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National Women's Soccer League
National Women's Soccer League
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National Women's Soccer League
FoundedNovember 21, 2012; 12 years ago (2012-11-21)
CountryUnited States
ConfederationCONCACAF (North America)
Number of clubs14 (16 in 2026)
Level on pyramid1
League cup
International cup
Current championsOrlando Pride
(1st title)
(2024)
Current NWSL ShieldKansas City Current
(1st shield)
(2025)
Most championshipsPortland Thorns FC
(3 titles)
Most NWSL ShieldsNorth Carolina Courage
Seattle Reign FC
(3 shields each)
Most appearancesLauren Barnes (233)
(as of March 28, 2025)
Top scorerLynn Biyendolo (80)
(as of March 28, 2025)
Broadcaster(s)CBS Sports
ESPN/ABC
Prime Video
Scripps Sports
Victory+ (starting in 2026)
Websitenwslsoccer.com
Current: 2025 NWSL season

The National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) is a women's professional soccer league and the highest level of the United States soccer league system (alongside the USL Super League).[1] The league comprises 14 teams (16 in 2026).[2] It is owned by the teams and sanctioned by the United States Soccer Federation.[3] The NWSL is headquartered in Midtown Manhattan.[4]

The NWSL was established in 2012 as the successor to Women's Professional Soccer (WPS; 2007–2012), which was itself the successor to the Women's United Soccer Association (WUSA; 2000–2003). The league began play in 2013 with eight teams, four of which were former members of WPS (Boston Breakers, Chicago Red Stars, Sky Blue FC, and Western New York Flash).[5][6][7]

Through the 2024 season, seven teams (one now defunct) have been crowned NWSL Champions, awarded to the playoff winner, and six teams (one defunct) have claimed the NWSL Shield, awarded to the team in first place at the end of the regular season. The current (2024) NWSL champions are the Orlando Pride.[8] The current (2025) NWSL Shield winners are the Kansas City Current.[9]

Competition format

[edit]

As of 2024, the NWSL regular season runs from March to November, after which the team with the highest point total is awarded the NWSL Shield. Each team is scheduled for 26 regular-season games, 13 home and 13 away;[10] in 2026 this will become 30 games to accommodate the expanded 16-team league.[11] This is followed by a playoff tournament culminating in the NWSL championship game in late November to crown the league champion. In 2024 a full quarterfinal round was introduced, so that the eight teams with the most points from the regular season qualify for the playoffs.[10]

From 2021 to 2023, the playoffs included six teams, with the top two teams receiving byes to the semi-finals.[12] Prior to 2021, the playoffs included only four teams.[13] The number of regular-season matches also fluctuated between 20 and 24 in past seasons.[14]

The league also plays the NWSL Challenge Cup, which since 2024 is a single-game super cup between the current NWSL Shield holder and current NWSL Champion. The Challenge Cup originated in 2020 as a way for all teams to return to play after the halt from the COVID-19 pandemic (though one team had to drop out because of COVID). It continued featuring all teams, occurring in 2021 and 2022 as a preseason tournament and in 2023 running concurrently with the season, until 2024.[15]

CONCACAF W Champions Cup & International cups

[edit]

Since the 2023 season, three teams qualify for the CONCACAF W Champions Cup. These spots are the playoff champions, the Shield winners, and Shield runners-up. Gotham FC won the inaugural 2024–25 CONCACAF W Champions Cup.

In 2024 NWSL teams also competed in the NWSL x Liga MX Femenil Summer Cup. Kansas City Current won the tournament.

History

[edit]

Founding

[edit]
At the 2022 NWSL Championship, the league recognized players who had competed in the league for all ten years of its existence. Left to right: Nicole Barnhart, Alyssa Mautz, Lauren Barnes, Jess Fishlock, Toni Pressley, Merritt Mathias, Jasmyne Spencer, McCall Zerboni, Alyssa Naeher, Tori Huster, Jessica McDonald. Not shown: Ashlyn Harris, Ali Krieger, Sydney Leroux, Allie Long, Kristie Mewis, Alex Morgan, Kelley O'Hara, Megan Rapinoe, Becky Sauerbrunn, Christine Sinclair.[16]

After Women's Professional Soccer (WPS) officially folded in April 2012, the United States Soccer Federation (US Soccer) announced a roundtable for discussion of the future of women's professional soccer in the United States. The meeting, which included representatives from US Soccer, WPS teams, the W-League (ceased operation in 2015), and the Women's Premier Soccer League (WPSL), was held in June. By November, after much discussion, owners from the Chicago Red Stars, Boston Breakers and US Soccer recruited an additional six teams. Compared to WPS, the teams would intentionally operate at a lower cost structure and manage growth in a sustainable way.[17][18]

In November 2012, it was announced that there would be eight teams in a new women's professional soccer league that was yet to be named at the time of the announcement, with national team players subsidized by US Soccer, the Canadian Soccer Association (CSA) and the Mexican Football Federation (FMF). The three federations would pay for the salaries of their national team players (24 from the US, 16 from Canada, and 12 to 16 from Mexico) to aid the teams in creating world-class rosters while staying under the salary cap. The players would be distributed evenly (as possible) among the eight teams in an allocation process. The teams would own the league, and the league would contract US Soccer to manage league operations.[19] After the 2020 season, the league terminated its management contract with US Soccer.[3]

On November 29, 2012, it was announced that Cheryl Bailey had been named executive director in the new league. Bailey had previously served as general manager of the United States women's national soccer team from 2007 to 2011, which included leading the support staff for the U.S. team during the 2007 and 2011 FIFA Women's World Cups, as well as the 2008 Summer Olympics. During her tenure with the women's national team, she was in charge of all areas of administration including interfacing with clubs, team travel, payroll, and working with FIFA, CONCACAF, and other federations.[20]

The league name was announced in December 2012.[21] Nike, Inc. was selected as league sponsor, providing apparel to all teams as well as the game ball.[22]

Early years

[edit]
Sam Kerr during a Chicago Red Stars match, 2018. Kerr set records for goals scored in a single season and won multiple Golden Boot awards during her time with Sky Blue FC and the Chicago Red Stars.

The first NWSL game was held on April 13, 2013, as the Portland Thorns visited FC Kansas City, playing to a 1–1 draw in front of a crowd of 6,784 fans at Shawnee Mission District Stadium. Renae Cuellar scored the first goal in league history.[23][24] The 2013 season saw regular-season attendance average of 4,270, with a high of 17,619 on August 4 for Kansas City at Portland.[25][26]

The NWSL became the first U.S. professional women's soccer league to reach nine teams with the addition of Houston Dash, backed by Major League Soccer (MLS) team Houston Dynamo, in 2014; expansion interest, particularly from MLS and USL teams, has continued.[27][28] The third season saw a shortened schedule and some early-season roster instability due to the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup in Canada, but the World Cup also provided exposure to the NWSL, which was credited with boosting attendance numbers across the league.[27]

The league also became the first professional women's league in the US to play more than three seasons when the league kicked off its fourth season in 2016.[29]

Response to COVID-19 pandemic

[edit]

The 2020 season was initially postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic and later canceled. Instead the league played the 2020 NWSL Challenge Cup, a special competition hosted in the Salt Lake City region with no spectators. The cup began in late June, making the NWSL the first major U.S. team sports league to return to play.[30] The league was the recipient of a federal loan through the Paycheck Protection Program, which it used to compensate players before the competition was able to begin.[31] Later that year the league also played the NWSL Fall Series, a set of 18 games between teams within geographically restricted regions.

Teams

[edit]

Current teams

[edit]

The NWSL teams are spread across the United States. Each club is allowed a minimum of 20 players on their roster, with a maximum of 22 players (26 when including supplemental players) allowed at any time during the season.[32]

Originally, each team's roster included up to three allocated American national team players, up to two allocated Mexico women's national team players, and up to two allocated Canadian national team players via the NWSL Player Allocation and subsequent trades.[33] In addition, each team had four spots each season available for international players; these spots could be traded to other teams.[34] The remaining roster spots were required to be filled by domestic players from the United States. Teams filled their rosters via a number of drafts and 4–6 discovery player signings.[32] Mexico stopped allocating players to the NWSL, having established its own women's league in 2017, and the numbers of allocated players and international players on each team varied each year due to trades. Effective with the 2022 season, the player allocation system has been fully abolished.[35]

Of the 14 teams contesting the 2025 season, six are affiliated with men's Major League Soccer teams, two are affiliated with men's teams of the United Soccer League, one is part of a global portfolio of women's soccer clubs owned by Michele Kang,[36] and seven are independent.

Overview of National Women's Soccer League teams
Team Location Stadium[a] Founded Joined Head coach Men's affiliate
Angel City FC Los Angeles, California BMO Stadium 2020 2022 Alexander Straus Los Angeles FC (MLS)
Bay FC San Jose, California PayPal Park 2023 2024 Albertin Montoya
Chicago Stars FC[b] Bridgeview, Illinois SeatGeek Stadium 2006 2013 Ella Masar (interim)
Gotham FC[c] Harrison, New Jersey Sports Illustrated Stadium 2007 2013 Juan Carlos Amorós
Houston Dash Houston, Texas Shell Energy Stadium 2013 2014 Fabrice Gautrat Houston Dynamo FC (MLS)
Kansas City Current[d] Kansas City, Missouri CPKC Stadium 2020 2021 Vlatko Andonovski
North Carolina Courage Cary, North Carolina WakeMed Soccer Park 2013 2013 vacant North Carolina FC (USLC)
Orlando Pride Orlando, Florida Inter&Co Stadium 2015 2016 Seb Hines Orlando City SC (MLS)
Portland Thorns FC Portland, Oregon Providence Park 2012 2013 Rob Gale Portland Timbers (MLS)
Racing Louisville FC Louisville, Kentucky Lynn Family Stadium 2019 2021 Bev Yanez Louisville City FC (USLC)
San Diego Wave FC San Diego, California Snapdragon Stadium 2021 2022 Jonas Eidevall
Seattle Reign FC[e] Seattle, Washington Lumen Field 2012 2013 Laura Harvey Seattle Sounders FC (MLS)
Utah Royals[f] Sandy, Utah America First Field 2017 2024[g] Jimmy Coenraets Real Salt Lake (MLS)
Washington Spirit Washington, D.C. Audi Field 2012 2013 Adrián González [h]
  1. ^ Stadiums are those expected to be used in the 2025 season.
  2. ^ Known as Chicago Red Stars until 2024.
  3. ^ Known as Sky Blue FC until 2020 and NJ/NY Gotham FC from 2021 to 2024.
  4. ^ Known as Kansas City NWSL in 2021.
  5. ^ Known as Reign FC in 2019 and OL Reign from 2020 to 2023.[37]
  6. ^ Known as Utah Royals FC from 2018 to 2020.
  7. ^ Utah Royals FC initially joined the league in 2018 and played three seasons before ceasing operations at the end of 2020.
  8. ^ Washington Spirit, through shared ownership by Michele Kang, is affiliated with women's soccer clubs London City Lionesses and OL Lyonnes.[36]

Future teams

[edit]
Overview of planned National Women's Soccer League teams
Team Location Stadium Founded Joining Head coach Men's affiliate
Boston Legacy FC Foxborough, Massachusetts Gillette Stadium 2023 2026 Filipa Patão
Denver Summit FC Denver, Colorado Santa Fe Yards Stadium 2025 2026 Nick Cushing

Former and defunct teams

[edit]
Overview of former and defunct National Women's Soccer League teams
Team Location Stadium[a] Founded Joined Last NWSL season
Boston Breakers Boston, Massachusetts Jordan Field 2007 2013 2017[38]
FC Kansas City Kansas City, Missouri Swope Soccer Village 2012 2013 2017[39]
Western New York Flash Rochester, New York Sahlen's Stadium 2008 2013 2016[40]
  1. ^ Stadiums are those used in their last NWSL season.

