Home Champions League all-time winners: The most successful clubs in history

Champions League all-time winners: The most successful clubs in history

A complete list of Champions League all-time winners, ranked by clubs and countries. Stats accurate before the 2025/26 season.

The Champions League has crowned Europe’s finest clubs for decades, with Real Madrid standing as the record holder with 15 titles. Its history is filled with thrilling finals and unforgettable moments that shaped the tournament.

From its inception in 1955, clubs from multiple countries have battled for glory on the biggest stage. Each season brings new stories of triumph, heartbreak, and legendary performances that define European soccer.

Year by year, champions have left their mark on the competition, creating legacies that inspire fans around the world. The journey through the most successful clubs reveals not just winners, but the evolution of the game itself.

Clubs with the most Champions League titles

Real Madrid — 15 titles
The benchmark for everything the competition measures: history, clutch moments and trophy-room gravitas. Their European success stretches from the competition’s first decade to the modern game, capped by a record-extending triumph in 2024 that underlined Madrid’s habit of arriving when it matters most.

Daniel Carvajal of Real Madrid kisses the UEFA Champions League Trophy in 2024. (Source: Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)

AC Milan — 7 titles
Milan’s honours speak of two golden ages: the pragmatic winners of the 1960s and the tactically ruthless Rossoneri of the late 1980s–early 1990s. Seven European Cups place them second on the all-time list and mark Italy’s enduring influence on continental finals.

Bayern Munich — 6 titles
A soccer institution that married domestic dominance with continental ruthlessness. Bayern’s three-in-a-row in the 1970s and later triumphs — across generations — show a club that repeatedly rebuilds to fit European standards.

Liverpool — 6 titles
The Reds combine working-class myth and dramatic theatre: the Kop’s greatest nights — from the 1970s/80s runs to the comeback in Istanbul (2005) and the modern-era win in 2019 — cement Liverpool as one of Europe’s iconic winners.

Barcelona — 5 titles
Five finals won across two distinct identities: the Cruyff-influenced era that modernised the club and the Guardiola-Luis Enrique period that turned a philosophy into trophies. Barca’s continental haul is as much about style as silverware.

Ajax — 4 titles
Ajax’s European story is a lesson in youth, invention and continuity: three straight titles in the early 1970s and a renaissance in 1995 illustrate a club that exports ideas to the rest of the continent.

Manchester United — 3 titles
United’s continental peaks are bracketed by historic moments — 1968 (first English winner), the treble of 1999 and the 2008 final — a club that has translated domestic power into decisive European nights.

Inter Milan — 3 titles
Inter’s European identity blends mid-century success with the tactical mastery of recent times; their 2010 triumph completed a rare treble and refreshed the club’s continental credentials for a new generation.

Juventus — 2 titles
Two European crowns and a string of final appearances: Juve’s record is one of near-misses as much as glory, a heavyweight of the continent that has repeatedly pushed to the edge of history.

Benfica — 2 titles
Back-to-back champions in the early 1960s, Benfica’s name is woven into the competition’s formative mythology — a reminder that some legacies begin fast and echo for decades.

Countries with the most Champions League titles

The UEFA Champions League has been a stage where nations have showcased their soccer prowess. Spanish clubs lead the way with a total of 20 titles, thanks to Real Madrid’s 15 and Barcelona’s 5. This dominance underscores their significant contribution.

A detailed view of the UEFA Champions League trophy in 2024. (Source: Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)

Italy follows with 12 titles, with AC Milan’s 7 and Inter Milan’s 3 being pivotal to their national tally. German clubs have secured 8 titles, led by Bayern Munich’s 6, highlighting Germany’s consistent competitiveness in European competitions.

England, with 15 titles, boasts the most diverse representation, with six different clubs having won the Champions League. This diversity reflects the country’s rich soccer heritage and the competitive nature of its domestic league.

Other nations like the Netherlands, Portugal and France have also made their mark, with clubs like Ajax and Benfica each securing multiple titles. These successes contribute to the global appeal and prestige of the Champions League.

Champions League winners by year

Year Winner Runner-up Final score
1956 Real Madrid Reims 4–3
1957 Real Madrid Fiorentina 2–0
1958 Real Madrid Milan 3–2
1959 Real Madrid Stade de Reims 2–0
1960 Real Madrid Eintracht Frankfurt 7–3
1961 Benfica Barcelona 3–2
1962 Benfica Real Madrid 5–3
1963 Milan Benfica 2–1
1964 Inter Milan Real Madrid 3–1
1965 Inter Milan Benfica 1–0
1966 Real Madrid Partizan 2–1
1967 Celtic Inter Milan 2–1
1968 Manchester United Benfica 4–1
1969 Milan Ajax 4–1
1970 Feyenoord Celtic 2–1
1971 Ajax Panathinaikos 2–0
1972 Ajax Inter Milan 2–0
1973 Ajax Juventus 1–0
1974 Bayern Munich Atletico Madrid 4–0
1975 Bayern Munich Leeds United 2–0
1976 Bayern Munich AS Saint-Étienne 1–0
1977 Liverpool Borussia Mönchengladbach 3–1
1978 Liverpool Club Brugge 1–0
1979 Nottingham Forest Malmö FF 1–0
1980 Nottingham Forest Malmö FF 1–0
1981 Liverpool Real Madrid 1–0
1982 Aston Villa Bayern Munich 1–0
1983 Hamburg Juventus 1–0
1984 Liverpool Roma 1–1 (4–2)
1985 Juventus Liverpool 1–0
1986 Steaua Bucharest Barcelona 0–0 (2–0)
1987 Porto Bayern Munich 2–1
1988 PSV Eindhoven S.L. Benfica 0–0 (6–5)
1989 Milan Steaua Bucharest 4–0
1990 Milan Benfica 1–0
1991 Crvena Zvezda Olympique Marseille 0–0 (5–3)
1992 Barcelona Sampdoria 1–0
1993 Marseille Milan 1–0
1994 Milan Barcelona 4–0
1995 Ajax Milan 1–0
1996 Juventus Ajax 1–1 (4–2)
1997 Borussia Dortmund Juventus 3–1
1998 Real Madrid Juventus 1–0
1999 Manchester United Bayern Munich 2–1
2000 Real Madrid Valencia 3–0
2001 Bayern Munich Valencia 1–1 (5–4)
2002 Real Madrid Bayer Leverkusen 2–1
2003 Milan Juventus 0–0 (3–2)
2004 Porto Monaco 3–0
2005 Liverpool Milan 3–3 (3–2)
2006 Barcelona Arsenal 2–1
2007 Milan Liverpool 2–1
2008 Manchester United Chelsea 1–1 (6–5)
2009 Barcelona Manchester United 2–0
2010 Inter Milan Bayern Munich 2–0
2011 Barcelona Manchester United 3–1
2012 Chelsea Bayern Munich 1–1 (4–3)
2013 Bayern Munich Borussia Dortmund 2–1
2014 Real Madrid Atlético Madrid 4–1
2015 Barcelona Juventus 3–1
2016 Real Madrid Atletico Madrid 1–1 (5–3)
2017 Real Madrid Juventus 4–1
2018 Real Madrid Liverpool 3–1
2019 Liverpool Tottenham Hotspur 2–0
2020 Bayern Munich Paris Saint-Germain 1–0
2021 Chelsea Manchester City 1–0
2022 Real Madrid Liverpool 1–0
2023 Manchester City Inter Milan 1–0
2024 Real Madrid Borussia Dortmund 2–0
2025 Paris Saint-Germain Inter Milan 5–0

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