Primera División Femenina (Peru)

The Primera División Femenina officially named Liga Femenina (currently known as Liga Femenina Pluspetrol 2023 for sponsorship reasons),[2] is the top tournament of women's association football in Peru, organized by the Peruvian Football Federation through its Women's Football Commission. The competition, as an official tournament, was created in 1996[1] under de name of "Campeonato Metropolitano de Fútbol Femenino" (Metropolitan women's football championship), followed by the "Campeonato Nacional de Fútbol Femenino" (Peruvian women's football championship) which was renamed later as "Copa Femenina"[3][4] and currently is designated as "Liga Femenina". The champion qualifies to the Copa Libertadores Femenina.

Liga Femenina
Founded1996; 28 years ago (1996)[1]
CountryPeru
ConfederationCONMEBOL
Number of clubs14
Level on pyramid1
Relegation toLiga de Ascenso Femenina
International cup(s)Copa Libertadores Femenina
Current championsAlianza Lima
(2024)
Most championshipsUniversitario (10 titles)
Top goalscorerAdriana Lúcar (77 goals)
TV partnersNativa
Current: 2025 season

History

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Metropolitan women's football championship

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Like the men's tournament, the Peruvian Primera División Femenina began on a regional and amateur basis. On 1996[1][5][6] the Peruvian female football competitions started with the creation of the "Campeonato Metropolitano de Fútbol Femenino" (Metropolitan women's football championship) organized by the Peruvian Football Federation and played with sport clubs from Lima and Callao. The champion of this first edition was the team of Club Universitario who repeated the achievement the following year, resulting in the first two-time championship. On 1999 the Sporting Cristal also became two-time champion by getting the titles of 1998 and 1999. Later, the team of Club Universitario obtained the first three-time championship in the history of Peruvian women's soccer by winning the 2001, 2002 and 2003 titles.[7]

Campeonato Sudamericano Interclubes de Fútbol Femenino

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In 2000, the FPF organized an unofficial international tournament called the Campeonato Sudamericano Interclubes de Fútbol Femenino, in which teams from Argentina, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela participated.[8][9]

Women's football national championship

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On 2008 the Peruvian Football Federation modified the competition scheme to give it a national scope, setting the tournament in three fases: provincial, regional and national. With this new competition format, the tournamente was renamed as "Campeonato Nacional de Fútbol Femenino" (women's football national championship), and incorporated the former tournament (Campeonato Metropolitano de Fútbol Femenino) as the Region IV (Lima & Callao) of its regional stage.

Regional stage Departamentos
Region I Amazonas, Lambayeque, Piura, Tumbes
Region II Áncash, Cajamarca, La Libertad, San Martín
Region III Loreto, Ucayali
Region IV Lima, Callao
Region V Huánuco, Junín, Pasco
Region VI Ayacucho, Huancavelica, Ica
Region VII Arequipa, Moquegua, Tacna
Region VIII Apurímac, Cusco, Madre de Dios, Puno

Since 2009 the champion qualifies for the Copa Libertadores Femenina.[10] the first champion under this new format was the team of White Star. That same year, the Peruvian Football Federation and the FIFA agreed to incorporate representatives of the Women's football Championship into the FPF Bases Assembly, thus granting them greater participation in the decisions of the governing body of Peruvian football[11] On 2012 the team of JC Sport Girls became three-times champion,[12] while on 2016 the team of Club Universitario de Deportes won the tri-championship for the second time.[13] As of 2017, the Peruvian Football Federation decided to accommodate its calendar to that of Conmebol so that the local women's tournaments would not intersect with the development of the Copa Libertadores Femenina. Until that time, the tournament schedule had no relation to the annual calendar; that is, the national championship of one year was defined the following year.[citation needed]

Liga Femenina

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In 2020 the Peruvian Football Federation decides to professionalize women's football for which it issues Resolution No. 014-2020-FPF[14] that provides for "strengthening the traditional National System of Women's football Championships, hereinafter referred to as FPF Liga Femenina".[15] The first season was expected to take place in 2020,[16] but was delayed until 2021 due to COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021, this new format was resumed and it was played under the name of FPF Liga Femenina and under the auspices of the private television network Movistar TV.[17] In the 2021 and 2022 seasons the title was won by the Alianza Lima club, while in 2023 it was won by Universitario, which thus achieved its tenth championship.

