Serie A is the highest level of Italian professional football, and it stands among the most prestigious domestic leagues on the planet.
From the very first Serie A season in 1929-30 to Inter Milan’s triumphant 21st Scudetto in 2025-26, the competition has delivered drama, dynasty, and some of the greatest footballers who ever lived.
This complete Serie A winners list covers every champion from the pre-modern era of 1898 right through to the present day, giving you the definitive record of Italian football history.
Known domestically as the Scudetto (meaning ‘little shield’ in Italian), the Serie A title is the most coveted prize in Italian club football.
Juventus hold the record with 36 championships, followed by Inter Milan with 21 and AC Milan with 19.
But the story of Italian football is not just one of Turin’s black-and-white giants, it’s also the tale of Napoli’s Maradona-era revolution, Helenio Herrera’s Grande Inter, Arrigo Sacchi’s all-conquering Milan, and Hellas Verona’s impossible fairytale in 1985.
Whether you’re looking for the complete Serie A champions list, a breakdown of Scudetto winners by season, or a deep dive into the clubs and managers who shaped Italian football, this article covers it all.
Complete Serie A Winners List by Year (1898-2026)
The table below covers every season of Italian top-flight football, from the inaugural 1898 Championship right through to the 2025-26 Serie A campaign. Note that the competition was known under different names before becoming Serie A in 1929-30.
| Season | Winner | Runner-Up |
| 1897-98 | Genoa | Internazionale Torino |
| 1898-99 | Genoa | Internazionale Torino |
| 1899-00 | Genoa | Torinese |
| 1900-01 | Milan | Genoa |
| 1901-02 | Genoa | Milan |
| 1902-03 | Genoa | Juventus |
| 1903-04 | Genoa | Juventus |
| 1904-05 | Juventus | Genoa |
| 1905-06 | Milan | Juventus |
| 1906-07 | Milan | Genoa |
| 1907-08 | Pro Vercelli | Genoa |
| 1908-09 | Pro Vercelli | US Milanese |
| 1909-10 | Inter | Pro Vercelli |
| 1910-11 | Pro Vercelli | Genoa |
| 1911-12 | Pro Vercelli | Inter |
| 1912-13 | Pro Vercelli | Genoa |
| 1913-14 | Casale | Pro Vercelli |
| 1914-15 | Genoa | Lazio |
| 1919-20 | Inter | Pro Vercelli |
| 1920-21 | Pro Vercelli | Pisa |
| 1921-22 | Pro Vercelli | Fortitudo |
| 1921-22 | Novese | Sampierdarenese |
| 1922-23 | Genoa | Lazio |
| 1923-24 | Genoa | Savoia |
| 1924-25 | Bologna | Alba Roma |
| 1925-26 | Juventus | Bologna |
| 1926-27 | No winner | Torino stripped |
| 1927-28 | Torino | Genoa |
| 1928-29 | Bologna | Torino |
| 1929-30 | Inter (Ambrosiana) | Genoa |
| 1930-31 | Juventus | Bologna |
| 1931-32 | Juventus | Bologna |
| 1932-33 | Juventus | Ambrosiana-Inter |
| 1933-34 | Juventus | Napoli |
| 1934-35 | Juventus | Ambrosiana |
| 1935-36 | Bologna | Roma |
| 1936-37 | Bologna | Lazio |
| 1937-38 | Inter | Juventus |
| 1938-39 | Bologna | Torino |
| 1939-40 | Inter | Bologna |
| 1940-41 | Bologna | Inter |
| 1941-42 | Roma | Torino |
| 1942-43 | Torino | Livorno |
| 1943-44 | No official title | |
