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FIFA Women's World Ranking

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(Redirected fromFIFA Women's World Rankings)
Global sports team ranking list
This article is about the women's rankings. For the men's rankings, seeFIFA Men's World Ranking.

Top 20 rankings as of 7 August 2025[1]
RankChangeTeamPoints
1Increase 1 Spain2066.79
2Decrease 1 United States2065.06
3Increase 3 Sweden2025.26
4Increase 1 England2022.64
5Decrease 2 Germany2011.56
6Increase 4 France1988.68
7Decrease 3 Brazil1976.3
8Decrease 1 Japan1971.05
9Decrease 1 Canada1967.83
10Increase 1 North Korea1944.22
11Steady Netherlands1899.18
12Increase 1 Italy1884.32
13Increase 3 Norway1861.98
14Decrease 2 Denmark1848.31
15Steady Australia1835.34
16Increase 1 China1807.34
17Decrease 3 Iceland1804.32
18Steady Colombia1796.71
19Steady Austria1794.41
20Steady Belgium1788.87
*Change from 12 June 2025
*Next change on 11 December 2025
Complete rankings at FIFA.com

TheFIFA Women's World Ranking is a ranking system for women's national teams inassociation football (commonly known as football or soccer) published by the international governing bodyFIFA. As of August 2025, theSpain national team is ranked number one.

The rankings were introduced in 2003,[2] with the first rankings published on 16 July of that year.[3][4] FIFA attempts to assess the strength ofinternationally active women's national teams at any given time based on their past game results with the most successful teams being ranked highest. As of July 2025[update], the ranking has 196 national teams.

The ranking has more than informative value, as it is often used to seed member associations into different pots in international tournaments.

Specifics of the ranking system

[edit]
  • FIFA Women's World Rankings are based on every international match a team ever played, dating back to 1971, the first FIFA-recognized women's international betweenFrance and theNetherlands.
  • FIFA Women's World Rankings are implicitly weighted to emphasize recent results.
  • FIFA Women's World Rankings are only published four times a year. Normally, rankings are released in March, June, September and December. (InWorld Cup years, dates may be adjusted to reflect the World Cup results.)

The first two points result from the FIFA Women's World Rankings system being based on theElo rating system adjusted for football; in 2018, FIFA modified the men's ranking system to similarly be based on Elo systems after continued criticism. FIFA considers the ratings for teams with fewer than 5 matches provisional and at the end of the list. In addition, any team that plays no matches for 4 years becomes unranked; this inactivity limit was previously 18 months, but was extended in early 2021 (after the COVID-19 pandemic stifled a significant amount of international play).

Ranking calculations

[edit]

The rankings are based on the following formulae:[2]

Raft=Rbef+K(SactSexp){\displaystyle R_{aft}=R_{bef}+K(S_{act}-S_{exp})}
Sexp=11+10x/2{\displaystyle S_{exp}={\frac {1}{1+10^{-x/2}}}}
x=RbefObef±Hc{\displaystyle x={\frac {R_{bef}-O_{bef}\pm H}{c}}}

Where

Raft{\displaystyle R_{aft}}= The team rating after the match
Rbef{\displaystyle R_{bef}}= The team rating before the match
K{\displaystyle K}=15M{\displaystyle 15M}, the weighted importance of the match
Sact{\displaystyle S_{act}}= The actual result of the match,see below
Sexp{\displaystyle S_{exp}}= The expected result of the match
x{\displaystyle x}= The scaled difference in rating points between the teams
Obef{\displaystyle O_{bef}}= The opposing team's rating before the match
H{\displaystyle H}= The "home advantage" correction,see below
c{\displaystyle c}= A scaling factor,see below
M{\displaystyle M}= The "Match Importance Factor",see below

The average points of all teams are about 1300 points. The top nations usually exceed 2000 points. In order to be ranked, a team must have played at least more than 5 matches against officially ranked teams, and have not been inactive for the last 48 months up to the date the rankings are published. Even if teams are not officially ranked, their points rating is kept constant until they play their next match.

Actual result of the match

[edit]

The main component of the actual result is whether the team wins, loses, or draws, but goal difference is also taken into account.

