CONCACAF Champions Cup
| Organizing body | CONCACAF |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1962 |
| Region | North America Central America Caribbean |
| Number of teams | 27 (2024) |
| Qualifier for | FIFA Club World Cup FIFA Intercontinental Cup |
| Current champion(s) | Cruz Azul (7th title) |
| Most successful club(s) | América Cruz Azul (7 titles each) |
| Television broadcasters | CONCACAF (YouTube) |
| Website | CONCACAF Champions Cup |
| 2025 CONCACAF Champions Cup | |
The CONCACAF Champions Cup, formerly known as CONCACAF Champions League (2008–2023), is an international association football competition organized by CONCACAF as its top continental tournament for clubs from North America, Central America, and the Caribbean. The champions automatically qualify for the FIFA Club World Cup and the FIFA Intercontinental Cup.
The tournament currently uses a knockout format; it had a group stage prior to the 2018 edition. Unlike its European and South American counterparts, the winners of the CONCACAF Champions Cup does not automatically qualify for the following edition of the tournament.
The title has been won by 30 clubs, 14 of which have won the title more than once. Liga MX from Mexico is the most successful league, with 40 titles in total. The second most successful league is the Liga FPD from Costa Rica, with six titles in total. Club América and Cruz Azul are the most successful club in the competition, winning seven titles each. The most successful non-Mexican club is Deportivo Saprissa, winning three titles. The only four teams to successfully defend the title are all Mexican: América, Cruz Azul, Pachuca and Monterrey. The current champions of the competition are Cruz Azul, who defeated Vancouver Whitecaps FC in the 2025 final.