| 1944-45 | No official title | |
| 1945-46 | Torino | Juventus |
| 1946-47 | Torino | Juventus |
| 1947-48 | Torino | Milan |
| 1948-49 | Torino | Inter |
| 1949-50 | Juventus | Milan |
| 1950-51 | Inter | Milan |
| 1951-52 | Juventus | Milan |
| 1952-53 | Inter | Juventus |
| 1953-54 | Inter | Juventus |
| 1954-55 | Milan | Udinese |
| 1955-56 | Fiorentina | Milan |
| 1956-57 | Milan | Fiorentina |
| 1957-58 | Juventus | Fiorentina |
| 1958-59 | Milan | Fiorentina |
| 1959-60 | Juventus | Fiorentina |
| 1960-61 | Juventus | Milan |
| 1961-62 | Milan | Inter |
| 1962-63 | Inter | Juventus |
| 1963-64 | Bologna | Inter |
| 1964-65 | Inter | Milan |
| 1965-66 | Inter | Bologna |
| 1966-67 | Juventus | Inter |
| 1967-68 | Milan | Napoli |
| 1968-69 | Fiorentina | Cagliari |
| 1969-70 | Cagliari | Inter |
| 1970-71 | Inter | Milan |
| 1971-72 | Juventus | AC Milan |
| 1972-73 | Juventus | Milan |
| 1973-74 | Lazio | Juventus |
| 1974-75 | Juventus | Napoli |
| 1975-76 | Torino | Juventus |
| 1976-77 | Juventus | Torino |
| 1977-78 | Juventus | Vicenza |
| 1978-79 | Milan | Inter |
| 1979-80 | Inter | Juventus |
| 1980-81 | Juventus | Roma |
| 1981-82 | Juventus | Fiorentina |
| 1982-83 | Roma | Juventus |
| 1983-84 | Juventus | Roma |
| 1984-85 | Verona | Torino |
| 1985-86 | Juventus | Roma |
| 1986-87 | Napoli | Juventus |
| 1987-88 | Milan | Napoli |
| 1988-89 | Inter | Milan |
| 1989-90 | Napoli | Milan |
| 1990-91 | Sampdoria | Milan |
| 1991-92 | Milan | Juventus |
| 1992-93 | Milan | Inter |
| 1993-94 | Milan | Juventus |
| 1994-95 | Juventus | Lazio |
| 1995-96 | Milan | Juventus |
| 1996-97 | Juventus | Parma |
| 1997-98 | Juventus | Inter |
| 1998-99 | Milan | Lazio |
| 1999-00 | Lazio | Juventus |
| 2000-01 | Roma | Juventus |
| 2001-02 | Juventus | Roma |
| 2002-03 | Juventus | Inter |
| 2003-04 | Milan | Roma |
| 2004-05 | No winner | |
| 2005-06 | Inter | Roma |
| 2006-07 | Inter | Roma |
| 2007-08 | Inter | Roma |
| 2008-09 | Inter | Juventus |
| 2009-10 | Inter | Roma |
| 2010-11 | Milan | Inter |
| 2011-12 | Juventus | Milan |
| 2012-13 | Juventus | Napoli |
| 2013-14 | Juventus | Roma |
| 2014-15 | Juventus | Roma |
| 2015-16 | Juventus | Napoli |
| 2016-17 | Juventus | Roma |
| 2017-18 | Juventus | Napoli |
| 2018-19 | Juventus | Napoli |
| 2019-20 | Juventus | Inter |
| 2020-21 | Inter | Milan |
| 2021-22 | Milan | Inter |
| 2022-23 | Napoli | Lazio |
| 2023-24 | Inter | Milan |
| 2024-25 | Napoli | Inter |
| 2025-26 | Inter | Napoli |
* Note: The 1904-05 season (Calciopoli scandal) is listed as ‘No winner’ as the title was stripped from Juventus with no reassignment.
The 1926-27 title was also vacated after Torino were stripped following a bribery investigation. WWII caused the suspension of official championships in 1943-44 and 1944-45.
Related: Explore our complete guides to the UEFA Champions League Winners List, the UEFA Conference League Winners List, the Ballon d’Or Winners List, and the La Liga Winners List, and league champions from England, Spain, Italy, Germany, and beyond.