Format

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Currently, the season is played in two stages: First stage and Final stage (Playoffs). The First stage is played under a single round-robin format with the 13 teams playing each other once. The Final stage is contested by teams ranked 1st to 6th in the First stage, with teams ranked 1st and 2nd directly qualified for semifinals and teams ranked 3rd to 6th qualified for a previous qualifying round or repechage to reach the semifinals. Winners of semifinals play the final to decide the national champion.[citation needed]

2025 teams

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Stadia and locations

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Defensores de Ilucan
 
UNSAAC
 
Flamengo
 
Biavo
 
Real Áncash
Locations of the 2025 Liga Femenina teams
Team City Stadium Capacity
Alianza Lima Lima Alejandro Villanueva 35,398
Biavo San Martín Carlos Vidaurre García 18,000
Carlos A. Mannucci Trujillo Mansiche 25,036
Defensores del Ilucán Cutervo Juan Maldonado Gamarra 12,000
Flamengo Huancayo Huancayo 20,000
Killas Lima Andrés Bedoya Díaz 10,000
Melgar Arequipa Virgen de Chapi 60,370
Real Áncash Huaraz Rosas Pampa 18,000
Sporting Cristal Lima Alberto Gallardo 11,600
Universidad César Vallejo Trujillo Mansiche 25,036
Universitario Lima Monumental 80,093
UNSAAC Cusco Estadio Garcilaso 45,056

List of champions

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  • (In bracket, title count):
Ed. Season Champion Runner-up
Campeonato Metropolitano de Lima & Callao[18]
1
1996 Universitario[7][19] (1)
2
1997 Universitario[7][19] (2) Sporting Cristal
3
1998 Sporting Cristal[20] (1) Sport Coopsol
4
1999 Sporting Cristal[20] (2)
5
2000 Sport Coopsol[21][22][23] (1)
6
2001 Universitario[7][19] (3) Sport Boys
7
2002 Universitario[7][19] (4) Sport Boys
8
2003 Universitario[7][19] (5) Sport Boys
9
2004 JC Sport Girls[24] (1) Sport Boys
2005 No Tournament[A][25]
10
2006 JC Sport Girls (2) Municipalidad de Santiago de Surco
2007 No Tournament
Campeonato Nacional de Fútbol Femenino[18]
11
2008 White Star[26] (1) Estudiantes Universitarios
12
2009 Universidad Particular de Iquitos[27] (1) UNSAAC
13
2010[28] JC Sport Girls[29] (3) River San Borja
14
2011 JC Sport Girls (4) Electro Oriente[30]
15
2012[31] JC Sport Girls (5) Internacional
16
2013[32] Real Maracaná (1) Internacional
17
2014[33][34] Universitario (6) Alfredo Vargas Guerra
18
2015[35] Universitario (7) CGTP
19
2016[36] Universitario (8) Ramiro Villafuerte
20
2017[37] JC Sport Girls (6) Deportivo Educación
Copa Perú Femenina[18]
21
2018[38] Municipalidad de Majes[39] (1) JC Sport Girls
22
2019 Universitario[19][40] (9) Amazon Sky
Liga Femenina[18]
2020 Canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
23
2021 Alianza Lima (1) Universitario
24
2022 Alianza Lima (2) Carlos A. Mannucci
25
2023 Universitario (10) Alianza Lima
26
2024 Alianza Lima (3) Universitario

Titles by club

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  • There are 9 clubs who have won the Peruvian title.
  • Teams in bold compete in the Liga Femenina as of the 2025 season.
Club Total Amateur era (1996–2019) Professional era (2020–)
Campeonato
Metropolitano

Lima & Callao
(1996–2007)

Campeonato
Nacional de

Fútbol Femenino
(2008–2017)

Copa Perú

Femenina
(2018–2019)

Liga Femenina
(2020–)
Universitario 10 5 3 1 1
JC Sport Girls 6 2 4
Alianza Lima 3 3
Sporting Cristal 2 2
Sport Coopsol 1 1
White Star 1 1
Municipalidad de Majes 1 1
Real Maracaná 1 1
Universidad Particular de Iquitos 1 1

