| Full name | Juventus Football ClubS.p.A.[1] | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nicknames | [Le] Bianconere (The Black and Whites) Juventus Femminile (Female Juventus) | |||
| Short name | Juve Women | |||
| Founded | 1 July 2017; 8 years ago (2017-07-01) | |||
| Ground | Stadio La Marmora-Pozzo | |||
| Capacity | 5,827 | |||
| Owner | ||||
| Chairman | Gianluca Ferrero | |||
| Head coach | Massimiliano Canzi | |||
| League | Serie A | |||
| 2024–25 | Serie A, 1st of 10 (champions) | |||
| Website | juventus.com/women | |||
| Active teams of Juventus F.C. |
|---|
Juventus Football Club (fromLatin:iuventūs, 'youth';Italian pronunciation:[juˈvɛntus]), known forcommercial purposes asJuventus Women or simplyJuve Women ([ˈjuːveˈwiːmen]), is awomen's football club based inTurin, Piedmont, Italy. It was established in 2017 as the women's section of thehomonymous club, following an acquisition ofCuneo's sporting licence.
The team competes inSerie A, the top flight in national football, since its debut in the2017–18 season. They have won six league titles, fourCoppa Italia titles, fourSupercoppa Italiana titles, and oneSerie A Women's Cup title, becoming one of the country's most successful teams. In2020–21, they became the first Italian club (women's or men's) to accomplish aperfect season, having won all their league matches. In2021–22, Juventus became the first team to win five consecutive league titles, and they accomplished their firstdomestic treble.[2]
In May 2017,Juventus' general managerGiuseppe Marotta announced that the club was planning to form a women's team.[3] The women's section of Juventus was officially formed on 1 July 2017.[4] Despite there being other women's football clubs inTurin in the past which had adopted the name "Juventus" and the black and white colours, such as the 1978-foundedJuventus Torino [it]; these have never had any connection with the men's club.[4][5]
Colloquially known as Juventus Women,[6] the team was formed after theItalian Football Federation (FIGC) allowed professional men's clubs to purchase amateur women's clubs. Already active in women's youth football since 2015,[7] Juventus acquired the sporting license ofSerie A clubCuneo,[8] which in the meantime had dissolved,[6] allowing the newly-formed team to directly compete in the Italian top division.[9] Several players were signed from neighbouringBrescia, Italian champions in two of the previous four seasons and runners-up in the others.[10]

During the tenure ofRita Guarino,[11] Juventus quickly emerged as a dominating force in Italy, winning four consecutive league titles in their first four years of activity.[12] Juventus' first game was on 27 August 2017, in a 13–0 away victory overTorino in the first leg of the first round of the2017–18 Coppa Italia [it];Martina Rosucci scored the club's first-ever goal.[13] In the2017–18 Serie A, the club was tied withBrescia for first place at 60 points.[14] The two sides played a single-legged play-off match where, following a goalless draw after 120 minutes, Juventus beat Brescia 5–4 in apenalty shoot-out.[14]
In2018–19, by having won the previous season's league title, they qualified for theUEFA Champions League; they lost 3–2 on aggregate toBrøndby in the round of 32.[15]That season [it], Juventus achieved thedomestic double, winning their second Serie A title and firstCoppa Italia.[16] In2019–20, Juventus won both theSupercoppa Italiana, their first title,[17] and their third consecutive league title.[a][12] In only two years, the team won all the trophies of Italian women's football.[17]
In the2020–21 season, Juventus won their secondSupercoppa Italiana,[20] and theirfourth-consecutive league title, becoming only the second club to achieve this streak afterTorres in 2013.[21] They finished the season winning all 22 league matches, becoming the first team in the Italian women's top flight to accomplish aperfect season.[22]

After four seasons at the club, Guarino left Juventus.[23] She was replaced by formerMelbourne City andArsenal coachJoe Montemurro ahead of the2021–22 season.[24] Juventus won their fifth-consecutive league title, establishing a record streak in Italian women's football.[2] They also finished among the best eight teams in Europe, reaching the quarterfinals of the2021–22 Champions League.[25] Having also won the Coppa Italia and Supercoppa Italiana that season, their second and third respectively, Juventus achieved their firstdomestic treble.[26]
In the 2022–23 season, Juventus lost the2022 Supercoppa Italiana toRoma in thepenalty shoot-out.[27] Roma also ended their run of five consecutive league titles.[28] Their sole seasonal trophy was the Coppa Italia, after defeating Roma 1–0 thanks toBarbara Bonansea's stoppage-time goal.[29]
Juventus started the 2023–24 season with the early elimination from the Champions League at the hands ofEintracht Frankfurt after penalty shoot-outs in the first qualifying round in September.[30] After a 1–0 defeat to Fiorentina in the first leg of the Coppa Italia semi-finals and a nine-point gap from league leaders Roma, Juventus announced Montemurro's dismissal with immediate effect on 6 March 2024.[31] During Montemurro's tenure, Juventus won one league title, two Coppa Italia titles, and two Supercoppa Italiana titles.[31][32] He was replaced for the rest of the season by his assistant coach,Giuseppe Zappella,[31] who brought Juventus to second place in the league behind Roma, who won their second league title in a row.[33]
On 22 May 2024, Juventus announced thatMassimiliano Canzi had agreed to become Juventus' coach on a two-year contract.[34] In their first season under Canzi, Juventus immediately achieved the domestic double: they won thescudetto after a three-year hiatus, and they won the Coppa Italia by defeating Roma 4–0.[35] Juventus opened the 2025–26 season by winning the first edition of theSerie A Women's Cup after beating again theGiallorosse 3–2 on 27 September 2025.[36]
| Season | League | Coppa Italia[37] | Supercoppa Italiana[38] | Serie A Women's Cup[39] | UEFA Champions League[40] | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tier | Division | Position[41] | |||||
| 2017–18 [it] | 1 | Serie A | Champions | Quarter-finals | N/A | Not played | N/A |
| 2018–19 [it] | Champions | Champions | Final | Round of 32 | |||
| 2019–20 | Champions | Not concluded | Champions | Round of 32 | |||
| 2020–21 | Champions | Semi-finals | Champions | Round of 32 | |||
| 2021–22 | Champions | Champions | Champions | Quarter-finals | |||
| 2022–23 [it] | Runners-up | Champions | Final | Group stage | |||
| 2023–24 [it] | Runners-up | Semi-finals | Champions | First round[b] | |||
| 2024–25 [it] | Champions | Champions | N/A | Group stage | |||
| 2025–26 [it] | Champions | ||||||

