Curaçao women's national football team
| Association | Curaçao Football Federation | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Confederation | CONCACAF | ||
| Head coach | Dean Gorré | ||
| Captain | Kadisha Martina | ||
| Most caps | Ignarda Pieternella (12) | ||
| Top scorer | Kadisha Martina (8) | ||
| Home stadium | Stadion Rignaal 'Jean' Francisca Stadion Ergilio Hato | ||
| FIFA code | CUW | ||
| |||
| FIFA ranking | |||
| Current | 179 (12 June 2025) | ||
| Highest | 128 (May 2006) | ||
| Lowest | 179 (March – June 2023; March – December 2024) | ||
| First international | |||
| Cayman Islands 1–2 Netherlands Antilles (George Town, Cayman Islands; 18 March 2006) as modern Curaçao Guadeloupe 2–3 Curaçao (North Sound, Antigua and Barbuda; 25 April 2018) | |||
| Biggest win | |||
| Curaçao 6–1 Cayman Islands (Willemstad, Curaçao; 4 December 2023) | |||
| Biggest defeat | |||
| Suriname 7–1 Netherlands Antilles (Oranjestad, Aruba; 3 May 2006) as modern Curaçao Curaçao 0–6 Guatemala (Willemstad, Curaçao; 19 February 2022) | |||
The Curaçao women's national football team is overseen by the Curaçao Football Federation. Formally representing Netherlands Antilles, the team changed jurisdiction in 2010 when Curaçao gained autonomy from the Netherlands.