Serie A Titles by Club: All-Time Standings
| Club | Total Titles | Runner-Up Finishes | First Title | Latest Title |
| Juventus | 36 | 21 | 1905-06 | 2019-20 |
| Inter Milan | 21 | 13 | 1909-10 | 2025-26 |
| AC Milan | 19 | 14 | 1900-01 | 2021-22 |
| Genoa | 9 | 5 | 1897-98 | 1923-24 |
| Torino | 7 | 8 | 1927-28 | 1975-76 |
| Bologna | 7 | 5 | 1924-25 | 1963-64 |
| Pro Vercelli | 7 | 3 | 1907-08 | 1921-22 |
| Roma | 3 | 7 | 1941-42 | 2000-01 |
| Lazio | 2 | 4 | 1973-74 | 1999-00 |
| Fiorentina | 2 | 3 | 1955-56 | 1968-69 |
| Napoli | 4 | 3 | 1986-87 | 2024-25 |
| Cagliari | 1 | 0 | 1969-70 | 1969-70 |
| Sampdoria | 1 | 1 | 1990-91 | 1990-91 |
| Verona | 1 | 0 | 1984-85 | 1984-85 |
| Casale | 1 | 0 | 1913-14 | 1913-14 |
| Novese | 1 | 0 | 1921-22 | 1921-22 |
Top 10 Clubs With Most Serie A Titles
1. Juventus — 36 Titles
Juventus are Italian football. No single club in any major European league has so thoroughly dominated their domestic competition over such a sustained period.
The Bianconeri from Turin have won the Scudetto 36 times more than the combined total of every other club in the top five.
Their story spans three distinct golden eras. The first came in the 1930s when Carlo Carcano built the foundational dynasty.
The second arrived in the late 1970s and 1980s under Giovanni Trapattoni, who won six Scudetti with a team featuring Michel Platini, Paolo Rossi, and the great libero Gaetano Scirea.
They added European glory, a European Cup in 1985, two UEFA Cups, and a Cup Winners’ Cup.
Marcello Lippi then delivered five titles between 1994 and 2003, including the 1996 Champions League. But their most extraordinary sequence came in the modern era.
Antonio Conte’s 2011-12 unbeaten side started a run of nine consecutive Scudetti, eventually broken by his own Inter Milan side in 2020-21.
The Calciopoli scandal of 2006 forced them into Serie B and stripped two titles — wounds that still sting in Turin, but the club’s institutional dominance has remained largely intact.
2. Inter Milan — 21 Titles
Inter Milan are Italian football’s other great constant, though their history has been less linear than Juventus’s.
The club known as the Nerazzurri (Black and Blues) won the first-ever Serie A title in 1929-30 when they were still called Ambrosiana-Inter, setting a precedent for future excellence.
Their greatest era came in the 1960s under Helenio Herrera’s Grande Inter, producing back-to-back European Cups in 1964 and 1965 alongside domestic dominance.
Then came the ‘Triplete’ of 2009-10 under Jose Mourinho, Serie A, Coppa Italia, and Champions League, one of the finest single-season achievements in European football history.
Inter’s modern resurgence is equally impressive. Since 2021, they have been the most consistent force in Serie A, winning four Scudetti in six seasons including their 21st under Cristian Chivu in 2025-26.
The Thuram-Martinez strike partnership and Inzaghi’s tactical flexibility before Chivu’s arrival brought Inter firmly back to elite status.
3. AC Milan — 19 Titles
Few clubs have experienced the heights and depths that AC Milan have. The Rossoneri were pioneers, winning Italy’s first modern football championship in 1900-01, and have remained relevant in virtually every era since.
Their greatest period was undeniably the late 1980s and early 1990s under Arrigo Sacchi and then Fabio Capello.
The Dutch trio of Gullit, Van Basten, and Rijkaard formed the nucleus of a team that won four Scudetti and two European Cups.
Capello’s 1991-92 side went an entire Serie A season unbeaten. Paolo Maldini, playing his entire career at the club, collected seven league titles.
