2010–11 Serie A

Serie A
Season2010–11
Dates28 August 2010 – 22 May 2011
ChampionsAC Milan
18th Italian title
RelegatedSampdoria
Brescia
Bari
Champions LeagueAC Milan
Internazionale
Napoli
Udinese
Europa LeagueLazio
Roma
Palermo
Matches played380
Goals scored955 (2.51 per match)
Top goalscorerAntonio Di Natale
(28 goals)
Biggest home win
4 goals (8 matches)
Biggest away winPalermo 0–7 Udinese
(27 February 2011)
Highest scoring AC Milan 4–4 Udinese
(9 January 2011)
Internazionale 5–3 Roma
(6 February 2011)

The 2010–11 Serie A (known as the Serie A TIM for sponsorship reasons) was the 109th season of top-tier Italian football, the 79th in a round-robin tournament, and the 1st since its organization under a league committee separate from Serie B. It began on 28 August 2010 and ended on 22 May 2011. Internazionale were the defending champions.

AC Milan won the 2010–11 Serie A and their 18th league title overall with a scoreless draw away to Roma on 7 May 2011. This result ensured that with two rounds remaining AC Milan's nearest rival Internazionale could only draw level on points, and AC Milan holds the tiebreaker based on their better head-to-head record. The result prompted celebrations at AC Milan's Piazza del Duomo. The trophy was presented at AC Milan's next home game on 14 May.

It was AC Milan's first Scudetto since 2004 and it ended a run of five successive Serie A titles by their rival Internazionale. It was the first league title for manager Massimiliano Allegri, winning in his first year with AC Milan and who was for many a surprise choice as manager. AC Milan led the table for most of the season and secured the title with two games remaining. Notably, they defeated defending champions Internazionale twice during the season and also did the same to third place challenger Napoli. AC Milan were credited for strengthening their squad with Zlatan Ibrahimović and Robinho in the summer as well as picking up Antonio Cassano and Mark van Bommel in January.

This would be the last Scudetto not won by Juventus until the 2020–21 Serie A.