In its present form, the Championship traces its legacy to the originalFootball League Second Division, which became theFirst Division in 1992 when the top flight of English football wasreorganised as the Premier League. The current competition was intended for the2004–05 season as theFootball League Championship as a rebrand of the First Division. The winningclub of this division each season receives the EFL Championship trophy, which was the previous trophy awarded tothe winners of the English top-flight prior to the launch of the Premier League. As with other divisions of professional English football, Welsh clubs can be part of this division, thus making it a cross-border league.
Each season, the two top-finishing teams in the Championship are automaticallypromoted to the Premier League. The teams that finish the season in third to sixth place enter aplay-off tournament, with the winner also gaining promotion to the Premier League. The three lowest-finishing teams in the Championship are relegated toLeague One.
The Championship is the wealthiest non-top-flightfootball division in the world, the ninth-richest division inEurope,[2] and the 12th best-attended division in world football (with the second highest per-match attendance of any secondary league – after the German2. Bundesliga).[3] Its average match attendance for the2022–23 season was 18,787.[4]
Cardiff City have spent more seasons in this division than any other team, andBristol City,Preston North End andQueens Park Rangers currently hold the longest tenure in this division, having last been absent in the2014–15 season.Barnsley became the first club to attain 1,000 wins in second-tier English league football with a 2–1 home victory overCoventry City on 3 January 2011. They also became the first club to play 3,000 games in second-level English league football following another 2–1 home victory, this time againstBrighton & Hove Albion on 12 March 2013[5] The current champions of the league areLeeds United.
Sunderland won their second Championship title in the2006–07 season, after being relegated from the top division the previous season. On 4 May 2007,Leeds United became the first side since the re-branding of the division to enteradministration; they were deducted 10 points and were relegated as a result.[10][11] On 28 May 2007,Derby County won the first Championship play-off final at the newWembley Stadium, beatingWest Bromwich Albion 1–0.[12] West Brom would go on to win the Championship in the following season.
On 30 September 2009,Coca-Cola announced they would end their sponsorship deal with the Football League, which began in 2004, at the end of the2009–10 season.[14] On 16 March 2010,npower were announced as the new title sponsors of the Football League, and from the start of the 2010–11 Football League season until the end of the 2012–13 season, the Football League Championship was known as theNpower Championship.[15]Crystal Palace became the second Championship club to enter administration in 2010.[16]
After winning the2011 League Cup final,Birmingham City became the first Championship club to compete in the group stage of theUEFA Cup/Europa League, finishing third in the group, only one point behind Portuguese clubBraga. Birmingham City eventually finished fourth in the Championship that season, and would lose to fifth-placeBlackpool in the play-off.Wigan Athletic became the second club to participate in the Europa League group stage after winning the 2013 FA Cup, only to accumulate one win and lose their last three group matches.[17]
On 18 July 2013, UK bookmakerSky Bet announced that they had signed a five-year agreement to sponsor the league.[18]
On 24 May 2014, the Championship play-off final between Derby County andQueens Park Rangers saw the highest crowd for any Championship fixture – 87,348 witnessed aBobby Zamora stoppage time winner for QPR to win promotion for the London club.[19]
For the2016–17 season, the Football League was rebranded as the English Football League. The league had a cumulative attendance of more than 11 million – excluding play-off matches – with more than two million watchingNewcastle United andAston Villa home fixtures alone, both of whom had been relegated from the Premier League in the previous season. This was included in the highest crowds for the second to fourth tier in England since the1958–59 season.[20] Newcastle won the title in 2016–17, while Aston Villa finished 13th, eventually returning to the Premier League in 2019.[21]
On 13 March 2020, Championship play was halted due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, with a suspension lasting until 4 April. It was then extended to the end of April, with the league eventually restarting on 20 June.Leeds United were confirmed as champions on 17 July 2020, being promoted to the Premier League for the first time in 16 years.[22]
Brentford, having been inLeague Two in 2009 and gaining promotion to the Championship five years later, were promoted following a play-off victory againstSwansea City on 29 May 2021, after losing the play-off toFulham the previous year.[23] On 29 May 2022,Nottingham Forest, having been in the Championship for 14 consecutive seasons, ended their 23-year absence from the top flight by beatingHuddersfield Town in the play-off final, after being last in the league as late as round 8 of the 2021–22 season.[24]
The EFL Championship took a unique four-week break in November and December 2022 to allow for players to join theirnational teams at the2022 FIFA World Cup held inQatar.[25]
The league comprises 24 teams. Over the course of a season, which runs annually from August to the following May (in 2022, the year of a World Cup break in November and December, the league started in July), each team plays twice against the others in the league, once at 'home' and once 'away', resulting in each team competing in 46 games in total.Three points are awarded for a win, one for adraw, and zero for a loss. The teams are ranked in the league table by points gained, thengoal difference, then goals scored, and then their head-to-head record for that season (including away goals record). If two or more teams finish the season equal in all these respects, then teams are separated by alphabetical order, unless a promotion, relegation, or play-off place (see below) is at stake, when the teams are separated by a play-off game, though this improbable situation has never arisen in all the years the rule has existed.[26]
At the end of the season, the top two teams and the winner of theChampionship play-offs are promoted to thePremier League and the bottom three teams are relegated toEFL League One. The Football League Championship play-offs is a knock-out competition for the teams finishing the season in third to sixth place with the winner being promoted to the Premier League. In the play-offs, the third-placed team plays against the sixth-placed team and the fourth-placed team plays against the fifth-placed team in two-legged semi-finals (home and away). The winners of each semi-final then compete in a single match atWembley Stadium with the prize being promotion to the Premier League and the Championship play-off trophy.
