English Womens Super League | England
Founded: 1988
Stadium: Joie Stadium
Manager: N/A
| Date | Match | Time |
|---|---|---|
| 10 May 2026 | Chelsea Women vs Manchester City WFC | 14:30:00 |
| 16 May 2026 | West Ham Women vs Manchester City WFC | 12:00:00 |
| Date | Home | Score | Away | League |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
03 May 2026 11:00 |
|
1 - 0 |
Liverpool FC Women |
English Womens Super League Joie Stadium |
|
25 Apr 2026 11:00 |
|
3 - 2 |
Manchester City WFC |
English Womens Super League Broadfield Stadium |
|
06 Apr 2026 16:00 |
|
0 - 1 |
Manchester City WFC |
FA Womens Challenge Cup St Andrew's @ Knighthead Park |
|
28 Mar 2026 13:30 |
|
0 - 3 |
Manchester City WFC |
English Womens Super League Old Trafford |
|
21 Mar 2026 12:00 |
|
5 - 2 |
Tottenham Women |
English Womens Super League Academy Stadium |
|
15 Mar 2026 11:55 |
|
0 - 0 |
Manchester City WFC |
English Womens Super League Villa Park |
|
22 Feb 2026 14:00 |
|
4 - 0 |
Sheffield United WFC |
FA Womens Challenge Cup Academy Stadium |
|
13 Feb 2026 19:00 |
|
6 - 0 |
Leicester City WFC |
English Womens Super League Academy Stadium |
|
08 Feb 2026 12:00 |
|
1 - 0 |
Manchester City WFC |
English Womens Super League Emirates Stadium |
|
01 Feb 2026 14:30 |
|
5 - 1 |
Chelsea Women |
English Womens Super League Academy Stadium |
Manchester City Women's Football Club (formerly Manchester City Ladies F.C.) are an English women's football club based in Manchester who play in the FA Women's Super League. They are affiliated with Manchester City F.C. who play in the Premier League.
Their first season of the professional football would see Manchester City finish fifth of eight teams, at the same time winning their first ever major trophy when they defeated Arsenal in the 2014 FA WSL Cup Final. The following season would start poorly, but City Women returned from the summer break for the Women's World Cup a different side, with England's third-place finish seemingly rejuvenating both players and fans. Recording twelve wins in their remaining thirteen league games the club entered a title challenge which they only lost on the final day of the season. Although it brought them no silverware, their runners-up position was enough to secure them European football for the first time in their history. As they embarked on their late-season surge, City also broke the league attendance record not once but twice.
The following seasons would see Manchester City become one of the dominant sides of English women's football, winning the league in 2016 and claiming two Women's FA Cup and two further WSL Cups by the end of the decade.