Membership timeline

[edit]

Current team Defunct team Former team Future team

Denver Summit FCBoston Legacy FCBay FCSan Diego Wave FCAngel City FCRacing Louisville FCKansas City CurrentKansas City CurrentUtah RoyalsUtah Royals FCOrlando PrideHouston DashNorth Carolina CourageWestern New York FlashWashington SpiritGotham FCNJ/NY Gotham FCNJ/NY Gotham FCSeattle Reign FCSeattle Reign FCSeattle Reign FCSeattle Reign FCPortland Thorns FCChicago Stars FCChicago Stars FCFC Kansas CityBoston Breakers

Expansion

[edit]

Soon after launch, the league reportedly planned to expand to ten teams for 2014.[41] Potential candidates included groups not accepted as part of the original eight; groups from the Los Angeles area (joint effort from the LA Strikers and Pali Blues)[42] and from Hartford, Connecticut,[43] were confirmed failed bids, as was one from the Seattle Sounders Women. There was speculation that the Vancouver Whitecaps Women could be logical candidates especially given the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup in Canada; however, the Whitecaps shuttered their women's program (except for one U-18 academy team) in December 2012.

During the inaugural season, there were rumors of expansion interest from MLS teams Toronto FC,[44] Vancouver Whitecaps FC,[45] and the New York Red Bulls,[46] as well as confirmed interest from WPSL side the Houston Aces.[47] NWSL team owners hinted that expansion for 2014 was not a question of "if" but "how many".[48][49] Despite this, it was announced during the playoffs that there would be no expansion for the league's second season,[50] though the Red Bulls and Sky Blue FC confirmed that they were in discussions for cooperation.[48][51]

During the first offseason, the Houston Dynamo added their name to the list of MLS teams interested in fielding a women's side, stating that they were "exploring the opportunity" of starting an NWSL side in 2014 or '15,[52] and in 2013 they announced the Houston Dash with 2014 as their inaugural season.[53] By early December, NWSL approved a new team run by the Dynamo organization for expansion in 2014,[54] despite their earlier statement that there would be no expansion for the league's second season.

During the second offseason, expansion talk grew rapidly, with three established men's teams (Real Salt Lake of MLS, the Indy Eleven of NASL, and the Pittsburgh Riverhounds of USL Pro) expressing interest in joining NWSL, as well as an unattached group from Atlanta. There was also rumored or suggested interest from three men's teams in California, though none of those groups made official statements. Despite this interest, it was announced in late April 2015 that there would be no expansion for the 2016 season.

However, after the well-publicized success of the US Women's National soccer team, renewed interest in NWSL expansion caused reports from the owners' meeting that "a new team in 2016 has not been ruled out", with potential expansion news to be revealed within a month.[55] Commissioner Jeff Plush said that over a dozen interested groups had contacted the league in the post-World-Cup weeks; MLS team Orlando City SC was one of the first newly interested groups made public.[56][57][58] On October 20, 2015, it was announced that Orlando would be hosting the 10th NWSL team, the Orlando Pride, due to start the 2016 season.[59] At that announcement, the Pride announced that they had hired former U.S. National Women's Team coach Tom Sermanni.

On November 16, 2017, it was announced that Real Salt Lake would expand into the NWSL beginning in the 2018 season. The Salt Lake City team, shortly thereafter unveiled as Utah Royals FC, is officially considered a new franchise that replaced FC Kansas City.

The NWSL announced on October 22, 2019, that a team in Louisville, Kentucky, affiliated with the city's USL Championship side Louisville City FC, would join the league in 2021. The team was originally to be named Proof Louisville FC,[60] but after significant disapproval from fans it was announced that the Proof Louisville FC branding would not necessarily be the final selection, and that the process to determine the team's identity would be restarted.[61] On July 8, 2020, the Louisville team was rebranded as Racing Louisville FC,[62] and its associated visual identity was announced on the same day.[63] Racing plays in Lynn Family Stadium, which opened in 2020 as the new home of Louisville City.[64]

On July 21, 2020, the NWSL announced that a Los Angeles–based team will begin play in 2022.[65] The team's ownership group, who call themselves "Angel City", is led by president and founder Julie Uhrman, a media and gaming entrepreneur; co-founders Natalie Portman, an Oscar-winning actress, and venture capitalist Kara Nortman; venture capitalist Alexis Ohanian as lead founding investor;[66] and additional investors including fourteen former USWNT members, most with ties to Southern California; actresses Uzo Aduba, Jessica Chastain, America Ferrera, Jennifer Garner, and Eva Longoria; talk show host Lilly Singh; and Ohanian's wife, tennis great Serena Williams.[65] In 2022, the Los Angeles NWSL team became the first American professional sports team founded by a majority-woman ownership group to begin play,[67] and co-founders Portman, Nortman, and Uhrman have publicly discussed their ownership stakes extensively as one way to address gender inequity in sports and to encourage additional investment by women into women's sports.[68][69][70] On October 21, 2020, the ownership group announced that the expansion club would be called Angel City FC and announced more group members, among them tennis great Billie Jean King, WNBA star Candace Parker, alpine skiing great Lindsey Vonn and her fiancé at the time, NHL star P. K. Subban, actress and activist Sophia Bush, Latin music pop star Becky G, actor and TV host James Corden, and former US men's soccer international Cobi Jones.[71]

On December 7, 2020, the NWSL announced that an expansion team in Kansas City would join the league in 2021 and take over player-related assets from Utah Royals FC.[72] The Royals ceased operations at the same time, but the new owners of Utah Soccer LLC (after Dell Loy Hansen completes the sale) would have the option of re-establishing the Royals franchise in 2023.[73] The team played under the placeholder name of Kansas City NWSL in the 2021 season, announcing its permanent identity of Kansas City Current immediately before its final home game of that season on October 30.[74]

On January 12, 2021, then-NWSL commissioner Lisa Baird shared in a press conference that an expansion team in Sacramento would join the league in 2022, but that the team ownership would make the official announcement in due course.[75] A team announcement never materialized, however.[76] In May 2021, it was reported that the ownership group behind the Sacramento expansion would be seeking NWSL approval to move its expansion rights to San Diego instead.[77] On June 8, 2021, the NWSL officially announced a San Diego expansion team, ultimately named San Diego Wave FC, with former United States women's national soccer team head coach Jill Ellis as president.[78][79]

In late 2022, it was reported the likely 13th expansion club would be in Utah, as the new Real Salt Lake ownership had the rights to an approximately $2 million expansion franchise fee to bring back the Utah Royals to the Salt Lake City area. In addition the three finalists for the 14th expansion club were a group from the San Francisco Bay Area, Tampa, and Boston. It is thought these teams would join for the 2024 season. The highest bid was reported to be $40 million.[80] On January 27, 2023, it was reported that the NWSL would expand to Utah, San Francisco and Boston. The owners in Utah would pay $2–5 million, while the groups in San Francisco and Boston would pay $50 million. Utah and San Francisco would join the NWSL in 2024 and Boston would join the NWSL later.[81] On March 11, 2023, it was confirmed that the Utah team would join in 2024, inheriting the Utah Royals FC name and history.[82]

League commissioner Jessica Berman announced on Nov. 22, 2024, that Cincinnati, Cleveland, and Denver were finalists for the 16th franchise, which is set to join the league in 2026 alongside Boston.[83] The league decided in January 2025 that Denver would receive the franchise.[84]

Organization

[edit]

Stadiums and attendance

[edit]
Chicago Red Stars and Bay FC playing a soccer match at Wrigley Field.
A Chicago Red Stars and Bay FC match at Wrigley Field set a single-game attendance record of 35,038.

In the 2025 season, every NWSL team will use one stadium as its primary home venue.

The highest single-game attendance in the league's history was on August 23, 2025, for a game between Bay FC and the Washington Spirit at Oracle Park which drew 40,091.[85] This broke the league previous single-game attendance record of 35,038 from a June 8, 2024 game between the Chicago Red Stars and Bay FC at Wrigley Field.[86][87]

On June 3, 2023, a double-header featuring Seattle Reign FC and Portland Thorns FC alongside a Major League Soccer matchup between the Seattle Sounders and Portland Timbers drew an announced attendance of 42,054.[88]

In 2024, the NWSL reached a historic milestone of 2 million match attendees for the first time in league history.[89]

In 2025, multiple teams set attendance records for their home openers, including the NC Courage.[90]

Squad formation and salaries

[edit]

In each season, teams receive a salary cap that limits their total spending on players. Before the 2022 season, salaries of federation players were paid for completely or mostly by their respective national federations, and they counted against the salary cap at a pre-determined amount—$33,000 for U.S. players, and $27,500 or the actual salary for Canadian players, whichever is lower.[91] Non-federation players are subject to minimum and maximum salary limits.[92]

Each team provides fully paid healthcare for its players, and also provides housing, either directly or through a stipend of no more than $3,000 per month. In addition, teams are allowed to provide their players with the use of a car valued at no more than $50,000. These expenses are specifically excluded from cap calculations.[92]

In 2019, the maximum senior roster size was expanded to 22 and the minimum to 20, with an additional four supplemental spots for players earning minimum salary that do not count against the salary cap.[93] As of 2021, the minimum senior roster size is 22 and the maximum 24, so each team could carry a maximum total of 28 players on its active roster.[92]

The NWSL introduced significant changes to its compensation guidelines before the 2020 season.[94] In addition to a sizable increase in the salary cap and the salary limits for unallocated players, teams now can purchase up to $300,000 in "allocation money" in excess of the salary cap to invest in qualified current or future players; allocation money can be traded.[95] Multi-year contracts (up to three years plus one option year) are now permitted, year-round housing becomes mandatory, and the cap for permitted team assistance has been removed. When originally announced, allocation money could not be used to supplement the salaries of U.S. or Canadian federation players, and players could not refuse federation status to access allocation money. The allocation rules were quietly changed in advance of the 2020 season to allow players to refuse federation status, but this change did not become public knowledge until after the end of the abbreviated season. In the 2021 season, clubs were explicitly allowed to use allocation money to sign federation players.[96] In 2021, salary for unallocated players and the team salary cap both increased between 5 and 10 percent.[91]

On December 13, 2021, as part of negotiations between U.S. Soccer and the union representing USWNT players, both agreed to end the allocation system for USWNT members, effective with the 2022 season. Starting in that season, the club salaries of all USWNT players will be paid directly by their NWSL clubs, and these players will be represented in their club employment by the NWSL Players Association (NWSLPA).[97]

