Results

Date R Kodus vs Võõrsil -
04/15 16:00 22 [1] Roma - naised vs Juventus - naised [2] 2-1
04/14 13:00 22 [6] AC Milan - naised vs Napoli - naised [9] 3-2
04/14 10:30 22 [10] ASD Pomigliano - naised vs Como - naised [7] 1-2
04/13 13:00 22 [4] Sassuolo - naised vs Inter Milan - naised [5] 2-1
03/30 17:00 21 [7] Como - naised vs AC Milan - naised [6] 1-4
03/30 13:00 21 [2] Juventus - naised vs Fiorentina - naised [3] 4-0
03/30 11:30 21 [9] Napoli - naised vs Sampdoria - naised [8] 2-0
03/29 17:30 21 [5] Inter Milan - naised vs Roma - naised [1] 1-2
03/24 14:00 20 [3] Fiorentina - naised vs Inter Milan - naised [5] 0-3
03/24 11:30 20 [6] AC Milan - naised vs ASD Pomigliano - naised [10] 4-0
03/23 14:00 20 [1] Roma - naised vs Sassuolo - naised [4] 3-0
03/23 11:30 20 [8] Sampdoria - naised vs Como - naised [7] 1-0

The Serie A (Italian pronunciation: [ˈsɛːrje ˈa]), also called Serie A Femminile TIM due to sponsorship by TIM, is the highest league of women's football in Italy. Established in 1968, it has been run by the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) since the 2018–19 season, and currently features 10 teams.

The most successful club in the league’s history is Torres, who have won seven times. The current Serie A champions are Roma, who won the title for the first time at the 2022–23 edition ending a five-year series from Juventus who won each of the last five years before. As of the 2022–23 edition, the Serie A is ranked fifth in the UEFA women's coefficient, and the top two teams qualify for the UEFA Women's Champions League.

The Serie A became fully-professional from the 2022–23 season, removing the salary cap and allowing teams to pay their players a higher wage. Women's footballers became the first female athletes in Italy to be fully professional. The number of teams also decreased from 12 to 10.

History

The first Italian Championship league was founded in 1968. 1986 the Italian Football Federation took over the running of Serie A. Serie A became fully-professional from the 2022–23 season onwards, removing the salary cap and allowing teams to pay their players a higher wage