Until 2023, Juventus' home ground was the 498-capacity Campo Ale & Ricky ("Ale & Ricky Field"), situated inside theJuventus Training Center inVinovo.[42][43] Thereafter, Juventus have been playing at theStadio La Marmora-Pozzo [it] in Biella.[44]
For their UEFA Women's Champions League matches (excluding qualifying rounds), Juventus have been using the men's team'sJuventus Stadium in Turin since 2020.[45] Juventus played their home matches of the 2018–19 and 2019–20 Champions League seasons respectively at theStadio Silvio Piola inNovara, and at theStadio Giuseppe Moccagatta inAlessandria.[c][47][48]
On 24 March 2019, Juventus played an important match againstFiorentina at the Juventus Stadium, in which tickets were free;[49] Juventus won 1–0, and the match was attended by 39,000 people, a record number of spectators in a women's football match in Italy.[50]
During their first season in 2017–18, Juventus trained at theSisport center in Turin.[42] Starting from 2018, Juventus has been training at the Juventus Training Center.[51]
In July 2015, Juventus formed their under-12 team following a partnership with Turin-based club San Bernando Luserno,[52] after FIGC decided that every Serie A club had to have a women's team.[53] By 2022, Juventus had already had seven youth teams (from U9 to U19 level).[53] In November 2022, Juventus Women's Team Director Stefano Braghin announced a collaboration withBari-based clubPink Bari's youth set-up.[54]
The under-19 team has won theWomen's Torneo di Viareggio thrice (in 2019, 2020 and 2025)[55][56][57] and reached (and lost) five league championship finals in six years (2018,[58] 2020,[59] 2021,[60] 2022[61] and 2023[62]),[d] with the addition of a third place in 2019, after defeating Pink Bari 4–2 in the third-place playoff.[63] They ultimately won the championship in 2025 after defeating rivalsInter Milan 2–0 in the final.[64]
The under-17 team has reached two league championship finals, they won in 2019[65] and lost in both 2022[66] and 2024.[67] The under-15s have won twoscudetti (in 2019[68] and 2022).[69] Juventus U12 have won twice the national phase of theDanone Nations Cup, a prestigious international competition among under-12 teams, in 2017 and 2022.[70][71]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Below is a list of Juventus Women coaches from 2017 until the present day.[73]
| Name | Nationality | Years |
|---|---|---|
| Rita Guarino | 2017–2021 | |
| Joe Montemurro | 2021–2024 | |
| Giuseppe Zappella | 2024 | |
| Paolo Beruatto | 2024 | |
| Massimiliano Canzi | 2024– |
Below is a list of Juventus Women trophies from 2017 until the present day.[74]
Juventus holds the record for consecutive Serie A victories (5), between 2018 and 2023,[75] and the mostscudetti in the three-point era (6),ex aequo withTorres.[76] In the 2021–22 season, Juventus became the first-ever Italian team in both men's and women's football to accomplish aperfect season with 22 league wins out of 22.[77] In addition, Juventus became the team to score the most league points (66), the most seasonal goals (75) and the best goal-difference (+65) in a single 12-team league.[78]
From 16 February 2020 to 16 January 2022, Juventus achieved the longest series of league matches won consecutively (36).[79] Furthermore, Juventus went unbeaten for 54 Serie A matches in–a–row, from 14 April 2019 to 27 February 2022.[80] From 2 January 2020 to 16 December 2023, Juventus always scored at least one goal for 82 consecutive league matches.[81]

Ahead of the2019 FIFA Women's World Cup, Italy coachMilena Bertolini called up eight Juventus players—including captain Sara Gama. Six of them were regularly fielded as starters. Italy reached the quarter-finals, their best-ever result in the competition.[82]
The 2022 Algarve Cup Final saw nine Juventus players being fielded. Seven were Italy's, namely Bonansea, Caruso,Cernoia, Gama,Girelli,Lenzini and Rosucci, while twoSweden's, namelyLina Hurtig andAmanda Nildén.[83]
Ahead of theUEFA Women's Euro 2025, where Italy would reach the semifinals, Italy's coachAndrea Soncin called up eightBianconere players: Boattini, Lenzini,Salvai,Schatzer,Bergamaschi, Bonansea,Cantore and Girelli.[84]
The following Juventus players have been inducted into theItalian Hall of Fame.
| Ind. | Name | Nationality | Pos. | Years | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | Sara Gama | DF | 2017–2025 | [85] | |
| 2021 | Barbara Bonansea | FW | 2017–pres. | [85] | |
| 2022 | Cristiana Girelli | FW | 2018–pres. | [85] |