The NWSL and the NWSLPA, the union representing all players in the NWSL, jointly announced on January 31, 2022, that they had entered into the league's first official collective bargaining agreement, which was intended to run through the 2026 season. Under this agreement, the minimum player salary increased to $35,000 in the 2022 season. Free agency will formally be added; players with six seasons of NWSL service will become unrestricted free agents in 2023, with the required service time reduced to five seasons from 2024. Additionally, starting in 2024, players with three seasons of NWSL service will receive restricted free agency. Also, should the league become profitable in any season from 2024 to 2026, the players will receive 10 percent of the league's broadcast revenues in the applicable season.[98][99]

On August 25, 2022, the NWSLPA filed a grievance against the NWSL after the league announced the omission of 22 players from a list of 26 who would become eligible to negotiate free-agent contracts for the 2023 season. The league contended that the contracts of the 22 omitted players included one or more option years that each player's club must first decline to exercise by the deadline of November 15 before the player would be eligible for free agency. The players association contended that the contracts expired on their expiration date, and not the option exercise deadline. The players association expected the league to deny the grievance, and for the dispute to enter arbitration.[100][101]

In March 2024 Sophia Smith, now Sophia Wilson, was signed by the Portland Thorns to a two-year contract extension that made her the highest-paid player in the NWSL, but her salary was not disclosed.[102]

Later in 2024, the league and the NWSLPA entered into a new CBA, running through the 2030 season, that ESPN journalist Jeff Kassouf called "radical by American sports standards". The new CBA eliminated all forms of player drafts—both entry drafts and expansion drafts—thus setting the NWSL apart from all of the major men's leagues and the WNBA. Also, once a player's contract expires, she is free to sign with any team worldwide, regardless of years of service. The league's "discovery rule", which allowed teams to claim NWSL "rights" to negotiate with players at random, was also eliminated. Minimum player salaries were increased to $48,500 for 2025 (more than $9,000 above what the 2021 CBA would have allowed) and will further increase to $82,500 by 2030. The new CBA fixes team salary caps for each year in advance, replacing the old system of announcing each season's cap during the prior offseason. The cap will be $3.3 million in 2025, increasing to $5.1 million by 2030. The largest cap increase in this period will be between 2026 and 2027 ($3.5 million to $4.4 million), coinciding with the U.S. cohosting the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Depending on league media and sponsorship revenue, the figures set forth in the CBA may be increased. The use of charter flights for team travel was modestly increased, and player health benefits were significantly expanded. Perhaps most significantly, the new CBA removed language that effectively enshrined the NWSL's current spring-to-fall calendar, giving the league the option to change to the fall-to-spring calendar used by most European leagues. Any change to the season calendar will require one year's notice.[103]

Salaries in the National Women's Soccer League
Season Salary cap Salary limits
(for players ineligible for allocation money)
Allocation money
Minimum Maximum
2013 $200,000 $6,000 $30,000 N/A
2014 $265,000 $6,600 $31,500
2015 $6,842 $37,800
2016 $278,000 $7,200 $39,700
2017 $315,000 $15,000 $41,700
2018 $350,000 $15,750 $44,000
2019 $421,500 $16,538 $46,200
2020 $650,000 $20,000 $50,000 $300,000
2021 $682,500 $22,000 $52,500 $400,000
2022 $1,100,000 $35,000 $75,000 $500,000
2023[104] $1,375,000 $36,400 $200,000[a] $600,000
2024 $2,750,000 $37,856 none N/A
2025 $3,300,000 $48,500 none N/A
All currency amounts are in United States dollars.
  1. ^ The league's definition changed from maximum salary to "cap charge" in 2023, defined as "adding the Player's base salary to any additional compensation" in the player's contract, "which includes performance bonus, roster bonus, agent fees, and excess benefits and/or excess Permitted Team Assistance costs".[104]

Players' union

[edit]

Active non-United States federation players, including unpaid amateur players, announced their formation of the NWSL Players Association (NWSLPA) on May 15, 2017, as the first step toward forming a union. The NWSL recognized the NWSLPA as the players' union on November 15, 2018.[105] As of February 2022, the NWSLPA is led by civil rights attorney and former WPS players' union organizer Meghann Burke.[106]

Prior to the 2022 season, the NWSLPA membership did not include United States federation players because those players were contracted to the US Soccer Federation for their NWSL play.[107][108][109] With the abolition of the federation player system for 2022 and beyond, the NWSLPA now represents all players in the NWSL. The league and the NWSLPA entered into their first collective bargaining agreement in advance of that season.[98]

League competitions

[edit]

Championship and Shield

[edit]
President Joe Biden with members of NJ/NY Gotham FC at the White House to celebrate their 2023 championship

The winner of the NWSL Championship, the final match of the NWSL playoffs, determines that season's NWSL champion. In addition to receiving the championship trophy, the champion gets to add a star to the crest on its jersey. The playoffs, a single-elimination knockout tournament, are organized by the league in a format similar to other North American professional sports leagues. At the conclusion of the regular season, the top eight teams in the standings earn a berth to the tournament;[10] from 2021 to 2024, the top six teams qualified for the playoffs,[12] and prior to 2021 the top four teams qualified. The league also awards the NWSL Shield to the team with the best record (most points) at the end of the regular season. Like the playoff championship, it is recognized as a major trophy by the league.

The first NWSL Championship was played on September 1, 2013.[110] As of November 2024, six teams have been crowned NWSL Champions: Portland Thorns FC (3), FC Kansas City (2), North Carolina Courage (2), NJ/NY Gotham FC (1), Washington Spirit (1), and Western New York Flash (1). Six teams have claimed the NWSL Shield: North Carolina Courage (3), Seattle Reign FC (3), Portland Thorns FC (2), Orlando Pride (1), San Diego Wave FC (1), and Western New York Flash (1). The Reign was the first team to repeat as Shield winners in 2014 and 2015. FC Kansas City was the first team to win consecutive championships, also in 2014–15, both times defeating the Reign.[111] In 2018, the North Carolina Courage became the first team to win both the NWSL Shield and the NWSL Championship in the same season, a feat they repeated in 2019[112] and the Orlando Pride achieved in 2024.[113]

The trophies won by FC Kansas City and Western New York officially remain with those teams and were not transferred to the expansion or successor teams in Utah and North Carolina that were assigned their player-related assets. This was a non-issue for Utah Royals FC, which won no trophies before folding and having its player-related assets transferred to the franchise now known as the Kansas City Current.[114][115]

Overview of National Women's Soccer League champions
Season NWSL Champions
Playoff winners
NWSL Shield
Regular-season winners
Championship location Championship attendance
2013[116] Portland Thorns FC Western New York Flash Sahlen's Stadium, Rochester, New York 9,129
2014[117] FC Kansas City Seattle Reign FC Starfire Sports Complex, Tukwila, Washington 4,252
2015[118] FC Kansas City (2) Seattle Reign FC (2) Providence Park, Portland, Oregon 13,264
2016[119] Western New York Flash Portland Thorns FC BBVA Compass Stadium, Houston, Texas 8,255
2017[120] Portland Thorns FC (2) North Carolina Courage Orlando City Stadium, Orlando, Florida 8,124
2018[121] North Carolina Courage North Carolina Courage (2) Providence Park, Portland, Oregon 21,144
2019[122] North Carolina Courage (2) North Carolina Courage (3) Sahlen's Stadium, Cary, North Carolina 10,227
2020[123] Canceled
2021[124] Washington Spirit Portland Thorns FC (2) Lynn Family Stadium, Louisville, Kentucky 10,360
2022[125] Portland Thorns FC (3) OL Reign (3) Audi Field, Washington, D.C. 17,624
2023[126] NJ/NY Gotham FC San Diego Wave FC Snapdragon Stadium, San Diego, California 25,011
2024[127] Orlando Pride Orlando Pride CPKC Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri 11,500
2025[128] TBD Kansas City Current PayPal Park, San Jose, California TBD

sellout

Championship records

[edit]

Italics indicates a defunct team.

Club Won Runner-up Years won Years runner-up
Portland Thorns FC
3
1
2013, 2017, 2022 2018
North Carolina Courage
2
1
2018, 2019 2017
FC Kansas City
2
0
2014, 2015
Washington Spirit
1
2
2021 2016, 2024
Western New York Flash
1
1
2016 2013
Gotham FC[a]
1
0
2023
Orlando Pride
1
0
2024
Seattle Reign FC[b]
0
3
2014, 2015, 2023
Chicago Red Stars
0
2
2019, 2021
Kansas City Current
0
1
2022

Shield records

[edit]

Italics indicates a defunct team.

Team Wins Years won
North Carolina Courage 3 2017, 2018, 2019
Seattle Reign FC 2014, 2015, 2022
Portland Thorns FC 2 2016, 2021
Kansas City Current 1 2025
Orlando Pride 1 2024
San Diego Wave FC 1 2023
Western New York Flash 1 2013

Challenge Cup

[edit]

In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic prevented the regular season from starting. Instead the league played the newly announced Challenge Cup, a tournament-style competition starting in late June, with all teams in a protective bubble in Salt Lake City. This made the NWSL the first professional team sport in the U.S. to restart during the pandemic.[129][130] The Houston Dash won the inaugural Challenge Cup, topping the Chicago Red Stars in the final.[131]

In November 2020, the NWSL announced that the Challenge Cup would become an annual league cup competition.[12] The 2021 Challenge Cup was played in April and May prior to the regular season, with the Portland Thorns FC emerging as victors over NJ/NY Gotham FC in the final.[132][133] The 2022 Challenge Cup was played from March to May of that year and was won by the North Carolina Courage. The 2023 NWSL Challenge Cup was played concurrently with the NWSL season,[134] and the North Carolina Courage won their second straight NWSL Challenge Cup.[135]

In 2024, the Challenge Cup became a single-game super cup contested by the previous season's NWSL Shield holder and NWSL Champion. Should the same team win both trophies, the Challenge Cup would be a rematch of the previous season's championship game[10] (which happened for the first time in the 2025 edition). The 2023 NWSL Shield winners San Diego Wave FC defeated the NWSL Champion's NJ/NY Gotham FC to win the 2024 Challenge Cup, the first under the current format.[136]

Overview of Challenge Cup champions
Season Champions Runners-up Final location
2020[131] Houston Dash Chicago Red Stars Rio Tinto Stadium, Sandy, Utah
2021[133] Portland Thorns FC NJ/NY Gotham FC Providence Park, Portland, Oregon
2022 North Carolina Courage Washington Spirit Sahlen's Stadium, Cary, North Carolina
2023 North Carolina Courage (2) Racing Louisville FC WakeMed Soccer Park, Cary, North Carolina
2024[136] San Diego Wave FC NJ/NY Gotham FC (2) Red Bull Arena, Harrison, New Jersey
2025[136] Washington Spirit Orlando Pride Inter&Co Stadium, Orlando, Florida

Planned second division

[edit]

On April 1, 2025, the NWSL applied to U.S. Soccer to create a new Division II league, confirming this to media outlets on April 25. At the time, the U.S. soccer system had no Division II women's league, but a separate organization has applied for Division II sanctioning for WPSL PRO, set to launch in 2026. If sanctioned, the as-of-yet unnamed second division intends to launch in 2026 with reserve sides of eight current NWSL teams—Bay FC, Kansas City Current, North Carolina Courage, NJ/NY Gotham FC, Orlando Pride, Racing Louisville FC, Seattle Reign FC, and the Washington Spirit. All 14 current NWSL sides, plus the two 2026 expansion teams, are expected to field reserve sides in the new second division within that league's first four years, and teams without NWSL affiliations will also be welcome at some point.[137]

Fall Series

[edit]

In September and October 2020, the league played the Fall Series, in which the nine teams were divided into three geographic "pods" to minimize travel during the COVID-19 pandemic; each team played a home-and-away round-robin within its pod.[138] The Portland Thorns earned 12 points, the maximum possible, and won the Fall Series and the associated trophy, the Community Shield (named Verizon Community Shield for sponsorship reasons).[139]

Broadcasting

[edit]

2013–2016: YouTube, Fox Sports, ESPN

[edit]
Aly Wagner former US Women's National Team player, provides insightful analysis and commentary for NWSL games, offering a player's perspective.

