List of Juventus FC records and statistics


is an Italian professional association football club based in Turin, Piedmont that competes in Serie A, the top football league in the country. The club was formed in 1897 as Sport Club Juventus by a group of Massimo d'Azeglio Lyceum young students and played its first competitive match on 11 March 1900, when it entered the Piedmont round of the third Federal Championship.
This list encompasses the major honours won by Juventus and records set by the club, their managers and their players. The individual records section includes details of the club's leading goalscorers and those who have made most appearances in first-team competitions. The club's players have received, among others, a record twelve Serie A Footballer of the Year, the award given by the Italian Footballers' Association, eight Ballon d'Or awards and four FIFA World Player of the Year awards, more than any other Italian club and third overall in the latter two cases.

Honours

Italy's most successful club of the 20th century with the most title in the history of Italian football, Juventus have won the Italian League Championship, the country's premier football club competition and organised by Lega Nazionale Professionisti Serie A, a record 36 times and have the record of consecutive triumphs in that tournament. They have also won the Coppa Italia, the country's primary single-elimination competition, a record fifteen times, becoming the first team to retain the trophy successfully with their triumph in the 1959–60 season, and the first to win it in three consecutive seasons from the 2014–15 season to the 2016–17 season, going on to win a fourth consecutive title in 2017–18. In addition, the club holds the record for Supercoppa Italiana wins with nine, the most recent coming in 2020.
Overall, Juventus have won 71 official competitions, more than any other club in the country: 60 at national level and eleven at international stage, making them, in the latter case, the second most successful Italian team. The club is currently sixth in Europe and twelfth in the world with the most international titles won officially recognised by their respective continental football confederation and Fédération Internationale de Football Association. In 1977, the Torinese side become the first in Southern Europe to have won the UEFA Cup and the first—and only to date—in Italian football history to achieve an international title with a squad composed by national footballers. In 1993, the club won its third competition's trophy, an unprecedented feat in the continent until then, a confederation record for the next 22 years and the most for an Italian team. Juventus was also the first club in the country to achieve the title in the European Super Cup, having won the competition in 1984, and the first European side to win the Intercontinental Cup in 1985, since it was restructured by Union of European Football Associations and Confederación Sudamericana de Fútbol 's organizing committee five years beforehand.
The club has earned the distinction of being allowed to wear three golden stars on its shirts representing its league victories: the tenth of which was achieved during the 1957–58 season, the twentieth in the 1981–82 season and the thirtieth officially in the 2013–14 season. Juventus were the first Italian team to have achieved the national double four times, in the 1959–60, 1994–95, 2014–15 and 2015–16 seasons. In the 2015–16 season, Juventus won the Coppa Italia Final|Coppa Italia] for the eleventh time and their second-straight title, becoming the first team in Italy's history to complete Serie A and Coppa Italia doubles in back-to-back seasons; Juventus would go on to win another two consecutive doubles in 2016–17 and 2017–18.
In 1985, Juventus became the first club in the history of European football to have won all three major UEFA competitions, the European Champion Clubs' Cup, the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and the UEFA Cup, being also the only one to reach it with the same coach. After their triumph in the Intercontinental Cup in the same year, Juventus also became the first football team ever—remaining the only one at 2022 [UEFA Europa Conference League Final|2022]—to have won all possible official confederation tournaments.
Only in the 1910s the club has not won any official competition, a unique case in the country. In terms of overall official trophies won, Juventus' most successful decade was the 2010s. In that period the club won eighteen competitions, ahead of the 1980s and 1990s.

National titles

Italian Football Championship/Serie A

European titles

European Cup / UEFA Champions League

Worldwide titles

Intercontinental Cup

Other honours

National Department of Public Education Cup : 1900, 1901, 1902Government of City of Torino's Gold Medal: 1901City of Torino's Cup : 1902, 1903Trino Vercellese's Tournament : 1903International University Cup : 1904Luigi Bozino Cup : 1905, 1906Luserna San Giovanni Cup : 1907Palla d'Argento Henry Dapples : 1908Federal Championship of Prima Categoria (James R. Spensley's Cup) : 1908Italian Championship of Prima Categoria (R. Buni's Cup) : 1909Biella Cup : 1909FIAT Tournament : 1945Pio Marchi Cup : 1945Cup of the Alps : 1963Italian-Spanish Friendship's Cup : 1965Pier Cesare Baretti Memorial : 1992, 1993First Centenary 1897–1997 Cup: Republic of San Marino Trophy: 1997Birra Moretti Trophy : 1997, 2000, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2008Trofeo Luigi Berlusconi : 1991, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2010, 2012, 2021TIM Trophy : 2009

Awards and recognitions

National

International

Other

Achievements

As one of the most successful sportive clubs in Italy and the world, Juventus have received during their history of important national and international special recognitions, among them:Medaglia di Bronzo al Valore Atletico: 1935Stella d'oro al Merito Sportivo: 1966Collare d'oro al Merito Sportivo: 2001

Individual records

Appearances

Appearances in competitive matches

All-time top 10 appearances

As of 1 September 2023 :
RankPlayerYearsTotalItalian championshipCoppa ItaliaEuropeOther
1

Goalkeeping

Goalscorers

Goalscorers in competitive matches

All-time top 10 goalscorers

As of 12 April 2022 :
RankPlayerYearsTotalItalian championshipCoppa ItaliaEuropeOther
1nowrap|1993–2012

Trophies

''As of 19 May 2021:''

Players

Managers

  • Note: bold signifies current Juventus manager.
  • ECC/CL = European Champions Cup/Champions League, CWC = Cup Winners' Cup, EuSC = European Super Cup, IntCup = Intercontinental Cup, ITC = Intertoto Cup.