After a trophy drought that stretched from 2011 until 2021-22, Milan’s Scudetto victory under Stefano Pioli — ending an 11-year wait — felt like a seismic moment.
The renaissance of Rafael Leao and Theo Hernandez, alongside intelligent recruitment, suggested the Rossoneri were returning to relevance.
4. Genoa — 9 Titles
Genoa are Italian football’s original giants, though you would struggle to recognise them as such today. The Ligurian club won nine championships between 1898 and 1924, including the very first Italian football title and six in the first decade of play.
They were the club that defined the sport’s early years in Italy, and their ninth and final title in 1923-24 prompted the Scudetto tradition, the little shield worn on the jersey, as a celebration of their achievement.
Since that final title over a century ago, Genoa have oscillated between the top flight and the Championship. They remain one of Italian football’s most storied clubs but one of its most underachieving in the modern era.
5. Torino — 7 Titles
Seven titles places Torino in the history books, but the number obscures the true magnitude of their story.
Five of those seven championships came consecutively between 1945-46 and 1948-49, when Grande Torino were arguably the best team in Europe.
They had ten regular starters capped for Italy, played fluid, attacking football, and appeared on the verge of a generational dynasty.
Then came Superga. The 1949 air disaster killed the entire first team and coaching staff, robbing football of one of its greatest ever sides.
Torino have won just one title since — the 1975-76 season — and remain the club defined more by tragedy than triumph, even as they occupy a permanent place in Serie A’s upper half.
6. Bologna — 7 Titles
Bologna’s seven titles came in two distinct clusters: four in the 1930s and early 1940s, when they were Serie A’s other great power alongside Juventus, and then a final title in 1963-64.
Their 1930s teams, built around physicality and technical precision under Hermann Felsner, were considered champions of the world after their international tour victories.
In 2024-25, Bologna qualified for the Champions League for the first time in their modern history — a remarkable achievement that suggests this ancient club still has chapters left to write.
7. Pro Vercelli — 7 Titles
Pro Vercelli’s seven titles represent one of football’s great historical curiosities. A club from a small Piedmontese town, they were Italy’s dominant force in the 1900s and 1910s, winning seven championships including four between 1908 and 1913.
They were known for their use of purely Italian players at a time when other clubs relied on foreign talent.
Pro Vercelli now play in the lower reaches of Italian football, making them the most extreme example of a club that once stood at the summit of the game and fell to near-total obscurity.
8. Napoli — 4 Titles
Napoli’s four Scudetti carry a weight and significance that transcends mere numbers.
The first two, in 1986-87 and 1989-90, came during the Maradona era when the city of Naples, long considered the poor relation of Italian football, beat the wealthy northern clubs at their own game.
Diego’s first title celebration remains one of football’s most extraordinary mass moments of joy.
After three decades of waiting, Luciano Spalletti’s 2022-23 side won the third Scudetto with a record 90 points, featuring Khvicha Kvaratskhelia and Victor Osimhen as the new generation’s standard-bearers.
Then, Antonio Conte, the same manager who had ended Juventus’s nine-in-a-row with Inter, delivered a fourth title in 2024-25, cementing Napoli’s position as Italian football’s most compelling club of the 2020s.
9. Roma — 3 Titles
Roma’s three Scudetti, 1941-42, 1982-83, and 2000-01 came across three distinct eras, each representing a peak moment for the Giallorossi.
The 1982-83 title under Nils Liedholm was particularly celebrated, while Fabio Capello’s 2000-01 triumph featuring Francesco Totti, Gabriel Batistuta, and Cafu stands as their finest modern achievement.
Roma have since been consistent Champions League qualifiers without adding to their Scudetto tally.
The 2024-25 season, however, saw them finish in the Champions League places for the first time in years, suggesting renewed ambition.
10. Lazio — 2 Titles
Lazio’s two Serie A titles, 1973-74 and 1999-2000, are separated by 26 years but share a common thread of unexpected triumph.