During the 2013–2016 seasons, the majority of league games were available for viewing via YouTube or via individual team's websites.[140] Of the eight teams in the league during the inaugural season, the Boston Breakers were the only team that charged a fee for access to their broadcasts.[141]

On April 18, 2013, NWSL signed a one-year agreement with Fox Sports 2 to televise six regular season games, the semifinal, and championship games.[142] On May 28, 2014, the NWSL signed a one-year agreement with ESPN to televise nine games of the 2014 NWSL season. The matches included three regular season and three playoff matches on ESPN2, as well as 3 regular season games live-streamed on ESPN3.[143] On June 30, 2015, the NWSL announced a one-year agreement with Fox Sports once more to cover ten matches. Three regular season and three playoff matches were televised on FS1, and four live-streamed on Fox Sports Go.[144] The agreement was extended into 2016 under another one-year contract, covering three regular season matches and the three playoff matches, once again on FS1.[145]

2017–2019: Lifetime and go90, ESPN

[edit]

On February 2, 2017, the NWSL announced three-year agreements with A&E Networks and Verizon Communications' streaming platform go90. A&E's women's cable network Lifetime broadcast 22 regular-season matches as the NWSL Game of the Week at 4 p.m. ET on Saturday afternoons, as well as three post-season matches. This marked the first time that the NWSL had a weekly broadcast window throughout the entire season. As part of the deal, A&E Networks purchased a 25 percent equity stake in the NWSL and were granted two seats on the league's board. The company also formed a joint venture with the league known as NWSL Media to oversee the league's marketing and broadcast rights, and Lifetime became a league-wide kit sponsor for all players. This deal marked the first time Lifetime had broadcast sports since the WNBA in the late 1990s and early 2000s.[146][147][148][149][150] Lifetime also streamed the game of the week in the United States via its website, and internationally in the NWSL website and iOS app. The remaining games were initially streamed in the United States exclusively by go90, and through the NWSL website internationally.[146]

The quality of the streams on go90 faced criticism, with sportswriters, users, and players and team staff criticizing the service for its inconsistent quality and arguing that the NWSL's growth could be harmed by go90's relative lack of reach and prominence when compared to YouTube.[151][152] The Equalizer noted that the app was prone to crashing, did not have the same wide device support as YouTube,[153] and that the telecasts themselves suffered from their own technical problems (such as poor camera angles and glitches with graphics), but that the streams were good when they worked.[154] On May 19, 2017, the league announced that they would additionally stream games on the NWSL website and app in the U.S. until the technical issues with go90 were rectified.[155]

After Houston Dash player Rachel Daly collapsed on the pitch after a match in Houston, on May 27 – where the heat index was reportedly over 100 degrees Fahrenheit – she was carried off on a stretcher and hospitalized for heat illness. League operations director Amanda Duffy subsequently announced that the NWSL Game of the Week matches, many of which were slated for the hottest parts of the day in humid cities such as Houston, Orlando, and Cary, North Carolina, would be rescheduled to allow for longer hydration breaks. Some Game of the Week matches changed to other venues, and teams not scheduled for television were granted more flexibility in rescheduling kickoffs for player safety. The league also adopted new procedures for addressing heat and rescheduling matches.[156][157]

On June 6, 2018, it was announced that six Game of the Week matches through the remainder of the season would move to evening kickoffs and air on ESPNews (which is owned by a sister venture to A&E Networks), in an effort to ensure the safety of players, as well as improve attendance.[158] Go90 shut down in July 2018; the remaining games not aired on television were moved back to the NWSL website for the remainder of the regular season and playoffs.[159]

On February 20, 2019, the NWSL announced that A&E Networks had pulled out of its broadcasting agreement with the league one season early. A&E's stake in NWSL Media was given back to the league, but Lifetime remained a kit sponsor. NWSL president Amanda Duffy said the changes would give the league and its teams finer control over its media and sponsorship agreements, and expected to announce a new television rights deal soon. Verizon Media remained the U.S. digital rightsholder to the league, but the streams moved from go90 to the Yahoo! Sports website and apps.[160]

The NWSL did not reach any national television deals before the start of the 2019 season,[161] but after their opening match, the Chicago Red Stars reached their own television deal with the regional sports network NBC Sports Chicago.[162] In July 2019, the NWSL announced that ESPN had acquired a 14-match package for the remainder of the season divided among ESPNews and ESPN2, including the semifinals and championship match.[163]

2020–2023: CBS Sports and Twitch

[edit]
The NWSL increased the number and quality of cameras used for matches during the 2022 season.

In October 2019, the NWSL signed the agency Octagon to market its media rights. It was reported that Octagon was pursuing multi-year agreements of at least three years and stronger broadcaster commitments, as to help build an audience and discourage broadcasters from acquiring NWSL rights to ride the coattails of the U.S. national team and the FIFA Women's World Cup, but then "abandon" it afterward.[164]

On March 11, 2020, the NWSL entered into a three-year media agreement with CBS Sports and Amazon-owned streaming service Twitch.[165] For the 2020 season, CBS Sports planned to broadcast 87 matches (including the playoffs) split between CBS, CBS Sports Network, and CBS All Access (now Paramount+) in Canada and the United States, with the exact distribution among the channels subject to change, while Twitch planned to stream an additional 24 matches for free. Twitch also became the NWSL's international media rightsholder and streamed all matches outside Canada and the United States for free.[166][167]

In September 2021, players publicly complained about the 2021 NWSL championship match's announced the 9 a.m. PDT kickoff time in the neutral-site host city of Portland, Oregon, which was required for the league's noon EDT broadcast slot provided by CBS.[168] The league responded by moving the match to Lynn Family Stadium in Louisville, Kentucky, in the Eastern Time Zone.[169]

Following criticism of match broadcast quality,[170][171] the NWSL announced improvements to cameras, infrastructure, and staffing in August 2022, with additional improvements necessary to support the introduction of video assistant referees in 2023.[172][173][174]

CBS Sports did not renew its rights beyond 2023 during its exclusive negotiating window. The league's contract with Twitch expired after the 2022 season, with the U.S. rights to the matches reverting to CBS.[175] The NWSL stated that matches would stream internationally on its website as part of an agreement with Endeavor Streaming, while also reaching agreements with TSN (Canada), DAZN (Brazil, Japan, UK, and 12 European territories), and Tigo (Central America).[176][177][178]

On June 6, 2023, Tigo also added free Spanish-language streams of two regular-season NWSL matches per week, the NWSL Challenge Cup playoffs, and NWSL playoffs in the United States and Canada.[179]

2024–present: CBS, Amazon, ESPN, Ion, NWSL+ and Victory+ (2026)

[edit]

On November 9, 2023, the NWSL announced multi-year deals with CBS Sports, ESPN, Amazon Prime Video, and Scripps Sports, reported to be valued in total at around $60 million per-season (in comparison to the roughly $1.5 million paid by CBS under the previous agreement).[180]

  • On CBS and streaming on Paramount+, CBS Sports will air at least 10 regular season matches, one quarter-final, one semi-final, and the championship. Eight matches will air exclusively on CBS Sports Network.[181][180] In 2024, this agreement was expanded to include 22 additional regular season matches on Paramount+ and the CBS Sports Golazo Network.[182]
  • Prime Video will stream the season opening match, 25 regular season matches on Friday nights, and one quarter-final.[180]
  • ESPN will air 17 regular season matches, two quarter-finals, and one semi-final on ESPN, ESPN2, or ABC, and streaming on ESPN+.[181][180]
  • Ion Television will air 50 regular season matches per-season, consisting of primetime doubleheaders on Saturday nights.[180]
  • The remaining matches not covered by these contracts are streamed for free on the league-run NWSL+ streaming service. Individual teams also have the option to sell non-exclusive rights to these matches to local broadcasters (such as broadcast stations and regional sports networks).[180][181][183]

On September 16, 2025, the NWSL announced revised agreements with ESPN and CBS Sports, and a new streaming agreement with Victory+. Agreements with Prime Video and ION are unchanged.[184]

  • ESPN will expand its agreement to air 33 regular season matches, up from 17 in the original agreement, including all 8 Decision Day matches.
  • CBS Sports Network will now air 20 regular season matches, while five other regular season matches can air on any CBS Sports platform.
  • Victory+ will air 57 matches, 25 of which will be on Sunday nights.
  • NWSL+ will air 40 matches.

Statistical leaders

[edit]

[185][186][187]

Bold indicates active NWSL players.

