Women's FA Cup
| Founded | 1970 |
|---|---|
| Region | England Wales |
| Number of teams | 514 (2024–25) |
| Current champions | Chelsea (6th title) |
| Most successful club(s) | Arsenal (14 titles) |
| Television broadcasters | Optus Sport (Australia) Viettel (Vietnam) |
| Website | Women's FA Cup |
| 2024–25 Women's FA Cup | |
The Women's FA Challenge Cup is the top annual cup tournament for women's clubs in English football. Founded in 1970, it has been named the WFA Cup, FA Women's Cup, and now Women's FA Cup (currently known as the Adobe Women's FA Cup for sponsorship reasons).
Designed as an equivalent to the FA Cup in men's football, the competition began in 1970–71 as the Mitre Challenge Trophy, organised by the Women's Football Association (WFA). There were 71 entrants, including teams from Scotland and Wales.
The WFA ran the competition for the first 23 editions, during which time Southampton won the cup eight times. The Football Association (FA) began administering English women's football in mid-1993.
Arsenal holds the record for most titles overall, having won fourteen times. The current cup holders are Chelsea, who defeated Manchester United 3–0 in the 2025 final to win their sixth FA Cup title.