Total titles won by club

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Rank Club Titles Runners-up Seasons won Seasons runner-up
1 Universitario 10 2 1996, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2019, 2023 2021, 2024
2 JC Sport Girls 6 1 2004, 2006, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2017 2018
3 Alianza Lima 3 1 2021, 2022, 2024 2023
4 Sporting Cristal 2 1 1998, 1999 1997
5 Sport Coopsol 1 1 2000 1998
White Star 1 2008
Municipalidad de Majes 1 2018
Real Maracaná 1 2013
Universidad Particular de Iquitos 1 2009

Top scorers

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Ed. Season Top scorer Top scorer's club Goals
7
2004   Olienka Salinas Sport Boys 18
9
2006   Miryam Tristán JC Sport Girls 29
19
2016   Pierina Núñez Universitario
22
2019   Sabrina Ramírez Universitario 20
23
2021   Adriana Lúcar Alianza Lima 23
24
2022   Luz Campoverde Carlos A. Mannucci 18
25
2023   Adriana Lúcar Alianza Lima 17
26
2024   Adriana Lúcar Alianza Lima 20

Managers

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Ed. Season Winning manager Manager's club
23
2021   Samir Mendoza Alianza Lima
24
2022   Samir Mendoza Alianza Lima
25
2023   John Tierradentro Universitario
26
2024   José Letelier Alianza Lima

Footnotes

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A. ^ In 2005, the League not played due to Peruvian participation in the 2005 Bolivarian Games
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References