If the match results in a winner and loser, the loser is awarded a percentage given by the accompanying table, with the result always less than or equal to 20% (for goal differences greater than zero). The result is based on the goal difference and the number of goals they scored. The remaining percentage points are awarded to the winner. For example, a 2–1 match has the result awarded 84%–16% respectively, a 4–3 match has the result awarded 82%–18%, and an 5–3 match has the result awarded 96.2%–3.8%. As such, it is possible for a team to lose points even if they win a match, assuming they did not "win by enough".

If the match ends in a draw the teams are awarded the same result, but the number depends on the goals scored so the results will not necessarily add up to 100%. For example, a 0–0 draw earns both teams 47% each, a 1–1 draw earns 50% each, and a 4–4 draw earns 52.5% each.[2]

Goal Difference
0123456 /+
Goals scored
by non winning team
Actual result (percentage)
047.0 / 47.085.0 / 15.092.0 / 8.096.0 / 4.097.0 / 3.098.0 / 2.099.0 / 1.0
150.0 / 50.084.0 / 16.091.1 / 8.995.2 / 4.896.3 / 3.797.4 / 2.698.5 / 1.5
251.0 / 51.083.0 / 17.090.2 / 9.894.4 / 5.695.6 / 4.496.8 / 3.298.0 / 2.0
352.0 / 52.082.0 / 18.089.3 / 10.793.6 / 6.494.9 / 5.196.2 / 3.897.5 / 2.5
452.5 / 52.581.0 / 19.088.4 / 11.692.8 / 7.294.2 / 5.895.6 / 4.497.0 / 3.0
553.0 / 53.080.0 / 20.087.5 / 12.592.0 / 8.093.5 / 6.595.0 / 5.096.5 / 3.5

Source:[2]

Neutral ground or home field advantage

[edit]

Historically, home teams earn 66% of the points available to them, with away teams earning the other 34%. To account for this, when two teams are not playing on neutral ground, the home team has itsRbef{\displaystyle R_{bef}} inflated by 100 points for the purposes of calculation. That is, if two equally ranked teams playing at one team's home ground, the home team would be expected to win at the same rate a team playing on neutral ground with a 100-point advantage. This 100 point difference corresponds to a 64%–36% advantage in terms of expected result. The scaling factor remains the same (c=200).[2]

Importance of the match

[edit]
Match importanceMatch importance
factor (M)
K-value
FIFA Women's World Cup match460
Women's Olympic football tournament460
FIFA Women's World Cup qualifier345
Women's Olympic football qualifier345
Women's Continental finals match345
Women's Continental qualifier230
Women's friendly match between two Top 10 teams230
Women's friendly match115

Ranking schedule

[edit]

Rankings are generally published four times a year. The next update is scheduled for 11 December 2025.[5]

Leaders

[edit]
FIFA Women's
World Ranking leaders

As of the 7 August 2025 rankings release,Spain is the number one ranked team.

TheUnited States holds the record for the longest consecutive period leading the rankings of nearly 7 years, from March 2008 to December 2014.

Before the2023 World Cup, theUnited States andGermany had been the only two teams to lead the women's rankings, and these two teams also had held the top two spots in all but six releases, when Germany was ranked third (onlyNorway,Brazil,England and Sweden had reached second during this time).

No.TeamConfederationDays at No. 1
1 United StatesCONCACAF6,070 days
2 GermanyUEFA1,701 days
3 SpainUEFA359 days[note 1]
4 SwedenUEFA112 days
  1. ^Current leader as of 28 November 2025.

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^"The FIFA/Coca-Cola Women's World Ranking".FIFA. 7 August 2025. Retrieved7 August 2025.
  2. ^abcde"Fact Sheet, FIFA Women's World Ranking"(PDF).FIFA. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 11 April 2012. Retrieved8 June 2015.
  3. ^"FIFA launches Women's World Ranking".FIFA.com.Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 16 July 2003. Archived fromthe original on 8 June 2019. Retrieved6 February 2020.
  4. ^"U.S. tops first women's world soccer rankings".The Honolulu Advertiser. Associated Press. 17 July 2003. p. D5. Retrieved6 July 2019 – via Newspapers.com.Free access icon
  5. ^"Latest Women's World Ranking".Fifa.com. 21 January 2025. Retrieved21 January 2025.

External links

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