The first, under Tommaso Maestrelli with Giorgio Chinaglia as the talisman, shocked Italian football.
The second, under Swede Sven-Goran Eriksson with a squad featuring Nesta, Veron, Crespo, and Nedved, came in one of Serie A’s most dramatic title races, edged on the final day from Juventus.
Most Consecutive Serie A Titles
| Club | Consecutive Titles | Seasons | Manager(s) |
| Juventus | 9 | 2011-12 to 2019-20 | Conte (3), Allegri (5), Sarri (1) |
| Grande Torino | 5 | 1945-46 to 1948-49 | Multiple managers |
| Inter Milan | 5 | 2005-06 to 2009-10 | Mancini (3), Mourinho (2) |
| Juventus | 5 | 1930-31 to 1934-35 | Carlo Carcano |
| Inter Milan | 3 | 2007-08 to 2009-10 | Mancini (1), Mourinho (2) |
Juventus’s nine consecutive titles from 2011-12 to 2019-20 is the longest winning streak in the history of any top European league.
No club in the Premier League, La Liga, Bundesliga, or Ligue 1 has matched it. Antonio Conte started the run, handing over to Massimiliano Allegri who won five in a row before Maurizio Sarri added the ninth in 2019-20. Inter’s Antonio Conte then famously ended the streak in 2020-21.
Serie A Records
| Record | Club / Player | Detail | Season |
| Most Championships (Club) | Juventus | 36 titles total | 1898-2020 |
| Most Consecutive Titles | Juventus | 9 in a row | 2011-12 to 2019-20 |
| First-Ever Champion | Genoa | Won inaugural 1898 tournament | 1897-98 |
| Highest Points (Modern era) | Inter Milan | 94 points | 2023-24 |
| Napoli Record Points | Napoli | 90 points | 2022-23 |
| Unbeaten Season | Juventus | 38 games unbeaten | 2011-12 |
| Unbeaten League Run (Milan) | AC Milan | 58 Serie A games | 1991-93 |
| Most Titles as Manager | Giovanni Trapattoni | 7 Scudetti | 1976-1994 |
| Biggest Shock Champion | Hellas Verona | Only title ever | 1984-85 |
| Only Southern Club Era | Napoli | Two titles (Maradona) | 1987, 1990 |
| Longest Title Drought Broken | AC Milan | 11 years between titles | 2011-2022 |
| Most Apps in Serie A | Gianluigi Buffon | 657 appearances | 1995-2023 |
| Most Scudetti as Player | Gianluigi Buffon | 10 winners medals | 2002-2020 |
Most Successful Serie A Managers
The managers who have shaped Serie A history are among the most tactically influential coaches the game has ever produced.
From Helenio Herrera’s catenaccio revolution to Arrigo Sacchi’s pressing system, Italy has been a laboratory for football’s greatest tactical innovations.
| Manager | Serie A Titles | Clubs | Active Years |
| Giovanni Trapattoni | 7 | Juventus (6), Inter (1) | 1976-1994 |
| Massimiliano Allegri | 6 | Juventus (5), Milan (1) | 2010-2024 |
| Fabio Capello | 5 | Milan (4), Roma (1) | 1991-2004 |
| Marcello Lippi | 5 | Juventus | 1994-2003 |
| Carlo Carcano | 5 | Juventus | 1930-1935 |
| Antonio Conte | 4 | Juventus (3), Inter (1), Napoli (1)* | 2011-2025 |
| Roberto Mancini | 3 | Inter | 2005-2008 |
| Hermann Felsner | 3 | Bologna | 1935-1941 |
| Helenio Herrera | 3 | Inter | 1963-1966 |
| Carlo Ancelotti | 1 | Milan | 2003-04 |
* Antonio Conte’s title count includes his work at multiple clubs. His record of winning the Scudetto with three different clubs (Juventus, Inter, Napoli) is unmatched in the modern era.
