swiss tourism in regards to the tournament. They added another 1.13 million francs on 11 June 2024.

On 31 May 2024, the Swiss Football Association published their legacy plan. The tournament coordinator, Doris Keller, also emphasized the hope that the tournament would have an impact for Swiss women's football. On 14 June 2024, before the start of UEFA Euro 2024, a Swiss Federation delegation went to the Swiss embassy in Berlin, to have a sport-related party, and discussed their ambitions for Euro 2025.

It was projected that 80% of people attending the matches will be Swiss. During the ticket launch event, a campaign to find volunteers was started. On 24 October 2024, Zurich unveiled their ambassadors for the tournament. On 4 March 2025, a human rights declaration was signed. On 11 March 2025, a special art exhibition was held at the UEFA headquarters.

Around 720,000 tickets were on sale for the tournament. Ticket prices started at 25 francs. Tickets were put up for sale on 1 October 2024. A ticket launch event took place at the Jungfraujoch. As of 18 December 2024, over 300,000 tickets had been sold, with Germany, England, Wales, France, and Norway being the countries with the highest ticket sales outside of Switzerland. As of the start of the tournament, over 600,000 tickets had been sold, surpassing the previous record for the event of 574,875 tickets sold at the 2022 England tournament.

Several cities around early July 2024 organised events to commemorate a year before the opening match kicks off.

Bern

The city of Bern held a one year to go event in collaboration with the Tour de Berne, with activities on 30 June 2024 at the Bundesplatz. Municipal Councillor Reto Nause said: .mw-parser-output .templatequote{overflow:hidden;margin:1em 0;padding:0 32px}.mw-parser-output .templatequotecite{line-height:1.5em;text-align:left;margin-top:0}@media(min-width:500px){.mw-parser-output .templatequotecite{padding-left:1.6em}}

We are looking forward to an unforgettable football festival here in the heart of Europe, in the heart of Switzerland, in the heart of Bern!

Basel

In Basel, a countdown clock was unveiled and activated on 2 July. Plus, a tram advertising the Women's Euro traveled around the city. Basel set aside 12.9 million francs for the European Championship.

Zurich

In Zurich, it was confirmed that a fan zone will be set up on Europaallee. Similar to Basel, a tram with the Women's Euro design and colours traveled around the city.

Lucerne

Lucerne Cantonal Councillor Michaela Tschuor and Mayor Beat Züsli were at the Europaplatz to promote the tournament. A mobile football field also traveled on the road around Lucerne's municipalities.

Michaela Tschuor said at the media event in Europaplatz:

It is a great honour for us to be able to welcome top female footballers next year, it is important to us to promote women and young girls, and to focus on the importance of this sport.

St. Gallen

St. Gallen held a media conference to underline their plans for the tournament. City Councillor Mathias Gabathuler said he wanted to unleash a wave of enthusiasm for women's football in the city. The canton would also support a training course for women, while Céline Bradke, Women's Euro Project Manager for St. Gallen, announced that around 200 volunteers would be present on match days.

The city and canton of St. Gallen together pledged 2.8 million francs for the planning, organisation and implementation of the event.

TerritoryBroadcasterReferences
AlbaniaRTSH
AndorraRTVE, TF1, France Télévisions
ArmeniaArmenia 1TV
AustriaORF
BelgiumVRT (Dutch)
RTBF (French)
Bosnia and HerzegovinaBHRT
BulgariaBNT
CroatiaHRT
CyprusCyBC
Czech RepublicČT Sport
DenmarkViaplay
EstoniaERR
FinlandYLE
FranceTF1 - France Télévisions
GeorgiaFirst Channel
GermanyARD - ZDF
GreeceERT
HungaryM4 Sport
IcelandRÚV
IrelandRTÉ
ItalyRAI
KosovoRTK
LatviaLTV
LiechtensteinSRG SSR
LithuaniaLRT
LuxembourgRTBF Tipik & Auvio (French)
Sporza and VRT
MaltaTVMSport
MoldovaTVR
MonacoTF1
MontenegroRTCG
NetherlandsNOS
North MacedoniaMRT
NorwayNRK - TV 2
PolandTVP
PortugalRTP
RomaniaTVR
San MarinoRAI
SerbiaRTS
SlovakiaRTVS
SloveniaRTV SLO
SpainRTVE
SwedenSVT - Viaplay
SwitzerlandSRG SSR
TurkeyTRT
United KingdomBBC - ITV - S4C
UkraineMegogo

Due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, UEFA was unable to find broadcasters for Russia and Belarus.