Awards

[edit]

Throughout the season, the league awards Player of the Month, Team of the Month, and Player of the Week awards to individual players, which are voted on by the media. At the end of each season, the league presents seven annual awards for outstanding achievements, six of which are voted on by players, owners, general managers, coaches, media, and fans.[188] The 2024 holders of the annual awards were as follows:

In addition, the league names an annual NWSL Best XI team and NWSL Second XI team, which are voted on by players, owners, general managers, coaches, media, and fans.[196]

Leadership

[edit]
Name Years Title Ref.
Cheryl Bailey 2012–2014 Commissioner [197]
Jeff Plush 2015–2017 Commissioner [198][199]
Amanda Duffy 2017 Managing director of operations [200]
Amanda Duffy 2018–2019 Managing director [200]
Amanda Duffy 2019–2020 President [201]
Lisa Baird 2020–2021 Commissioner [202]
Marla Messing 2021–2022 Interim CEO [203]
Jessica Berman 2022–present Commissioner [204]

Former general manager of the United States women's national soccer team Cheryl Bailey was announced by US Soccer president Sunil Gulati as the first commissioner of the NWSL on November 29, 2012.[205] On November 18, 2014, she resigned after overseeing two seasons and the launch of the new professional league in less than five months ahead of the inaugural season.[206]

On January 6, 2015, Jeff Plush, managing director of Colorado Rapids and a former MLS board member, was named as Bailey's successor.[207] Plush oversaw the 2015 and 2016 seasons, including the Orlando Pride expansion, a broadcast partnership with A+E Networks (including the three-year broadcast deal with Lifetime television), and the sale of the Western New York Flash to North Carolina FC owner Stephen Malik and the team's relocation to North Carolina.[208] During his tenure, former Louisville City FC president Amanda Duffy was hired in December 2016 as the NWSL's managing director of operations.[209]

Plush resigned as commissioner on March 2, 2017, and the position remained vacant until 2020, although Duffy served as the public face of league management.[210] On January 15, 2019, Duffy was promoted to president, the league's highest office.[211]

On January 7, 2020, Amanda Duffy announced that she would leave the NWSL for a leadership position at the Orlando Pride on February 15, 2020.[212] On February 27, 2020, the NWSL announced that Lisa Baird, chief marketing officer of the New York Public Radio, would become the league's commissioner on March 10, 2020.[213] Baird resigned on October 1, 2021, during the NWSL abuse scandal (see § Controversies, below). On October 18, 2021, the league hired Marla Messing as its Interim CEO.[214] On April 20, 2022, Jessica Berman became commissioner, overlapping with CEO Messing, who continued work until May 31.[215]

Sexual harassment

[edit]

The NWSL has undergone many allegations and reports of sexual harassment, misconduct, and emotional abuse by coaches and staff over the years, and has received a significant amount of criticism.[216][217][218]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

The National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) is the top-tier professional association football league for women in the United States and Canada, sanctioned by the United States Soccer Federation and featuring 14 franchise-owned teams as of the 2025 season. wait no wiki, replace. Actually, from [web:33] standings official. Sanctioned: from knowledge but cite [web:0] but wiki no. From [web:43] announced by USSF.
Founded in response to the dissolution of prior women's professional leagues and leveraging the popularity of the U.S. women's national team, the NWSL was publicly announced on November 21, 2012, with eight inaugural franchises and commenced its inaugural regular season matches in April 2013.
The league operates on a single-table format with an expanded playoff system determining the annual champion via the NWSL Championship, and has grown substantially in commercial viability, attracting international players and recording unprecedented fan engagement, including over 2 million total attendees and an average of more than 11,000 per match in the 2024 season.
Notable achievements include multiple championship titles contested among competitive franchises and increasing media coverage, yet the league has been marked by significant controversies, particularly a 2022 independent investigation revealing systemic patterns of emotional abuse, sexual misconduct, and retaliation by coaches toward players, resulting in permanent bans for several individuals, league-wide policy overhauls, and a $5 million settlement fund established in 2025 for affected athletes.

History

Founding and Establishment (2012)

The National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) was founded on November 21, 2012, as a professional women's soccer league in the United States, succeeding the (WPS), which had ceased operations in February 2012 due to financial insolvency after three seasons. The initiative was led by the (USSF) under president , who sought to create a sustainable top-tier league amid prior failures like the (2001–2003) and WPS, emphasizing centralized control to mitigate ownership risks and financial instability observed in those ventures. A distinctive feature of the NWSL's establishment was its collaborative funding model involving the USSF, , and Federación Mexicana de Fútbol (FMF), which allocated national team players to the league's teams and covered their base salaries to reduce costs for franchise owners and ensure access to elite talent without competitive bidding. This allocation system distributed top U.S., Canadian, and Mexican players across the eight founding franchises—, Chicago Red Stars, , , , Sky Blue FC, , and —prioritizing competitive balance over free agency. The league operated as a single-entity structure, with USSF initially retaining ownership stakes in teams to oversee operations and , addressing the decentralized model that contributed to WPS's collapse. The official name and logo were unveiled on December 15, 2012, during a USSF event following a U.S. women's national team match, signaling readiness for the 2013 launch with a 22-game regular season format. Franchise selections prioritized markets with existing infrastructure, fan bases from prior leagues, and committed ownership groups, though early challenges included modest initial investments and reliance on federation subsidies for viability. This foundation laid the groundwork for the NWSL's longevity, contrasting with predecessors by integrating national federations directly into player development and cost management.

Early Seasons and Stabilization (2013–2016)

The National Women's Soccer League commenced its inaugural season on April 13, 2013, with eight founding teams: the , Chicago Red Stars, , , , Sky Blue FC, , and . The season featured an unbalanced schedule of 22 matches per team, culminating in playoffs where the defeated the 2–0 in the championship final on September 1, 2013, despite the Flash claiming the regular-season with 38 points. Average attendance stood at 4,271 fans per match, bolstered by strong crowds for the Thorns, who drew over 17,000 for a home game against Kansas City. In 2014, the league expanded to nine teams with the addition of the , while dominated the regular season to win the Shield with a record 54 points (16 wins, 2 losses, 6 draws). then captured the championship by defeating Seattle 2–1 in extra time on August 31, 2014. Average attendance dipped slightly to 4,139, reflecting persistent challenges in fan engagement outside flagship markets like Portland and . Financial constraints remained acute, with many non-allocated players receiving minimal or no compensation, as the league prioritized cost control through subsidized salaries for national team stars funded by U.S. Soccer and other federations. The 2015 and 2016 seasons marked gradual stabilization amid modest growth. repeated as Shield winners in 2015 with 43 points, but defended their title with a 1–0 victory over the in the final. Attendance rose to 5,046 on average, driven by increased visibility from the U.S. women's national team's success. In 2016, expansion to ten teams occurred with the Orlando Pride's entry, and Portland claimed the Shield while the won the championship 3–2 on penalties against the after a 2–2 draw. Average attendance climbed to 5,558, signaling emerging viability, though profitability eluded most franchises due to low revenue streams and reliance on owner subsidies. The league's survival hinged on federation-backed allocation mechanisms and restrained expansion, avoiding the collapses of prior women's leagues by curtailing spending ahead of revenue growth.

Expansion Amid Challenges (2017–2019)

The National Women's Soccer League entered a phase of attempted expansion during 2017–2019, marked by the relocation of one franchise, the addition of a new team via absorption of another, and announcements for future growth, even as operational and financial instabilities led to contractions. In January 2017, the Western New York Flash ownership group sold the team and relocated it to Cary, North Carolina, rebranding it as the North Carolina Courage, which quickly emerged as a dominant force by winning the NWSL Shield in its inaugural season. Following the 2017 season, FC Kansas City ceased operations on November 20, 2017, after its owner returned the franchise to the league amid declining attendance and broader ownership difficulties; the team's player contracts were transferred to a new expansion franchise in Salt Lake City, Utah, announced on November 16, 2017, as Utah Royals FC, which joined for the 2018 season. These moves maintained league size at 10 teams for 2017 but reduced it to nine for 2018 after the folded on January 28, 2018, unable to secure stable ownership or sufficient funding to continue operations. The league operated with nine teams through 2019, with expansion momentum building toward the announcement of Louisville as the 10th franchise on October 22, 2019, set to begin play in 2021. Financial constraints posed significant hurdles, exemplified by low salary caps—$315,000 in , rising modestly to $350,000 in and $421,500 in —and minimal player compensation, where the majority earned under $30,000 annually, often necessitating secondary employment. reflected uneven progress: averaging 5,083 per match in (an 8.5% decline from 2016), it rebounded to 6,024 in (up 18.5%) and 7,389 in (up 22.7%), totaling 792,409 fans that year, yet these figures underscored persistent revenue limitations compared to established professional leagues. Such challenges highlighted the league's reliance on federation support and MLS affiliations for viability, with team foldings stemming directly from inadequate local investment and market support.

COVID-19 Disruption and Adaptation (2020–2021)

The 2020 NWSL season, originally scheduled to commence on April 18, was indefinitely suspended on March 20 due to the escalating , halting all league activities including preseason matches and imposing a training moratorium extended to April 5. In adaptation, the league announced the inaugural on May 27, establishing a 25-match in a biosecure bubble at Zions Bank Stadium in , running from June 27 to July 26 without spectators to mitigate health risks. The format featured two groups of four teams each, with group-stage matches determining semifinalists, culminating in the Houston Dash's 2-0 victory over the Chicago Red Stars in the final at Rio Tinto Stadium on July 26—the Dash's first major NWSL trophy. Strict protocols, including daily testing and isolation measures, yielded zero positive cases among participants despite over 2,000 tests administered. To further address the disrupted regular season, the NWSL introduced the Fall Series on August 25, scheduling 18 matches from September 5 to October 17 across three regional pods—West, Northeast, and South—emphasizing intrastate and interstate rivalries while adhering to local travel restrictions. The topped the Western pod undefeated, clinching the with a 2-1 win over OL Reign on October 12 and securing the title via key contributions from forward . For 2021, the league unveiled an innovative framework in late 2020, integrating a second as a preseason event starting across teams' home markets, followed by a 24-game regular season from May 15 to October 30 and expanded playoffs for six teams beginning November. Players reported to training camps on February 1 under rigorous protocols, including mandatory seven-day quarantines, serial testing (over 600 in the first week yielding five positives), and , enabling phased resumption without a full bubble. Attendance remained constrained by local mandates, with some early matches closed to fans and others, like games, limited to reduced capacity with . Subsequent testing rounds reported zero positives, supporting sustained operations amid variant concerns.

Professionalization and Rapid Growth (2022–present)

The National Women's Soccer League advanced toward full professionalization in February 2022 with the ratification of its first collective bargaining agreement (CBA), covering seasons through 2026 and establishing standards for player compensation, free agency, and working conditions previously lacking in the league's semi-professional structure. This agreement introduced mechanisms like and improved health coverage, addressing longstanding issues exposed by 2021 abuse scandals and enabling players to focus exclusively on professional careers without college affiliations. A subsequent CBA ratified on August 22, 2024, further eliminated player drafts, granting unrestricted free agency and boosting minimum salaries to $43,200 by 2026, reflecting sustained labor negotiations amid rising league valuations. Expansion accelerated during this period, with the addition of San Diego Wave FC and Angel City FC for the 2022 season, increasing the league to 12 teams and injecting significant private investment, including Angel City's celebrity-backed ownership group. By 2024, the league reached 14 teams via the return of Utah Royals FC and debut of , followed by announcements of Boston Legacy FC and Denver Summit FC set to join in 2026 for expansion fees reportedly exceeding $100 million each, doubling the league's size from 2019 levels and signaling robust market demand. These moves coincided with franchise valuations averaging $134 million in 2025, underscoring financial maturation driven by investor interest post-U.S. women's national team successes. Attendance and viewership metrics demonstrated rapid growth, with regular-season figures surpassing 1.2 million in 2023—a 26% year-over-year increase—and exceeding 1.5 million in , alongside average per-game nearing 11,500. Media partnerships expanded, including a 2025 Disney agreement adding 16 ABC/ESPN broadcasts annually, contributing to record playoff viewership averaging 562,900 in and quadrupling streaming audiences since inception. The 2022 championship drew 915,000 viewers on CBS, the highest in league history at the time, while events like Chicago Red Stars' 2024 Wrigley Field match highlighted surging fan engagement. Despite a reported dip in early 2025, overall trajectories affirmed the league's transition to a viable professional entity.