Individual recognitions

[Ballon d'Or]

* Juventus is the Italian team, and second overall, with the most players recognized with the FIFA World Player of the Year Award.

[UEFA Club Footballer of the Year]/[UEFA Men's [Player of the Year Award]]

* Gianluigi Buffon is the only goalkeeper to ever win this award.

[UEFA Team of the Year]

Most appearances: 5 Gianluigi Buffon: 2003, 2004, 2006, 2016, 2017

UEFA Champions League Squad of the Season

Most appearances: 2 Gianluigi Buffon: 2015, 2017, Giorgio Chiellini: 2015, 2018

UEFA Europa League Squad of the Season

Most appearances: 1 Gianluigi Buffon: 2014, Leonardo Bonucci: 2014, Andrea Pirlo: 2014, Carlos Tévez: 2014

Serie A Players of the Year Awards

YearPlayer
2001

[Serie A Team of the Year] (started in 2010–11)

Goalkeepers in Serie A Team of the Year
SeasonPlayer
2011–12

European [Footballer of the Year (Ballon d'Or)">Ballon d'Or">European [Footballer of the Year (Ballon d'Or)]

* Juventus is the Italian team with the most players recognized with the Ballon d'Or, as well as the team with the third most overall.

World Soccer Player of the Year">World Soccer (magazine)#Men's World Player of the Year">World Soccer Player of the Year

* Juventus is the Italian team, and second overall, with the most players recognized with the World Soccer Player of the Year Award.

Club records

First competitive matches

  • In Italian competition: vs. FC Torinese, [1900 Italian Football Championship|Third Federal Championship, First Round, First Leg], 11 March 1900
  • In European competition : vs. Wiener SK, [UEFA Champions League|European Champions Clubs' Cup 1958–59, First Round, First Leg], 24 September 1958

Club records

As of 20 May 2018.
  • Victories and defeats:
  • * Home victory: 11–0 vs. Fiorentina, Federal Championship, 7 October 1928
    11–0 vs. Fiumana, Federal Championship, 4 November 1928
  • * Away victory: 15–0 vs. Cento, Coppa Italia, second round, 6 January 1927
  • * Home defeat: 0–8 vs. Torino Calcio, Federal Championship, 17 November 1912
  • * Away defeat: 1–8 vs. Milan, 14 January 1912
  • Most points in any top five European domestic league
  • * 102 in 38 games
  • Most points in a season:
  • * 3 points for a win: 102 in 38 games
  • * 2 points for a win: 62 in 38 games
  • Most league victories in a season: 33 in 38 games
  • Most home wins in a season: 19 in 19 games
  • Fewest league draws in a season: 3 in 38 games
  • Most league draws in a season: 17 in 34 games
  • Fewest league defeats in a season: 0 in 38 games
  • Most league defeats in a season: 15 in 38 games
  • Most league goals scored in a season : 103 in 38 games
  • Fewest league goals scored in a season : 28 in 30 games
  • Fewest league goals conceded in a season : 14 in 30 games
  • Most league goals conceded in a season : 56 in 34 games
  • Longest sequence of League victories:
  • * In a single season: 15, since 11th match on 31 October 2015 to 25th match on 13 February 2016
  • * Overlapping seasons: 13, since the 32nd match of the 2013–14 season to the 6th match of the 2014–15 season
  • * Since the first match in a single season: 9,
  • Longest sequence of unbeaten league matches :
  • * In a single season: 38
  • * Overall: 49
  • Longest sequence of league matches without a victory:
  • * In a single season: 8
  • * Overall: 13
  • Longest sequence of League defeats:
  • * Overall and in a single season: 7

Signings

The sale of Zinedine Zidane to Real Madrid of Spain from Juventus in 2001 was the world football transfer record at the time, costing the Spanish club around €77.5 million.
The intake of Gianluigi Buffon in 2001 from Parma cost Juventus €52 million, making it the then-List of most expensive [association football transfers|most expensive transfer for a goalkeeper] of all-time until 2018.
On 26 July 2016, Juventus signing Gonzalo Higuaín became the third highest football transfer of all-time and highest ever transfer for an Italian club, at the time, when he signed for €90 million from Napoli.
On 8 August 2016, Paul Pogba returned to his first club, Manchester United, for the former record for highest football transfer fee at €105 million, surpassing the previous record holder Gareth Bale.
On 10 July 2018, Cristiano Ronaldo became the highest ever transfer for an Italian club with his €100 million transfer from Real Madrid.

Honours

Statistics and records