2021–22 FA Cup
The 2021–22 FA Cup was the 141st season and marked the 150th anniversary of the first Football Association Challenge Cup, the oldest football tournament in the world, started in the 1871–72 season. It was sponsored by Emirates and was known as the Emirates FA Cup for sponsorship purposes.
Premier League side Leicester City were the holders, having beaten Chelsea in the 2021 final. They were eliminated by Nottingham Forest in the fourth round.
Liverpool beat the two-time defending runners-up Chelsea on penalties in the final to win their eighth FA Cup overall and first since 2006. This was the fifth FA Cup final that went to extra time, with Chelsea becoming the first team to lose three consecutive finals. As winners, Liverpool would have qualified for the 2022–23 UEFA Europa League group stage; however, as they had already qualified for the Champions League via the league standings, the spot was passed down to the 6th-placed Premier League team.
Teams
The FA Cup is a knockout competition with 124 teams taking part all trying to reach the Final at Wembley in May 2022. The competitors consist of the 92 teams from the Football League system plus the 32 surviving teams out of 637 teams from the National League System that started the competition in qualifying rounds.All rounds are drawn randomly, usually either at the completion of the previous round or on the evening of the last televised game of a round being played, depending on television broadcasting rights.
| Round | Main date | Number of fixtures | Clubs remaining | New entries this round | Winner prize money | Loser prize money | Divisions entering this round |
| First round proper | Saturday 6 November 2021 | 40 | 124 → 84 | 48 | £22,629 | - | 24 EFL League One teams 24 EFL League Two teams |
| Second round proper | Saturday 4 December 2021 | 20 | 84 → 64 | - | £32,000 | - | - |
| Third round proper | Saturday 8 January 2022 | 32 | 64 → 32 | 44 | £82,000 | - | 20 Premier League teams 24 EFL Championship teams |
| Fourth round proper | Saturday 5 February 2022 | 16 | 32 → 16 | - | £90,000 | - | - |
| Fifth round proper | Wednesday 2 March 2022 | 8 | 16 → 8 | - | £180,000 | - | - |
| Quarter-finals | Saturday 19 March 2022 | 4 | 8 → 4 | - | £360,000 | - | - |
| Semi-finals | Saturday 16 April 2022 | 2 | 4 → 2 | - | £900,000 | £450,000 | - |
| Final | Saturday 14 May 2022 | 1 | 2 → 1 | - | £1,800,000 | £900,000 | - |
Qualifying
All participating clubs that were not members of the Premier League or English Football League competed in the qualifying rounds to secure one of 32 available places in the first round proper. The six-round qualifying competition began with the extra preliminary round on 6 August 2021, with the fourth and final qualifying round being played on the weekend of 16 October.The winners from the fourth qualifying round were Wrexham, Gateshead, Chesterfield, Solihull Moors, Guiseley, FC Halifax Town, York City, Buxton, Stratford Town, King's Lynn Town, Grimsby Town, Stockport County, Altrincham, Notts County, Ebbsfleet United, Horsham, St Albans City, Maidenhead United, Hayes & Yeading United, Kidderminster Harriers, Bromley, Harrow Borough, Dagenham & Redbridge, AFC Sudbury, Banbury United, Yeovil Town, Eastleigh, Boreham Wood, Havant & Waterlooville, Southend United, Yate Town and Bowers & Pitsea.
Stratford Town and Bowers & Pitsea were appearing in the competition proper for the first time. Of the others, Yate Town had last featured at this stage in 2012–13, Horsham had last done so in 2007-08, AFC Sudbury had last done so in 2000-01 and Buxton had last done so in 1962-63.
First round proper
The first round saw the 32 winners from the fourth qualifying round joined by the 48 clubs from League One and League Two. The draw was held on 17 October 2021 at Wembley Stadium, and was done by Kelly Smith and Wes Morgan. The lowest-ranked team in the first round were AFC Sudbury of the eighth-tier Isthmian League North Division.| Premier League | Championship | League One | League Two | Non-League | Total |
Second round proper
The second round featured the 40 winners from the first round. The draw was held on 8 November 2021 at Wembley Stadium, and was done by Shaun Wright-Phillips and Rachel Yankey. The lowest-ranked team in the second round were Buxton of the seventh-tier Northern Premier League Premier Division.| Premier League | Championship | League One | League Two | Non-League | Total |
Third round proper
The third round featured all 44 clubs across the Premier League and the Championship, who entered the competition in this round, along with the 20 winners from the second round. The draw was held on 6 December 2021 at Wembley Stadium, and was done by David Seaman and Faye White.The lowest-ranked team in the third round were Kidderminster Harriers of the sixth-tier National League North. To avoid possible fixture congestion caused by postponements to league matches due to a surge in COVID-19 cases, matches from this round onwards are decided on the day, with extra time and penalties used if necessary.
| Premier League | Championship | League One | League Two | Non-League | Total |
Fourth round proper
The draw for the fourth round was held on 9 January 2022 at Wembley Stadium, and was done by David James and Leah Williamson. The lowest-ranked team in the fourth round were Kidderminster Harriers of the sixth-tier National League North.| Premier League | Championship | League One | League Two | Non-League | Total |
Fifth round proper
The draw for the fifth round was held on 6 February 2022 at Wembley Stadium, and was done by Andy Cole. The matches were played during the week commencing Monday 28 February 2022. The lowest-ranked team in the fifth round were Boreham Wood of the fifth-tier National League.| Premier League | Championship | League One | League Two | Non-League | Total |
Quarter-finals
The draw was held on 3 March 2022 at Wembley Stadium, and was conducted by England national football team manager Gareth Southgate. The lowest-ranked teams in the quarter-finals were Middlesbrough and Nottingham Forest, both of the second-tier EFL Championship.On 15 March, Chelsea requested to play their game against Middlesbrough behind closed doors, due to them being unable to sell any more than the season tickets and 500–600 regular tickets sold before 10 March, after the Russian owner Roman Abramovich was sanctioned by the UK over his links to Vladimir Putin. This would have meant no one would be able to attend, including Middlesbrough fans whose tickets already had sold out. Chelsea's request was withdrawn the same day under criticism from the FA and Middlesbrough.
| Premier League | Championship | League One | League Two | Non-League | Total |
Semi-finals
The draw for the semi-finals was held on 20 March 2022 by former England international Robbie Fowler, before the quarter final between Nottingham Forest and Liverpool on ITV1 and STV.| Premier League | Championship | League One | League Two | Non-League | Total |
Top scorers
Following the conclusion of the competition, Marske United player Adam Boyes was awarded the FA Cup Golden Ball Award, commemorating him as the top scorer of the season from the extra preliminary round through to the final with eleven goals.| Rank | Player | Club | Goals |
| 1 | ![]() Television rights in the United KingdomThe domestic broadcasting rights for the competition were held by the BBC who had held them since 2014–15 and ITV who were showing matches for the first time since the 2013–14 season. After replacing ITV's FA Cup games with other network programming, films, locally-produced content and acquired international programmes for the majority of the 2008–2014 period that ITV last broadcast the competition, STV broadcast ITV's coverage to viewers in Scotland, with ITV1 games available to stream live or on-demand on STV Player for the first time. ITV also aired exclusive linear coverage of the FA Cup draws across the network.The following matches were broadcast live on UK television: Broadcast partners for other countries can be found on . |