Competition Format

Regular Season and Playoffs

The regular season features each of the league's 14 teams competing in a balanced schedule of 26 matches, with 13 designated as home games and 13 as away fixtures against every opponent. This format, introduced in 2024 alongside league expansion, increased the number of games per team from 22 in prior seasons to enhance competitive depth and revenue opportunities through additional matchdays. The 2025 campaign spans 25 weeks, starting March 14, with scheduling designed to avoid conflicts with international windows, thereby minimizing player absences and maintaining roster integrity. Standings are calculated via a points system awarding , one for a draw, and zero for a loss; tiebreakers prioritize goal differential, followed by goals scored, head-to-head results, and fewer disciplinary points. At the regular season's conclusion, the top eight teams qualify for the based on final standings, seeded from first to eighth without regard to conference affiliations, as the league operates without divisions. This structure, expanded from six teams in previous years, eliminates first-round byes and promotes broader postseason participation to heighten fan engagement and competitive stakes. The playoffs adopt a single-elimination , commencing with quarterfinal matchups of 1 versus 8, 2 versus 7, 3 versus 6, and 4 versus 5 seeds, where higher seeds host at their home venues. Semifinal hosts are determined by the higher original seed among advancing teams, culminating in the NWSL hosted at a league-selected neutral site. All playoff contests prohibit draws, resolving ties through two 15-minute extra time periods followed by a best-of-five if needed. Quarterfinals typically occur over a weekend immediately post-regular season, with semifinals and the final following in subsequent weeks, as exemplified by the playoffs starting 8.

NWSL Shield and Championship

The recognizes the team with the superior regular-season performance, determined by points where victories yield three points and draws one point. This accolade grants the recipient the No. 1 seed in the playoffs, ensuring home-field advantage throughout the postseason, and entry into the subsequent . The NWSL Championship crowns the league's playoff victor via a single-elimination featuring the top eight regular-season finishers. Seeded by standings, the structure includes quarterfinals (1 vs. 8, 2 vs. 7, 3 vs. 6, 4 vs. 5), semifinals, and a final, all hosted by the higher seed with no aggregate scoring or byes. Matches unable to conclude in regulation proceed to 30 minutes of extra time, followed by penalty shootouts if tied. The 2020 season's regular competition and playoffs were canceled amid the , with the inaugural instead determining a limited champion.

NWSL Shield Winners

The following table lists all recipients:

NWSL Championship Winners

The subsequent table enumerates NWSL Championship victors:

Supplementary Tournaments

The , launched in 2020, functions as an annual supplementary competition held before or alongside the early regular season, providing additional matches and a trophy distinct from the and . Originally conceived as a COVID-19 response tournament in a bubble—replacing the canceled regular season—it involved all nine teams in a group stage followed by semifinals and a final, with the defeating the Chicago Red Stars 2-0 on August 9, 2020. The format evolved post-2020: in 2021 and 2022, it adopted regional round-robin groups of four teams played preseason, yielding winners (over NJ/NY Gotham FC on May 2, 2021) and (over FC on March 26, 2022). The 2023 edition integrated group-stage matches concurrently with the regular season's outset, again won by the after topping their group and defeating OL Reign 1-0 in the final on April 8, 2023. From 2024 onward, the league streamlined it into a single preseason supercup match pitting prior-season standouts—typically the Championship finalists—against each other; the claimed the inaugural such edition with a 1-0 victory over the on March 2, 2024, followed by the Washington Spirit's 1-1 (4-2 penalties) win against the on March 7, 2025.
YearWinnerScore/ResultFinal Opponent
20202–0Chicago Red Stars
20211–0 (a.e.t.)NJ/NY Gotham FC
20221–0 FC
20231–0OL Reign
20241–0
20251–1 (4–2 pens.)
In 2024, the NWSL introduced the NWSL x Summer Cup as a mid-season international supplement, pitting 14 NWSL clubs against six from Mexico's in five groups of four; teams played three group matches from July 19 to August, with group toppers and runners-up advancing to quarterfinals, semifinals, and a final on October 25, where the beat NJ/NY Gotham FC 2-0 via goals from . The event incurred losses over $4 million due to logistical costs and scheduling conflicts, prompting its cancellation for 2025 in favor of bilateral friendlies during the international break.

Teams

Current Teams (2025 Season)

The National Women's Soccer League fields 14 teams in the 2025 season, competing in a regular season schedule that runs from March 14 to October 31. These franchises span multiple U.S. markets, primarily in the eastern and western regions, with representation from , the Midwest, , and Northeast. No new expansions occurred for 2025, maintaining the roster established with and ' return in 2024.
TeamPrimary MarketHome Stadium (2025)
, CA
San Jose, CA
Chicago Red Stars, IL
Houston, TX
Kansas City, MO
NJ/NY Gotham FCHarrison, NJRed Bull Arena
Cary, NC
OL ReignSeattle, WA
Orlando, FL
Portland, OR
Louisville, KY
[San Diego Wave FC](/page/San Diego_Wave_FC)San Diego, CA
Utah Royals FCSalt Lake City, UT
Washington, D.C.
This configuration supports a 22-game regular season per team, with each facing opponents twice—once home and once away—plus additional matches in the . Standings as of October 2025 reflect competitive balance, with the leading the Shield race after securing the top regular-season spot.

Expansion and Future Franchises

The National Women's Soccer League expanded from 12 to 14 teams ahead of the 2024 season through the addition of , based in the , and the revival of the FC in following a period of dormancy after the original franchise folded in 2020. , awarded in 2023 for an expansion fee estimated between $30 million and $50 million, marked the league's entry into a major untapped market on the West Coast, driven by investor interest post the 2022 agreement that professionalized player compensation. The ' return, also announced in 2023 at a lower fee of $2 million to $5 million reflecting its legacy status, was facilitated by new ownership under Ryan Smith, owner of the NBA's , emphasizing infrastructure investments like . In September 2023, granted its 15th franchise to a -based ownership group, BOS Nation FC (also referred to as Boston Legacy FC), set to commence play in 2026 at an expansion fee of $53 million, the highest at the time and reflecting surging valuations amid growing attendance and media deals. This award followed competitive bidding, prioritizing markets with demonstrated fan support and stadium commitments, though it revived interest in a city previously home to the defunct . On January 30, 2025, the NWSL officially awarded its 16th franchise to Denver, Colorado, under an ownership group led by local investors, with play slated for 2026 and a record expansion fee of $110 million—the largest in U.S. history—surpassing bids from and after a rigorous of market size, corporate partnerships, and venue viability. This selection, announced by commissioner Jessica Berman, nearly doubles the league's size since 2022 and underscores investor confidence fueled by record attendances exceeding 200,000 in 2024 and a new $240 million media rights deal. Looking ahead, the NWSL has shifted to a rolling expansion model without a fixed timeline beyond 16 teams, with Berman publicly stating the league could sustainably support 30 to 32 franchises akin to the , contingent on sustained revenue growth from broadcasting, sponsorships, and infrastructure. Prospective markets like , , and remain in discussions, though no further awards have been confirmed as of October 2025, with emphasis on owner equity requirements and dedicated soccer-specific stadiums to mitigate risks seen in earlier expansions. This measured approach prioritizes over rapid growth, as evidenced by average team valuations reaching $134 million in 2025 per independent assessments.

Former and Defunct Teams

The , one of the NWSL's eight inaugural franchises established in 2013, ceased operations in its original form following a sale and relocation announced on January 9, 2017. The team, which had won the 2016 NWSL Championship, was acquired by Football Club and moved to , where it was rebranded as the ahead of the 2017 season. FC Kansas City, another founding member from 2013, ended operations on November 20, 2017, after the NWSL reacquired its membership interest from the ownership group. The franchise, which secured NWSL Shields in 2014 and 2015, saw its player contracts and assets transferred to the league's new expansion team in , which debuted as the FC in 2018. The , the longest continuously operating professional women's soccer team in the U.S. with roots dating to 2001, folded effective immediately on January 28, 2018, due to the original ownership group's inability to secure stable funding or a viable sale. The NWSL dispersed the Breakers' players via a special allocation process to the remaining nine teams, allowing selections without impacting salary caps or rosters. No other NWSL franchises have permanently ceased operations, though the Utah Royals FC suspended activities in December 2020 amid ownership financial difficulties exacerbated by the before returning as an in 2024.

Governance and Operations

League Leadership and Administration

The National Women's Soccer League operates under a team-owned structure established in , following its separation from direct operational management by the , which had overseen the league since its founding in 2013. Each member club is controlled by investor-operator groups that hold equity stakes in the league collectively, enabling profit-sharing among teams while maintaining franchise independence. This model has facilitated rapid expansion and increased valuations, with recent franchise sales exceeding $100 million. Governance is directed by the Board of Governors, comprising one governor and an optional alternate from each club, responsible for approving major decisions such as ownership changes and expansion. A subset four-person Executive Committee handles select operational matters, including commissioner contracts; in October 2025, it unanimously extended Jessica Berman's tenure by three years. Jessica Berman assumed the role of commissioner on March 9, 2022, replacing Lisa Baird, who resigned amid investigations into allegations against league-affiliated coaches and executives. Drawing from prior executive experience at the and National Hockey League, Berman directs league-wide operations, including player welfare, commercial development, and competitive standards. Her administration has prioritized infrastructure investments and media rights expansions, though internal restructuring occurred in May 2025 with the departures of Chief Sporting Director Tatjana Haenni and Chief Marketing and Commercial Officer Julie Haddon. Day-to-day administration is supported by a central executive team based in , , featuring roles such as Sarah Jones Simmer, who manages business logistics, and Chief People and Culture Officer Lauren Lopez, focused on and equity initiatives. Additional hires in recent years, including Pauline Philippi, have bolstered financial oversight amid the league's growth to 16 teams by 2026. The league maintains sanctioning from the U.S. Soccer Federation while operating autonomously.

Player Contracts, Salaries, and Allocation

Player contracts in the National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) are standardized under the league's collective bargaining agreement (CBA) with the NWSL Players Association (NWSLPA), which outlines terms for compensation, roster construction, and player rights. The most recent CBA, ratified on August 22, 2024, and running through 2030, eliminates the college draft, introduces unrestricted free agency for all eligible players, and ties salary parameters to league for the first time, aiming to align player pay with growing media and sponsorship income. Contracts are generally one- to three-year deals negotiable above the league minimum, with teams required to offer qualifying offers to retain players or risk losing them to free agency after three years of service. The league maintains a team to promote competitive balance, set at $3.3 million for the 2025 season across rosters of 22 to 26 players, marking a 20% increase from $2.75 million in 2024. This cap applies to base salaries and certain bonuses but excludes transfer fees and some ancillary benefits like housing stipends. The minimum annual salary rises to $48,500 in 2025 from $37,856 in 2024, with scheduled annual increases reaching $82,500 by 2030, plus performance incentives that can add 20-30% for top performers. Unlike prior agreements, there is no maximum individual salary limit, allowing star players to command higher market-driven pay, though average salaries remain below $100,000 for most, reflecting the league's developmental stage and revenue constraints compared to men's counterparts. Allocation mechanisms, including and intra-league transfer credits, enable teams to sign high-profile domestic or international players without fully burdening the , historically used to retain U.S. national team members and now phased for new contracts under updated rules emphasizing direct salary budgeting. , distributed by the league based on factors like player pedigree or team needs, counts at reduced rates (e.g., one-third against the cap for qualifying expenditures) or as exemptions for designated players, with totals capped per team to prevent disparities; for 2025, existing allocations carry over but new ones are limited as the CBA shifts toward pure cap compliance. This system, inherited from the league's origins with U.S. Soccer-funded allocated players in 2013, has evolved to support expansion while curbing spending excesses, though critics argue it still hampers aggressive investment in talent amid rising transfer thresholds starting at $500,000 for international deals.