There are 106 teams that have taken part in 122 English second tier seasons (including theFootball League Second Division, theFootball League First Division, and the EFL Championship) that were played from the1892–93 season until the2025–26 season. The teams in bold compete in the EFL Championship currently, while the teams in italics have never competed in the EFL Championship. The year in parentheses represents the most recent year of participation at this level.
There are 58 teams that have taken part in 22 English second tier seasons that were played from the2004–05 season until the2025–26 season. The teams in bold compete in the EFL Championship currently. The year in parentheses represents the most recent year of participation at this level.
1 When Norwich City gained promotion to the Premier League they were the first team to be relegated to, relegated from, promoted to and promoted from the Championship. 2 When Burnley were promoted with 100 points they set a record for the most points for a second-placed team; beating the previous record of 96 points by Ipswich Town.
The EFL Championship is the secondmost-watched second-tier domestic sports league in the World, behind the German2. Bundesliga (29,081), with an average of 23,048 spectators per game in the 2023–24 season. The Championship is the fifth most watched league in Europe.[28]
The highest average league attendance was in 2023–24 season, when 12.7 million fans attended Championship matches, at an average of 23,048 per game.[29] The lowest average league attendance came in the 2013–14 season, when 9.1 million spectators watched at an average of 16,605 per game.[30] The highest seasonal average for a club was 51,106 forNewcastle United in the 2016–17 season.[31]
Since the restructuring into the Championship in 2004, 57 teams have spent at least one season in the division, including 13 of the 20 teams in the2025–26 Premier League.Cardiff City have spent the longest in the league with 19 seasons. The 15-season spell forIpswich Town between 2004 and 2019 is the longest consecutive spell of any team in the division. The teams with the current longest tenure areBristol City,Preston North End andQueens Park Rangers, who will each have their eleventh consecutive season as a Championship team in the2025–26 season.Norwich City has had six separate spells in the Championship; the most of any team. There have been 13 different winners of the EFL Championship, with eight teams (Burnley,Leeds United,Leicester City,Newcastle United, Norwich City,Reading,Sunderland andWolverhampton Wanderers) having won it twice.
Burnley and Norwich City have been promoted out of the Championship on four occasions, with five teams (Fulham,Hull City, Sheffield United,Watford,West Brom) having been promoted on three occasions.Rotherham United have been relegated from the Championship the most times on five occasions, withWigan Athletic having been relegated the second-most times on four occasions and two teams (Barnsley andCharlton Athletic) having been relegated on three occasions. 14 teams have been both promoted out of and relegated from the Championship.
Key
† Teams with this background and symbol in the "Club" column will be competing in the2025–26 EFL Championship
^"Barnsley 2–1 Brighton".BBC Sport. 12 March 2013.Archived from the original on 22 November 2018. Retrieved11 August 2017.Barnsley became the first team to play 3,000 games in second level league football.
^"Countdown underway to new season".BBC Sport. 6 August 2005.Archived from the original on 24 August 2007. Retrieved2 May 2010.Attendances rose by 10% to 9.8 million in 2004/05; it is the fourth best attended division in Europe; 9 clubs had something to play for on the final day of the last campaign (2004–05).