La Liga winners list (1929–2026): all champions by year & most titles
Complete La Liga winners by year from 1929 to 2025. Discover every champion, closest title races, record-breaking campaigns, and the stories behind.
Complete La Liga winners by year from 1929 to 2025. Discover every champion, closest title races, record-breaking campaigns, and the stories behind.
Ninety-four seasons of Spanish football. Each with its own story. From Athletic Bilbao's early dominance to Barcelona's recent resurgence, La Liga history spans nearly a century of drama.
Nine clubs have won the title. Real Madrid lead with 36 championships. FC Barcelona follow with 28. Seven other clubs share the remaining trophies.
This guide breaks down every La Liga winner by year. We've organized the history into eras for easy scanning. For the complete list in table format, see our full la liga winners list.
Real Madrid’s dominance in La Liga history has been reinforced by its youth development system, particularly through La Fábrica, which has contributed to multiple title-winning squads.
Similarly, Barcelona’s golden eras were heavily influenced by graduates of La Masia, widely regarded as one of football’s most successful academies.
The last decade belonged to three clubs. FC Barcelona, Real Madrid, and Atlético Madrid shared every title. No other team came close to winning the Spanish league.
Season | Champion | Pts | Key Story |
2024-25 | 88 | Hansi Flick's domestic treble, Lamine Yamal emerges | |
2023-24 | 95 | Bellingham transforms Madrid, highest points total | |
2022-23 | 88 | Xavi's first full season delivers title | |
2021-22 | 86 | Benzema wins Ballon d'Or, dominant campaign | |
2020-21 | 86 | Final day drama, Simeone breaks duopoly | |
2019-20 | 87 | COVID-interrupted season, ten straight wins | |
2018-19 | 87 | Messi's final La Liga title at Camp Nou | |
2017-18 | 93 | Valverde's unbeaten run ends late | |
2016-17 | 93 | La Liga and Champions League double | |
2015-16 | 91 | MSN's attacking brilliance |
Who won the La Liga Champions in 2025? FC Barcelona claimed the title under Hansi Flick. They beat Real Madrid in all four Clásicos and completed a domestic treble.
Who won La Liga 22-23? FC Barcelona, with Xavi Hernández guiding them to 88 points. It marked their first title since 2018-19.
The 2020-21 season stands out. Atlético Madrid won on the final day at Valladolid. Luis Suárez scored the crucial goal against his former club's rivals. Diego Simeone delivered only the second title by a club outside the big two since 2004.
For detailed analysis of each campaign, see our la liga winners list last 10 years guide.

This era produced the greatest individual rivalry in football history. Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo pushed each other to extraordinary heights. Their teams broke records that still stand today.
Season | Champion | Pts | Key Story |
2013-14 | 90 | Simeone's first title, final day drama at Camp Nou | |
2012-13 | 100 | Record points total, Tito Vilanova's only season | |
2011-12 | 100 | Mourinho's Madrid, 121 goals scored | |
2010-11 | 96 | Guardiola's third consecutive title | |
2009-10 | 99 | Peak tiki-taka football | |
2008-09 | 87 | Guardiola's treble-winning debut season | |
2007-08 | 85 | Schuster delivers title, Villarreal finish second | |
2006-07 | 76 | Capello's disciplined approach | |
2005-06 | 82 | Ronaldinho's magic, second straight title | |
2004-05 | 84 | Rijkaard rebuilds Barcelona | |
2003-04 | 77 | Benítez's final title before Liverpool move | |
2002-03 | 78 | Galácticos deliver La Liga | |
2001-02 | 75 | Second title in three years | |
2000-01 | 80 | Del Bosque's Champions League winners |
Has a team ever gone unbeaten in La Liga? No team has completed an entire season without defeat. FC Barcelona came closest in 2017-18, losing only once.
Two clubs reached 100 points. Real Madrid achieved it first in 2011-12 under José Mourinho. They scored 121 goals. FC Barcelona matched the record the following season under Tito Vilanova.
Pep Guardiola's Barcelona dominated from 2008 to 2012. Three consecutive La Liga titles. Two Champions League trophies. Football at its highest level. Many consider this the greatest club side ever assembled.
Real Madrid's Galácticos era brought Zidane, Ronaldo, Beckham, and Figo to the Bernabéu. Glamour and success in equal measure. Two La Liga titles and a European Cup between 2001 and 2003.
This era saw the last champions from outside the established elite. Real Sociedad and Athletic Bilbao both lifted the trophy. It also produced two remarkable dynasties: Real Madrid's five-in-a-row and Johan Cruyff's Dream Team.
Season | Champion | Key Story |
1998-99 | Van Gaal's title, Rivaldo shines | |
1997-98 | Back-to-back for the Dutch coach | |
1996-97 | Capello's single dominant season | |
1995-96 | Simeone as player helps deliver title | |
1994-95 | Cruyff's Dream Team finally stopped | |
1993-94 | Fourth consecutive championship | |
1992-93 | Dream Team dominance continues | |
1991-92 | Cruyff's revolution takes hold | |
1990-91 | First of four straight titles | |
1989-90 | Fifth consecutive championship | |
1988-89 | La Quinta del Buitre era | |
1987-88 | Three in a row | |
1986-87 | Hugo Sánchez leads the attack | |
1985-86 | Start of historic run | |
1984-85 | Venables delivers English influence | |
1983-84 | Athletic Bilbao | Last title for the Basque giants |
1982-83 | Athletic Bilbao | Back-to-back for Bilbao |
1981-82 | Second consecutive shock title | |
1980-81 | Basque club stuns Spain |
Real Madrid won five consecutive La Liga titles from 1986 to 1990. The Quinta del Buitre generation powered this success. Emilio Butragueño, Michel, and Hugo Sánchez became legends. No club has matched this run since.