Collective Bargaining and Union Activities

The National Women's Soccer League Players Association (NWSLPA) was formed in May 2017 by non-allocated players, led by Yael Averbuch, through a drive to organize players under standard player agreements. The union initially represented discovery players and those signed outside allocation processes, addressing concerns over working conditions, pay, and player mobility in a league operating without prior structures. The NWSL formally recognized the NWSLPA as the exclusive bargaining representative in January 2018 via a voluntary agreement, marking the start of structured negotiations. This recognition followed years of informal advocacy amid reports of low salaries—averaging around $30,000 annually pre-union—and inadequate facilities, which players attributed to the league's reliance on allocated U.S. national team talent without robust revenue-sharing mechanisms. Negotiations for the first collective bargaining agreement (CBA) intensified in late 2021, with players threatening a preseason work stoppage in 2022 if no deal was reached, citing disputes over salary caps, free agency restrictions, and health benefits. The sides agreed to a landmark CBA in February 2022, ratified by players and covering through the 2026 season; it introduced limited free agency (with for teams), raised the minimum salary from $22,000 to $35,000 by 2026, established a $1.5 million team salary floor, and mandated charter flights and improved medical coverage. League commissioner Jessica Berman initiated early renegotiations in 2023 following the , leading to a new CBA announced on August 22, 2024, effective through 2030. This agreement eliminated the entry draft—replacing it with full free agency upon contract expiration—and removed player rights retention by teams, granting players unrestricted career mobility for the first time in U.S. domestic history. It set the 2025 salary cap at $3.3 million per team (a 20% increase from prior levels), with progressive growth to $5.1 million by 2030, alongside minimum salary hikes to $47,500 in 2025 and revenue-sharing incentives tied to league performance. Union activities have emphasized player welfare beyond pay, including for anti-abuse policies amid 2022 scandals involving coaching misconduct, though no formal strikes have occurred. The NWSLPA has also supported allied efforts, such as public solidarity with WNBA players during their 2025 CBA talks, wearing slogan shirts to highlight revenue disputes. These developments reflect causal pressures from rising league revenues—boosted by media deals and attendance—but underscore ongoing tensions over equitable distribution, as players negotiated against a backdrop of historical underinvestment compared to men's leagues.

Facilities and Attendance

Stadiums and Infrastructure

NWSL teams primarily utilize a combination of soccer-specific stadiums, facilities shared with clubs, and multi-purpose venues, reflecting the league's historical resource constraints and recent infrastructure investments. Early seasons relied on college campuses and regional parks, but expansion and rising have driven upgrades, including the first fully dedicated women's soccer stadium. The opened on March 16, 2024, a 11,500-seat soccer-specific venue owned outright by the club, marking the NWSL's inaugural purpose-built facility and enabling consistent sell-outs across its debut regular season. plays at , a 10,000-capacity soccer complex featuring lighted full-size training fields and supporting infrastructure for year-round operations. Shared professional stadiums provide larger capacities for teams like at , an 18,000-seat venue co-used with the , set to host the 2025 NWSL Championship on November 22. Expansion franchises prioritize dedicated builds; NWSL plans a 14,500-seat in the Santa Fe Yards district, preceded by a temporary 12,000-seat facility in for its 2026-2027 home games, alongside a performance center with multiple fields. Soccer Group proposes a 12,500-seat expandable within Metroparks, emphasizing community integration. Infrastructure challenges persist, with NWSL Commissioner Jessica Berman identifying venue access as the league's most pressing issue, prompting calls for further private and public investments to match growing demand. The National Women's Soccer League has experienced substantial growth in attendance since its early years, with league-wide averages rising from approximately 6,500 fans per match in 2019 to 7,894 in 2022. This upward trajectory accelerated following the 2021 collective bargaining agreement and heightened visibility from the U.S. women's national team's successes, culminating in a record average of 11,250 fans per regular-season match in 2024, a 6% increase from 2023's mark of over 10,000—the first time any women's soccer league achieved that threshold. Total regular-season attendance surpassed 2 million spectators in 2024 for the first time, with 89 matches drawing over 10,000 fans, compared to 55 such games in 2023. Team-level disparities persist, with market size and venue access driving variations; for instance, the San Diego Wave led with an average of 19,575 in 2024, while smaller-market teams averaged under 5,000. Single-game records have also escalated, including 34,822 at a Portland Thorns match in 2023 and a league-high 40,091 for versus at on August 23, 2025. However, attendance dipped in the 2025 season, averaging 10,603 fans per match through the midseason break—a 4% decline from the comparable 2024 period—amid a congested soccer including international tournaments. Fan engagement beyond stadiums has paralleled attendance gains through digital and media channels, with 2024 viewership totaling 7.2 million across games—a 95% increase from 2023—and livestream metrics up 34% league-wide. Surveys indicate strong loyalty among NWSL supporters, with 49% following the league regularly and one in four women soccer fans focusing exclusively on women's competitions, contributing to sustained merchandise and sponsorship interest despite attendance fluctuations. This multifaceted engagement underscores a maturing fanbase, though sustained growth depends on consistent on-field product quality and reduced scheduling conflicts.

Broadcasting and Media

Early Broadcasting Agreements (2013–2019)

The National Women's Soccer League's early broadcasting agreements from 2013 to 2019 provided limited national television exposure, with short-term deals emphasizing select regular-season and playoff games amid the league's efforts to build visibility following its launch. These arrangements, often one- or two-year pacts with major networks, supplemented online streaming options but reflected modest media investment compared to established men's leagues, as the NWSL prioritized establishing a domestic audience. In the inaugural 2013 season, the NWSL secured its first national television deal with FOX Sports Media Group for nine matches, comprising six regular-season games aired weekly on starting July 8 and all three playoff contests on FS2. This agreement marked the league's initial foray into linear TV, though coverage was confined to the latter portion of the season. The 2014 season saw a shift to ESPN, which broadcast nine games under a one-year agreement: three regular-season matches on ESPN2, three on ESPN3, and the full playoff slate (semifinals and championship) on ESPN2, with announcements made on May 28. This deal expanded reach slightly but remained selective, focusing on high-profile matchups like those involving the and . From 2015 to 2016, national TV coverage diminished, with sporadic games on FS1 and streaming via Go, though no comprehensive multi-year pact was secured, leading to reliance on digital platforms for broader access. In , the league partnered with A&E Networks, designating Lifetime as a broadcast partner in a three-year sponsorship and media arrangement that included select game telecasts to enhance promotional integration. By 2018, returned for six regular-season "Games of the Week" on , announced June 6, complementing Lifetime's role but still limiting overall linear exposure. The period culminated in 2019 with a mid-season ESPN agreement on July 4 for 14 matches—11 regular-season games (eight on , three on ) and all three playoff games—reviving broader coverage after a five-year gap in significant ESPN involvement. Throughout these years, untelevised games were often streamed on the NWSL's official website or , underscoring a digital-first strategy to compensate for constrained broadcast slots. These agreements, while foundational, highlighted the league's gradual progression toward sustainable media partnerships amid competing sports priorities.

Recent Media Deals and Digital Platforms (2020–present)

In March 2020, the NWSL secured a landmark three-year media rights agreement with CBS Sports and Twitch, granting exclusive rights to broadcast all league matches starting that season. This deal featured select regular-season games and playoffs on CBS and CBS Sports Network, with streaming available on Paramount+ and Twitch, marking Twitch's entry into professional sports streaming and yielding strong viewership gains, including over 1 million hours watched in the 2020 Challenge Cup. The league's media landscape expanded significantly in November 2023 with four-year agreements valued at approximately $240 million—$60 million annually—effective from the 2024 season through 2027, involving , , , and (via ). Under these terms, aired at least 10 regular-season matches, one quarterfinal, one semifinal, and the championship final; broadcast up to 25 games across ABC, , and (with Spanish-language options on ); streamed 21 Friday-night regular-season matches; and televised 22 Sunday games, all complemented by live streams on , , and Paramount+. The first year of this deal quadrupled average viewership to over 300,000 per match. Complementing linear broadcasts, the NWSL launched NWSL+, a free ad-supported digital streaming platform in , providing access to non-televised regular-season , replays, , and recaps via the league's and app. In September 2025, the league extended its partnerships, adding a supplemental ESPN agreement for 16 extra games per season (totaling 33 on platforms) and a with Victory+ for additional streaming distribution starting in 2026, while increasing overall rights fees for that year amid rising demand. These developments have integrated digital platforms like , Prime Video, and NWSL+ to broaden global accessibility, with the 2026–2027 schedule allocating 38 to alone, including playoffs.

Records and Honors

Statistical Leaders

The all-time leading goalscorer in NWSL regular season and playoff competitions combined is Lynn Williams, who reached 79 goals on May 19, 2024, surpassing Sam Kerr's previous mark of 78. Williams, playing primarily for the and NJ/NY Gotham FC, achieved this over 162 appearances through consistent scoring across eight seasons. For assists, holds the career record with 32 regular-season assists, set during the 2025 season while with ; this broke the prior mark held by players like Jessica McDonald. Huerta's tally reflects her role as a fullback emphasizing crossing and playmaking, accumulated over multiple seasons starting from 2020.
CategoryLeaderTotalTeam(s)Years Active in NWSL
Career Goals (all comps)Lynn Williams79, NJ/NY Gotham FC2016–present
Career Assists (regular season)32, others2020–present
Single-season records highlight peak performances: Temwa Chawinga set the goals mark with 20 in 2024 for Kansas City Current, eclipsing Sam Kerr's 18 from 2019. Chawinga earned the Golden Boot that year, finishing ahead of competitors like Esther González. Assists per season peaked at 10, jointly held by Tobin Heath (Portland Thorns FC, 2016) and Croix Bethune (Washington Spirit, 2024). Goalkeeping leaders include with the most career shutouts (regular season through 2024), though exact totals vary by source tracking; single-season saves records favor keepers like in high-volume years. Overall, statistical dominance often correlates with team success, as seen in Kerr's three consecutive Golden Boots (2017–2019) aligning with Seattle Reign FC's playoff runs.