Players With Most Serie A Title Medals
| Player | Title Medals | Club(s) | Years Active |
| Paolo Maldini | 7 | AC Milan | 1987-2004 |
| Costacurta | 7 | AC Milan | 1987-2004 |
| Javier Zanetti | 5 | Inter Milan | 2006-2010 |
| Alessandro Del Piero | 7 | Juventus | 1994-2012 |
| Gianluigi Buffon | 10 | Juventus | 2001-2021 |
| Giorgio Chiellini | 9 | Juventus | 2005-2022 |
| Leonardo Bonucci | 8 | Juventus | 2011-2023 |
| Andrea Pirlo | 6 | AC Milan (3), Juventus (3) | 2003-2015 |
| Filippo Inzaghi | 5 | Juventus (2), AC Milan (3) | 1997-2011 |
| Francesco Totti | 3 | Roma | 1994-2017 |
Gianluigi Buffon’s 10 Scudetti across stints at Juventus make him the single most decorated player in Serie A history. His longevity spanning from 1995 to 2023 is almost as remarkable as his medal haul.
Alessandro Del Piero’s seven titles, all with Juventus, represent an era-defining loyalty that saw him stay through the club’s Serie B exile and return.
Golden Eras in Serie A History
1930s: Juventus and Bologna
The 1930s were dominated by two clubs: Juventus (five consecutive titles, 1931-35) and Bologna (four titles, including three between 1936 and 1941).
These were the years when Italian football established its competitive identity, with Serie A becoming a fully professional, highly organised competition watched by tens of thousands.
1940s: Grande Torino
The greatest team Italy has ever produced never got to show the world what they could achieve. Grande Torino’s five-in-a-row from 1946 to 1949 was built on a style and quality that set standards not matched for decades.
Valentino Mazzola was their inspiration — a midfielder of extraordinary technical and physical gifts. His son Sandro would go on to lead Grande Inter in the 1960s.
1960s: Grande Inter and Catenaccio
Helenio Herrera’s Inter perfected the catenaccio system that Italy became synonymous with, adding attacking transition and devastating set-piece delivery to an impenetrable defensive structure.
Their back-to-back European Cups and three Scudetti between 1963 and 1966 represented Italian football at its tactical peak.
1980s: Maradona and the Napoli Awakening
For the first time, a southern club genuinely challenged — and defeated — the northern giants. Napoli’s two Scudetti with Maradona represent more than sporting achievement; they were a cultural statement from a city that had long felt excluded from Italy’s economic and sporting mainstream.
1990s: Serie A as the World’s Best League
The 1990s were Italian football’s commercial and competitive apex. Serie A attracted the world’s greatest players, Ronaldo, Zidane, Vieri, Del Piero, Maldini, Baresi, Totti and the league’s tactical sophistication was unmatched. Juventus, Milan, and Inter traded dominance in an era of genuine European supremacy.
2010s: Juventus’s Unbreakable Nine
Nine consecutive Scudetti from 2011-12 to 2019-20 gave Juventus an unassailable position in Italian football history.
Bianconeri critics could point to domestic hegemony without European payoff; five Champions League finals in nine years produced zero titles, but the Scudetto record remains extraordinary.
Pirlo, Bonucci, Chiellini, Buffon, Tevez, Dybala, and Ronaldo all contributed to the dynasty.
2020s: Competitive Era Returns
The 2020s have been Italian football’s most competitive decade in 30 years.
Six different clubs have won or seriously challenged for the title since 2020, reflecting investment from American ownership at Milan and Roma, sustained excellence at Inter, and Napoli’s transformation under both Spalletti and Conte.
The 2025-26 title win by Inter under Chivu, after Napoli’s back-to-back attempt fell short, signals that the competitive battle will continue.
20 Interesting Facts About Serie A Champions
1. Juventus’s nine consecutive Serie A titles (2011-2020) is the longest winning streak in any top European league — no club in England, Spain, Germany, or France has matched it.
2. The 1984-85 Serie A season produced football’s greatest shock: Hellas Verona, a club from a mid-sized city in northern Italy, won the Scudetto. They have never won it since.