TerritoryBroadcasterReferences
AustraliaOptus Sport
Stan Sport
BrazilCazé TV
CanadaTSN, CTV
French overseas territories and French GuianaTF1
GhanaSporty TV
Hong KongHOY TV
Indian subcontinentFancode
KenyaSporty TV
Latin AmericaESPN
MENAbeIN Sports
NigeriaSporty TV
South Africa
South KoreaSPOTV
Sub-Saharan AfricaAzam Sports
SuperSport
New World Sport
United StatesFox Sports (English)
TUDN / Vix (Spanish)
Worldwide (in-flight and cruise ship markets)Sport 24

Statisticians from the Technical University of Dortmund and the University of Innsbruck calculated the winning probabilities of all teams in the run-up to the tournament. According to the results, the probability of Spain having won the title was 27.2 percent, Germany 23.0 percent, France 17.6 percent and England 17.2 percent. The analysis was built on statistical models based on past match data and betting odds, which were used to simulate the tournament 100,000 times.

On 31 January 2024, the Swiss federal government announced they would support the tournament with 4 million francs. This sparked controversy as during the bidding process, they promised 15 million francs, which was seen as a big reason why the Swiss bid won. Many people around women's football and politicians in Switzerland criticised the funding cuts, with people from the former saying how England's hosting of the 2022 edition changed the perception of the sport in the country and had big economic benefits for the host cities. Regarding the latter, co-president of the parliamentary group "Euro 25" Corina Gredig, said that the tournament would become a "junk tournament" with the lack of money. While municipal councillor of host city Thun, Katharina Ali-Oesch, said the city would have had to withdraw as a host venue due to the cuts in funding.

The Swiss Football Association also said that this money would only have been partially sufficient for their goals for the tournament, and hoped the situation would be taken up again in the further political discussion.

On 16 February 2024, the Committee of the Council of States for Science, Education and Culture, applied for a federal contribution of 15 million francs for the competition. The Council of States was able to get a cross-party commission motion calling for the federal government to support the Women's Euro 2025 in Switzerland with 15 million francs to be unanimously approved by the lower house.

Then, on 6 March 2024, the eight host cities sent a letter to the federal government asking them to reconsider their decision, stating that they have spent millions on this tournament and hoped for improvements.

On 19 April 2024, mayor of Lucerne, Beat Züsli, stated that in order to make the tournament as sustainable as possible, the 15 million francs are vital.

On 27 April 2024, the Swiss house of representatives voted in favour of increasing the money to 15 million francs.

On 8 May 2024, the finance commission also threw in their support for a potential increase in financial support.

On 30 May 2024, the Council of States and the National Council officially reversed the decision to allocate 4 million and increased the distributed money to 15 million.

In December 2024, the Grand Chamber approved the motion to distribute 15 million francs for the tournament.

On 30 August 2023, it was reported that while Basel wanted to host the tournament, they were concerned about the additional costs and scheduling conflicts that would occur due to hosting the competition. Also, it was deemed necessary by UEFA that Basel needed to guarantee that there would be no blackout in St. Jakob-Park during the tournament and requested that they upgrade their lights. However, on 29 September 2023, the problems were fixed as, at a cost of 1 million francs, LED lights were put in place for the stadium, despite no host city contract had been signed.

The qualifying match between Scotland and Israel on 31 May and the return fixture on 4 June 2024, were played behind closed doors due to anticipated protests against the Gaza war. The 31 May match was delayed 30 minutes after a protester wearing a "Red Card For Israel" T-shirt chained himself to one of the goal frames just before the scheduled kick-off time. About 400 pro-Palestinian protesters also gathered outside the national stadium in Glasgow.

  • UEFA Euro 2024

  • Official website

  • Official technical report (Archived 30 September 2025 at the Wayback Machine)

  • Switzerland 2025 bid info at Swiss Football Association (in German)

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