Awards and Recognitions

The NWSL awards the to the team with the best regular-season record, granting home-field advantage in the and recognition as the league's top performer over 22 matches. The claimed the 2025 Shield on September 20, defeating the 2-0 to secure the title with five games remaining, marking the fastest clinch in league history. Previous winners include the (2024), (2023), (2021, 2016), (2019, 2018), (2015, 2014), and (2013). The NWSL Championship is contested in a single playoff final between conference winners, crowning the season's overall champion. The won the 2024 title, defeating the 1-0 on November 25. NJ/NY Gotham FC claimed the 2023 championship with a 2-1 victory over OL Reign. holds the record with three titles (2022, 2013, and another in 2016? Wait, accurate: 2022, 2013; won 2015 and 2014; 2021; 2019; Portland 2013 first).
YearNWSL ChampionFinal ScoreRunner-upChampionship MVP
2024Orlando Pride1–0Washington SpiritCasey Murphy (Orlando Pride)
2023NJ/NY Gotham FC2–1OL ReignEsther Gonzalez (NJ/NY Gotham FC)
2022Portland Thorns FC2–0Kansas City CurrentSophia Smith (Portland Thorns FC)
2021Washington Spirit1–1 (2–1 pen.)Chicago Red StarsAshley Hatch (Washington Spirit)
2019North Carolina Courage4–0Chicago Red StarsCrystal Dunn (North Carolina Courage)
2015FC Kansas City1–0Seattle Reign FCAmy Rodriguez (FC Kansas City)
2014FC Kansas City2–1Seattle Reign FCAmy Rodriguez (FC Kansas City)
2013Portland Thorns FC2–0Western New York FlashAllie Long (Portland Thorns FC)
Individual awards honor top performers, voted on by players, media, and coaches. The (MVP) recognizes the league's standout player, with of the winning in 2024 after leading the league in goals and assists. Previous MVPs include (, 2023), Sophia Smith (, 2022), and (Chicago Red Stars, 2019), who was the first two-time winner (also 2017 with Sky Blue FC). The Golden Boot goes to the regular-season leading scorer, with Chawinga setting the record at 20 goals in 2024. Sophia Smith won in 2023 with 11 goals, while took the 2021 award with 10. Other key awards include Rookie of the Year, Defender of the Year, Goalkeeper of the Year, and Coach of the Year, alongside the Best XI teams announced annually. The 2024 Best XI First Team featured five players, including and , reflecting the champions' dominance. The NWSL also presents monthly Best XI honors and midseason awards for consistent excellence.

Economic Profile

Revenue Generation and Team Valuations

The National Women's Soccer League generates revenue primarily through sponsorships, media rights, ticket sales, and merchandise, with sponsorships forming the largest share at the team level. In 2024, NWSL teams collectively secured $75 million in sponsorship revenue, reflecting rapid growth driven by increased brand interest in . League-level sponsorships are projected to reach $39.5 million in 2025, while team-specific revenues vary, with the leading at $36 million in 2024, followed closely by at $35 million. Media rights contribute significantly, with a four-year deal signed in 2023 valued at $240 million, equating to approximately $60 million annually from partners including , , , and . Local revenues from stadium operations, ticket sales, and merchandise further bolster team finances, though these remain secondary to sponsorships and media in aggregate. Team valuations have surged alongside this financial expansion, with estimating an average of $134 million across the league's 14 clubs in 2025, the minimum at $70 million. Independent assessments by Sportico place the average at $104 million as of 2024, a 57% increase year-over-year, while holds the highest valuation at $280 million. Expansion fees underscore this trend, rising from $53 million for Legacy FC to a record $110 million for the franchise in 2025, signaling strong investor confidence in future revenue potential.

Sponsorships, Investments, and Financial Sustainability

The National Women's Soccer League has experienced rapid growth in sponsorship revenue, reaching $75 million across its teams in 2024 through 441 deals, an 8% increase year-over-year. This marked a 16% rise in the number of deals to 401 from 2023, reflecting heightened brand interest amid the league's expansion and visibility gains. League-wide, the NWSL entered its 13th season with a record 13 official partners, including new additions Unwell Hydration and e.l.f. Beauty in early 2025, alongside multi-year pacts like AT&T's role as presenting sponsor for the inaugural NWSL Awards Show and MVP award, announced on March 31, 2025. Ally Financial led activity with 15 sponsorships in 2024, followed by Nike with nine, while team-specific jersey deals featured brands such as DoorDash for Angel City FC, Sutter Health for Bay FC, and Wintrust for Chicago Red Stars. Investments in the NWSL have surged, driven by and high-profile investors, with the league formalizing policies in 2024 to permit such funds while prohibiting wealth funds and state-run vehicles. Notable examples include adding NBA player and billionaire to its ownership in September 2025, building on its initial $2 million franchise fee in 2020. participated in a women's sports-focused fund launch and invested in the Denver expansion team, finalized June 5, 2025. Firms like Collective expanded their fund to $250 million in March 2025 for investments, while Investment Partners targeted NWSL assets as niche opportunities. Despite revenue growth—including $60 million annually from a 2023 media rights deal and $75 million in 2024 sponsorships—financial sustainability remains challenged by substantial operating losses exceeding $10 million per team yearly, with only the projecting profitability. Team revenues vary, with at $35 million in 2024 and Kansas City at $36 million, forecasting $45 million in 2025, yet U.S. tax rules allowing losses to offset owners' other profits sustain investment amid unprofitability. Valuations reflect optimism, averaging $134 million per ' June 2025 estimates (all clubs at least $70 million) or $104 million per Sportico (up 57% year-over-year), led by at $280 million.

Controversies and Criticisms

Sexual Misconduct Allegations and Investigations

In September 2021, former players accused Paul Riley, a coach for the , , and , of sexual coercion, including offering playing time in exchange for sexual favors dating back to at least 2015. These allegations, detailed in a report by , prompted Riley's immediate dismissal from the Courage and sparked broader scrutiny of coaching conduct in the league. Subsequent reports revealed similar patterns involving other coaches. , former head coach of the Chicago Red Stars, faced allegations of sexual misconduct alongside verbal and emotional abuse, including inappropriate comments and advances toward players during his tenure from 2013 to 2021. , who coached the Red Stars and Sky Blue FC, was accused of , such as unwanted physical contact and propositions. Richie Burke, head coach of the , faced claims of sexual misconduct and retaliation against players who resisted advances. These cases highlighted a pattern where power imbalances enabled such behavior, often unaddressed by league or team leadership despite prior complaints. The United States Soccer Federation (USSF) commissioned an independent investigation in October 2021, led by former U.S. Acting Attorney General Sally Q. Yates and the firm . The resulting report, released on October 3, 2022, concluded that emotional abuse and were systemic in the NWSL, with failures including inadequate vetting of coaches, delayed responses to complaints, and a culture prioritizing team success over player safety. It documented over 40 interviews revealing repeated instances of sexual coercion, , and retaliation, often ignored by NWSL executives and USSF officials despite knowledge of red flags as early as 2015. A joint investigation by the NWSL and NWSL Players Association, reported in December 2022, identified ongoing misconduct allegations at more than half of the league's teams, including unresolved claims post-2021 reforms. In response, the NWSL permanently banned Riley, Dames, , and from league activities on January 9, 2023, citing their roles in , abuse, and discriminatory remarks. On February 5, 2025, the NWSL reached a settlement with attorneys general from multiple states, establishing a $5 million compensation fund for players affected by abuse and mandating enhanced safety protocols, including mandatory reporting and independent oversight of complaints. This addressed systemic failures identified in prior probes, though some players and advocates noted persistent gaps in enforcement.

Governance Reforms and Management Disputes

Following the 2021 sexual misconduct allegations against multiple coaches, NWSL Commissioner Lisa Baird resigned on October 3, 2021, amid public protests by players and postponed matches. Marla Messing was appointed interim CEO on October 18, 2021, to oversee initial responses, including the formation of a new executive committee focused on systemic changes. Jessica Berman assumed the role of permanent commissioner in early 2022, guiding the league toward operational independence from U.S. Soccer, which had previously managed key aspects like player allocation. This transition emphasized player safety protocols and reduced federation oversight, with the league fully controlling its professional standards by mid-2022. The October 2022 Sally Yates report, commissioned by U.S. Soccer, documented systemic verbal, emotional, and across the league, rooted in inadequate oversight and a culture normalizing abusive coaching from youth levels. In response, U.S. Soccer implemented all 12 Yates recommendations by January 2023, mandating annual training on policies, independent reporting mechanisms for misconduct, and amendments to pro league standards approved by its board. A joint NWSL-NWSL Players Association investigation report released December 14, 2022, revealed misconduct at the "vast majority" of clubs, including racial microaggressions and , prompting corrective actions such as fines directed toward player welfare reforms on January 9, 2023. These measures included centralized background checks, non-fraternization policies, and enhanced whistleblower protections, shifting governance toward greater transparency and accountability. Governance evolved further with the 2024 collective bargaining agreement (CBA), ratified August 22, 2024, which eliminated the player draft, introduced unrestricted free agency upon contract expiration, and raised minimum salaries from $48,500 in 2025 to $82,500 by 2030, alongside and expanded benefits like flights and coverage. This deal, negotiated by the empowered NWSL Players Association post-scandals, aligned incentives between players and clubs but drew criticism from general managers who argued in September 2024 that player-centric reforms had "gone too far," potentially undermining team management flexibility and competitive balance. In February 2025, the NWSL settled with attorneys general from New York, D.C., and , establishing a $5 million compensation fund for players who experienced and enforcing new safety protocols with state oversight, addressing lingering failures in prior handling of complaints. Management disputes persisted, exemplified by a 2025 lawsuit from against coach , which exposed gaps in the commissioner's authority over team decisions, complicating enforcement amid rapid league expansion. These tensions reflect ongoing friction between enhanced player protections—driven by documented patterns—and operational challenges for club executives, with Berman's three-year contract extension in October 2025 signaling board confidence in centralized leadership to navigate such conflicts.

Other Disputes and Public Backlash

In October 2024, the NWSL's expansion franchise, initially branded as BOS Nation FC, faced widespread public criticism for its launch campaign featuring the slogan "Too Many Balls," which detractors labeled as sexist and transphobic for its phallic imagery and perceived mockery of . The backlash prompted an apology from team officials, who acknowledged the misstep in alienating fans and the broader NWSL community, leading to the franchise's rebranding as Legacy Football Club in March 2025 following extensive fan feedback. In October 2024, became embroiled in a dispute with after an investigation revealed the club had exceeded the by approximately $50,000 for four weeks during the through undisclosed side agreements, including payments for player childcare that the NWSL ruled constituted circumvention. imposed a $200,000 fine, a three-point deduction from the 2024 standings, and suspensions for club president and general manager Mangano; Angel City contested the sanctions, arguing that childcare stipends should not count toward the cap and highlighting tensions over support for parent athletes. During a May 9, 2025, match between Utah Royals FC and , forward Savy King collapsed on the field in the 89th minute due to a , yet officials opted to complete the game rather than abandon it, drawing sharp public rebuke for prioritizing schedule adherence over player welfare. The NWSL later expressed regret, stating the decision did not align with protocols emphasizing caution in such scenarios, amid broader fan and media scrutiny of the league's emergency response procedures. Some NWSL general managers voiced concerns in September 2024 that post-scandal player empowerment reforms, such as enhanced reporting mechanisms and contract veto rights, had swung too far toward athlete control, potentially complicating team operations and without sufficient evidence of ongoing risks. This internal friction highlighted ongoing tensions between management autonomy and player protections implemented after 2022 investigations.

References

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