3. AC Milan went an extraordinary 58 Serie A matches without defeat between 1991 and 1993 under Fabio Capello, a record that still stands in Italian football.
4. The 2004-05 Serie A season has no official champion. Juventus won it on the pitch but were stripped due to the Calciopoli match-fixing scandal, and the title was not reassigned.
5. Genoa CFC won nine Italian championships between 1898 and 1924 but have not won a major title since. They are the definition of a sleeping giant.
6. Grande Torino’s entire first team and coaching staff were killed in the Superga air disaster of 1949 — 31 people in total. It remains the most devastating tragedy in Italian football history.
7. Naples erupted into three days of celebrations in 2023 when Napoli won their third Scudetto — 33 years after their second. Some Neapolitan fans had placed banners in the cemetery saying ‘Those who didn’t make it — but we did’.
8. Pro Vercelli won seven Italian championships before 1922 but now play in Italy’s fourth division. No club in world football has fallen further from the summit.
9. Inter Milan’s 2009-10 Treble under Jose Mourinho (Serie A, Coppa Italia, Champions League) is one of only a handful of Trebles achieved in European football history.
10. Giovanni Trapattoni won seven Serie A titles — six with Juventus and one with Inter — making him the most successful manager in Italian league history.
11. The Scudetto badge tradition was started by Genoa in 1924, when they sewed a small shield to their shirt to mark their ninth title — creating one of football’s most enduring visual traditions.
12. Juventus have three gold stars on their crest representing 30 or more Scudetti. Inter and Milan each have one star for 10+ titles.
13. Cagliari, a club from the island of Sardinia, won their only Serie A title in 1969-70, inspired by Gigi Riva, Italy’s all-time leading scorer. They have never come close since.
14. Antonio Conte is the only manager in Serie A history to have won the Scudetto with three different clubs: Juventus (x3), Inter, and Napoli.
15. Roberto Mancini won three consecutive Serie A titles with Inter Milan (2005-06, 2006-07, 2007-08) but those were awarded during the Calciopoli scandal re-organisation, giving Inter an unusual sequence of titles.
16. Sampdoria’s only Serie A title (1990-91) came under Yugoslav coach Vujadin Boskov with a squad featuring Roberto Mancini and Gianluca Vialli. They remain the only club from Liguria to win the modern Scudetto.
17. The city of Turin has won more combined Serie A titles than any other Italian city, with Juventus (36) and Torino (7) providing a combined 43 championships.
18. AC Milan’s Paolo Maldini is widely considered the greatest Serie A player of all time, winning seven Scudetti while playing his entire career at a single club across 25 years.
19. Fiorentina’s two Serie A titles came in 1955-56 and 1968-69 — and despite being a top-flight club for virtually every season since, they have not won a third.
20. Inter Milan’s 21st title in 2025-26 under Cristian Chivu — a former Inter player — extended the club’s record as the most successful club in the post-Juventus-dominance era, having won four Scudetti in six seasons.
Conclusion
Serie A’s history stretches across more than 125 years of Italian football, from Genoa’s first title on a single day in Turin in 1898 to Inter Milan’s 21st Scudetto in 2026.
It is a story told through the dynasties of Juventus, the tactical genius of Inter’s Grande Inter, the cultural revolution of Maradona’s Napoli, and the exquisite football of Sacchi’s Milan.
The complete Serie A winners list reveals Italian football’s most enduring truth: dominance is cyclical. Juventus owned the 2010s in a way that seemed permanent, then suddenly ended.
Inter’s current resurgence looks formidable. Napoli have shown that geography is no barrier to greatness.
And somewhere out there, a club nobody is talking about might be building the next Hellas Verona story.
With Inter defending their 21st Scudetto in the 2026-27 season, and Napoli, Milan, and a resurgent Roma all capable of challenging, the next chapter of the Serie A winners list promises to be every bit as compelling as the 125 that came before it.
Italian football, at its best, has always rewarded those paying attention.