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  1. ^ a b c «Mención aparte merece el futbol femenino que ha recibido el impulso necesario y viene desarrollándose con éxito desde 1996. (...) gracias al trabajo coordinado entre la Federación y los clubes, nuestro país se ha convertido en uno de los mejores en esta parte del continente»."Federación Peruana de Fútbol: Memoria 1992–2002, p. 39, 2003" (PDF) (in Spanish). Peruvian Football Federation. 19 December 2003. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 March 2007.
  2. ^ "FPF ANUNCIA LA LIGA FEMENINA PLUSPETROL 2022" (in Spanish). Peruvian Football Federation. 4 March 2022.
  3. ^ "Comunicado" (in Spanish). Peruvian Football Federation. 14 February 2020.
  4. ^ "Resolucion No. 014-FPF-2020" (PDF) (in Spanish). Peruvian Football Federation. February 2020.
  5. ^ "Perú: se inicia el campeonato Metropolitano Femenino" (in Spanish). CONMEBOL. 10 May 2014.
  6. ^ "¿Y Universitario? Así va el palmarés del fútbol femenino con el bicampeonato de Alianza Lima" (in Spanish). libero.pe. 8 October 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d e f «Vivian Ayres fue pieza importante para que Universitario obtuviera los títulos de fútbol femenino en 1996, 1997, 2001, 2002 y 2003, tiempos en el que se consolidó como la goleadora histórica del club crema»."Universitario: Vivian Ayres, nueva DT del equipo de futsal" (in Spanish). peru.com. 14 October 2022.
  8. ^ Primer Sudamericano de Clubes Femenino #Peru2000
  9. ^ Lizandro Barbarán, precursor del bicampeonato de Sporting Cristal femenino en los años 1998, y 1999, y campeón del Sudamericano de Clubes en el año 2000.
  10. ^ "Se inicia Campeonato Nacional de Fútbol Femenino 2015" (in Spanish). Peruvian Football Federation. 15 April 2016. Archived from the original on 22 October 2017.
  11. ^ «2) a) The parties present agree with the integration in the FPF Bases Assembly of representatives of the 2nd Division clubs, in the process of becoming professional from 2010, of the referees' association, of the coaches' association, of the championship of women's football and futsal league »."Acta de la Reunión FIFA-FIFPRO-Federación Peruana de Futbol, Zurich 10 y 11 de setiembre 2009" (PDF) (in Spanish). Peruvian Football Federation. 17 October 2022.
  12. ^ "JC Sport Girls campeón del Campeonato Nacional de Perú" (in Spanish). feminafutbol.com. 23 December 2017.
  13. ^ "Universitario de Deportes tricampeón nacional de fútbol femenino" (in Spanish). rpp.pe. 27 January 2017.
  14. ^ "Resolución N° 014-2020-FPF" (PDF) (in Spanish). Peruvian Football Federation. February 2020.
  15. ^ "Reglamento Copa Femenina 2020" (PDF) (in Spanish). Peruvian Football Federation. February 2020.
  16. ^ "NUEVA LIGA FEMENINA 2020" (in Spanish). Peruvian Football Federation. 22 February 2020.
  17. ^ "Liga Femenina 2021". Peruvian Football Federation.
  18. ^ a b c d "Peru – List of Women Champions". RSSSF. 11 October 2022.
  19. ^ a b c d e f "Dossier Universitario Femenino" (PDF) (in Spanish). universitario.pe. 2021.
  20. ^ a b "Club Sporting Cristal Femenino" (in Spanish). Sporting Cristal. 16 December 2018.
  21. ^ "The most champion of women's soccer in Peru: Alianza Lima or Universitario?". euro.eseuro.com/. 4 September 2023.
  22. ^ "El más campeón del fútbol femenino en el Perú: ¿Alianza Lima o Universitario?" (in Spanish). El Comercio. 4 September 2023.
  23. ^ "Así quedó el palmarés de la Liga Femenina tras el título de Universitario de Deportes" (in Spanish). futbolperuano.com. 2 September 2023.
  24. ^ Peru (Women) 2004
  25. ^ La FPF decidió no hacer un torneo. Las jugadoras tuvieron que concentrarse cien por ciento en los trabajos con la Bicolor.
  26. ^ "White logró por primera vez para Arequipa el Campeonato Nacional de Fútbol Femenino" (in Spanish). deporteaqp.blogspot.com. 5 April 2009.
  27. ^ "Chicas de la Universidad Particular de Iquitos inician participación en Copa Libertadores. El equipo de la "Universidad Particular de Iquitos", campeón nacional de fútbol femenino, participarán en el Torneo Sudamericano de Clubes Campeones Femenino – Copa Libertadores de América 2010 a realizarse en Bareuri, Sao Paulo, Brasil" (video). youtube.com (in Spanish). Enlace Deportivo Peru. 3 October 2010.
  28. ^ "JC Girls are champion" (in Spanish). Jcsportgirls.wordpress.com. 2 October 2011. Retrieved 17 October 2011.
  29. ^ "JC Sport Girls logró esta mañana su primer campeonato nacional, al superar por 2 a 1 a River San Borja en la final" (in Spanish). jcsportgirls.wordpress.com. 2 October 2011.
  30. ^ "J.C. SPORT GIRLS SE CORONO CAMPEÓN NACIONAL DE FÚTBOL FEMENINO 2011". Archived from the original on 1 February 2014. Retrieved 25 January 2014.
  31. ^ "JC Sport Girls se coronó campeón nacional" (in Spanish). Ovacion.pe. 1 October 2013. Archived from the original on 19 December 2013. Retrieved 3 October 2013.
  32. ^ "Real Maracana clasificó a la Copa Libertadores en el Fútbol Femenino" (in Spanish). Ovaciondelsur.com. 7 July 2014. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  33. ^ "Universitario de Deportes: equipo femenino es campeón y clasificó a la Copa Libertadores" (in Spanish). depor.com. 8 May 2015. Retrieved 6 October 2016.
  34. ^ "Copa Libertadores: Equipo femenino de Universitario representará al Perú" (in Spanish). ojo.pe. 8 May 2015. Archived from the original on 27 May 2015. Retrieved 6 October 2016.
  35. ^ "Universitario de Deportes se coronó bicampeón del fútbol femenino (Universitatio champion for second time)" (in Spanish). depor.com. 22 April 2016. Archived from the original on 9 October 2016. Retrieved 6 October 2016. Las chicas de Universitario [...] y clasificaron a la Copa Libertadores femenina.
  36. ^ "UNIVESITARIO CAMPEÓN NACIONAL" (in Spanish). fpf.org.pe. 27 January 2017. Archived from the original on 3 February 2017. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
  37. ^ "JC SPORTS GIRLS SE CONSAGRÓ CAMPEÓN DEL TORNEO NACIONAL DE FÚTBOL FEMENINO" (in Spanish). fpf.org.pe. 16 December 2017. Retrieved 3 October 2013.
  38. ^ "MAJES DE AREQUIPA SE QUEDÓ CON LA COPA PERÚ FEMENINA 2018" (in Spanish). FPF. 20 December 2018.
  39. ^ "Municipalidad de Majes se corona campeón nacional de fútbol femenino" (in Spanish). deporteaqp.blogspot.com. 20 December 2018.
  40. ^ [...]Novoa is now a member of Peru's national team and captain of Universitario, the country's national champion[...] "In Peru, women's soccer is blossoming from the ground up". The Athletic. 1 April 2020.