Johan Cruyff's Dream Team answered immediately. FC Barcelona won four straight titles from 1991 to 1994. Guardiola, Stoichkov, and Koeman played beautiful football. Cruyff established the philosophy that still defines Barcelona today.
Real Sociedad shocked Spanish football in 1981 and 1982. Back-to-back titles from a club outside Madrid and Barcelona seemed impossible. Athletic Bilbao followed with consecutive championships in 1983 and 1984. The Basque clubs enjoyed their final golden era. Neither has won La Liga since.
This era saw the last champions from outside the established elite. Real Sociedad and Athletic Bilbao both lifted the trophy. It also produced two remarkable dynasties: Real Madrid's five-in-a-row and Johan Cruyff's Dream Team.
Season | Champion | Key Story |
1998-99 | Van Gaal's title, Rivaldo shines | |
1997-98 | Back-to-back for the Dutch coach | |
1996-97 | Capello's single dominant season | |
1995-96 | Simeone as player helps deliver title | |
1994-95 | Cruyff's Dream Team finally stopped | |
1993-94 | Fourth consecutive championship | |
1992-93 | Dream Team dominance continues | |
1991-92 | Cruyff's revolution takes hold | |
1990-91 | First of four straight titles | |
1989-90 | Fifth consecutive championship | |
1988-89 | La Quinta del Buitre era | |
1987-88 | Three in a row | |
1986-87 | Hugo Sánchez leads the attack | |
1985-86 | Start of historic run | |
1984-85 | Venables delivers English influence | |
1983-84 | Athletic Bilbao | Last title for the Basque giants |
1982-83 | Athletic Bilbao | Back-to-back for Bilbao |
1981-82 | Second consecutive shock title | |
1980-81 | Basque club stuns Spain |
Real Madrid won five consecutive La Liga titles from 1986 to 1990. The Quinta del Buitre generation powered this success. Emilio Butragueño, Michel, and Hugo Sánchez became legends. No club has matched this run since.
Johan Cruyff's Dream Team answered immediately. FC Barcelona won four straight titles from 1991 to 1994. Guardiola, Stoichkov, and Koeman played beautiful football. Cruyff established the philosophy that still defines Barcelona today.
Real Sociedad shocked Spanish football in 1981 and 1982. Back-to-back titles from a club outside Madrid and Barcelona seemed impossible. Athletic Bilbao followed with consecutive championships in 1983 and 1984. The Basque clubs enjoyed their final golden era. Neither has won La Liga since.
La Liga began in 1929 with ten clubs. The competition format was simple. Every team played each other twice. The Spanish league quickly established itself as a serious competition.
Season | Champion | Key Story |
1935-36 | Athletic Bilbao | Fourth title before war interrupts |
1934-35 | Real Betis | Only championship in club history |
1933-34 | Athletic Bilbao | Third title of the decade |
1932-33 | First title for Los Blancos | |
1931-32 | Madrid establish themselves | |
1930-31 | Athletic Bilbao | Second consecutive crown |
1929-30 | Athletic Bilbao | Dominant from the start |
1928-29 | Inaugural La Liga champions |
FC Barcelona won the first ever La Liga title in 1928-29. They claimed their place in history from the competition's inception. It took Real Madrid three more years to win their first championship.
Athletic Bilbao dominated early Spanish football. They won four of the first eight titles. The Basque club played attractive football with homegrown players. Their success established a foundation that lasted decades.
Real Betis claimed the 1934-35 title. The Seville club finished two points ahead of Real Madrid. It remains their only La Liga championship. Nearly 90 years later, that single trophy still defines their proudest moment.
The Spanish Civil War halted everything in 1936. No football was played at the highest level for three years. La Liga resumed in 1939-40 with a different Spain. The war changed Spanish football forever. Atlético Madrid won the first post-war title, beginning a new chapter in La Liga history.
For complete title rankings by club, see our guide on who has won the most la liga titles.
Real Madrid have won the most La Liga titles with 36 championships. They are the most successful club in Spanish football history. FC Barcelona sit second with 28 titles.
FC Barcelona won La Liga in 2024-25. Hansi Flick guided them to 88 points and a domestic treble. Lamine Yamal starred throughout the campaign.
FC Barcelona won the 2022-23 La Liga title. Xavi Hernández delivered the championship in his first full season as manager. They finished with 88 points, nine ahead of Real Madrid.
No team has completed an entire La Liga season without defeat. FC Barcelona came closest in 2017-18, losing just once. Unlike the Premier League's Arsenal in 2003-04, no Spanish club has achieved the invincible feat.
Real Madrid have won more La Liga titles than Barcelona. The count stands at 36 for Real Madrid versus 28 for FC Barcelona. Real Madrid lead by eight championships in La Liga history.
Three clubs have won La Liga in the past 20 years. Barcelona claimed eleven titles. Real Madrid won nine. Atlético Madrid took two championships in 2013-14 and 2020-21. No other club has won since Valencia in 2003-04.

Julian Mercer is a lifelong student of the game whose passion for football was sparked at an early age, after stepping onto the grass of Camp Nou as a six-year-old — a moment that left a lasting impression and set him on a permanent path into the sport. Since then, football has been both his lens on the world and his favourite language. Blending traditional fandom with a deep interest in tactics, squad building, and long-term team development, Julian has spent decades analysing the game from every angle. His fascination with football strategy was further shaped through years of immersive play in Football Manager, a series he has followed since the mid-1990s, developing a sharp eye for patterns, player profiles, and the fine margins that define success. At My World Of Football, Julian focuses on the stories beneath the surface — from tactical evolutions and managerial philosophies to the narratives that connect clubs, players, and supporters across generations. His writing aims to balance insight with accessibility, always grounded in a genuine love for the game.
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