Serie A | Full History
Italy’s top football division since 1929 — home to Juventus’ record 36 Scudetti, the Milan–Inter rivalry, and some of the greatest teams and players in the sport’s history.
Entries cover every Serie A season in the round-robin single-group format from 1929-30 through 2025-26 (95 seasons on record; the league was suspended for 1943-44 and 1944-45 during World War II, so no entries exist for those years, and 2004-05/2005-06 are recorded per their real Calciopoli-scandal outcomes rather than the original on-pitch results). Title-leader counts are each club’s officially recognized all-time total (per Lega Serie A / FIGC and club honours records); for the sport’s oldest clubs — Juventus, Inter Milan, AC Milan, Genoa, Torino, Bologna, and Pro Vercelli — that total includes championships won in the pre-1929 regional-format era before Serie A’s round-robin structure existed. Those early years are included in each leader’s year list where independently verified (Juventus, Inter Milan, AC Milan); for Genoa, Torino, Bologna, and Pro Vercelli only the verified total is shown, since reconstructing their fragmented pre-1929 season-by-season results was not independently confirmed here.
Top 10 Teams — Most Titles
Full History | Newest First
95 entries on record
Inter’s 21st Scudetto, clinched with three matches to spare and 11 points clear of Napoli, under new coach Cristian Chivu.
Napoli’s first title under manager Antonio Conte.
Inter’s 20th Scudetto, earning the club’s "second star" (a badge awarded at 20 titles), clinched with a win in the Milan derby.
Napoli’s first Scudetto in 33 years, under manager Luciano Spalletti.
Ended Juventus’ nine-year run as champions.
Ninth consecutive title — a Serie A record streak.
First of a record nine consecutive Scudetti.
Completed a continental treble under José Mourinho — Serie A, Coppa Italia, and the UEFA Champions League.
Awarded to Inter — who had finished third on the pitch — after Juventus were stripped of the title and other top clubs sanctioned in the Calciopoli scandal.
Juventus finished first on the pitch, but the title was later revoked and left unassigned by the Italian sporting courts following the Calciopoli match-fixing scandal.
Sampdoria’s only Scudetto.
Napoli’s second Scudetto, also under Diego Maradona.
Napoli’s first Scudetto, led by Diego Maradona.
Hellas Verona’s only Scudetto — widely regarded as one of the greatest underdog title wins in Serie A history.
Lazio’s first Scudetto.
Cagliari’s only Scudetto, built around striker Gigi Riva.
Fiorentina’s second, and as yet last, Scudetto.
Fiorentina’s first Scudetto.
The club reverted to its Internazionale name after World War II, ending the "Ambrosiana-Inter" era.
The entire "Grande Torino" squad and staff died in the Superga air disaster on 4 May 1949, days before the season’s end; the title was awarded with the club holding an insurmountable table lead.
League resumed after a two-season wartime suspension (1943-44 and 1944-45 were not played).
The start of the "Grande Torino" era, interrupted the following two seasons when the league was suspended during World War II.
Playing under the enforced "Ambrosiana-Inter" name (see 1929-30 note).
Playing under the enforced "Ambrosiana-Inter" name (see 1929-30 note).
Completed a then-record run of five consecutive Scudetti (1930-31 to 1934-35).
First of five consecutive titles — a then-record streak.
Playing as "Ambrosiana-Inter" — the club (today Inter Milan) was forced to merge with Unione Sportiva Milanese and drop its "Internazionale" name under Fascist-era policy from 1928; it reverted to Internazionale in 1945.