List of Polish football champions
Template:Short description The Polish football champions are the annual winners of Poland's premier annual football competition. The title has been contested since 1920 in varying forms of competition. From 1921 to 1926 the championship was decided in a series of tournaments until the league was formed in 1927. Since then the title was awarded the winners of the highest league in Polish football. In 1951 the title was awarded to the winner of the Polish Cup.<ref name="r1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Pre-independence era (1913–1914)
Before Poland regained its independence in 1918, Polish clubs had held their own championships in Austrian and Prussian partitions.
Galicia (Austrian partition)
Competitions were organized by the original Polish Football Association, which was part of the Austrian Football Association.
| Season | Champions | Runners-up | Third Place | Top scorer(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1913 | Cracovia | Wisła Kraków | Pogoń Lwów | Template:Plainlist |
| 1914 | Tournament abandoned due to the First World War | |||
Province of Posen (Prussian partition)
Competitions were organized by Association of Polish Sports Societies for the German Reich (now Greater Poland Football Association, a part of Polish Football Association).
Not to be confused with Posen Football Championship, the regional competition organized by South Eastern German Association, a part of German Football Association in 1908–1914.
| Season | Champions (number of titles) |
Runners-up | Third Place |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1913 | Warta Poznań | Posnania | Ostrovia |
| 1914 | Warta Poznań (2) | Posnania | OstroviaTemplate:Efn |
| 1919 | Unia Poznań | Warta Poznań | Posnania |
Under German occupation (1940–1944)
Warsaw Championship
| Season | Champions | Runners-up | Third Place |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1942 | Polonia Warsaw | Okęcie Warsaw | Olimpia Warsaw |
| 1943 | Polonia Warsaw (2) | Piaseczno | Marymont Warsaw |
| 1944 | Tournament abandoned due to the Warsaw Uprising | ||
Kraków Championship
| Season | Champions | Runners-up | Third Place |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1940 | Wisła Kraków | Zwierzyniecki Kraków | Garbarnia Kraków |
| 1941 | Wisła Kraków (2) | Cracovia | AKS Kraków |
| 1943 | Cracovia | Wisła Kraków | Garbarnia Kraków |
| 1944 | Tournament abandoned due to the Warsaw Uprising | ||
List of champions
| Cracovia, 1921 champions |
| Pogoń Lwów, 1926 champions |
| Wisła Kraków, 1927 champions |
| Wisła Kraków, 1928 champions |
| Ruch Chorzów, 1938 champions |
| Ruch Chorzów, 1967–68 champions |
| Lech Poznań, 2014–15 champions |
| Jagiellonia Białystok, 2023–24 champions |
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Winning clubs
By number of championships
Bold indicates clubs currently playing in the top division.
Italics indicates defunct clubs.
By voivodeship
| Voivodeship | Championships | Clubs |
|---|---|---|
| Silesian | 33 | Ruch Chorzów (14), Górnik Zabrze (14), Polonia Bytom (2), Piast Gliwice (1), Raków Częstochowa (1), Szombierki Bytom (1) |
| Lesser Poland | 19 | Wisła Kraków (13), Cracovia (5), Garbarnia Kraków (1) |
| Masovian | 17 | Legia Warsaw (15), Polonia Warsaw (2) |
| Greater Poland | 11 | Lech Poznań (9), Warta Poznań (2) |
| Łódź | 6 | Widzew Łódź (4), ŁKS Łódź (2) |
| Lower Silesian | 4 | Śląsk Wrocław (2), Zagłębie Lubin (2) |
| Lwów | 4 | Pogoń Lwów (4) |
| Subcarpathian | 2 | Stal Mielec (2) |
| Podlachian | 1 | Jagiellonia Białystok (1) |
By city
| City | Championships | Clubs |
|---|---|---|
| Kraków | 19 | Wisła Kraków (13), Cracovia (5), Garbarnia Kraków (1) |
| Warsaw | 17 | Legia Warsaw (15), Polonia Warsaw (2) |
| Chorzów | 14 | Ruch Chorzów (14) |
| Zabrze | 14 | Górnik Zabrze (14) |
| Poznań | 11 | Lech Poznań (9), Warta Poznań (2) |
| Łódź | 6 | Widzew Łódź (4), ŁKS Łódź (2) |
| Lwów | 4 | Pogoń Lwów (4) |
| Bytom | 3 | Polonia Bytom (2), Szombierki Bytom (1) |
| Lubin | 2 | Zagłębie Lubin (2) |
| Mielec | 2 | Stal Mielec (2) |
| Wrocław | 2 | Śląsk Wrocław (2) |
| Białystok | 1 | Jagiellonia Białystok (1) |
| Częstochowa | 1 | Raków Częstochowa (1) |
| Gliwice | 1 | Piast Gliwice (1) |
Honoured teams
After 10 Polish Championship titles a representative Golden Star is placed above the team's badge to indicate 10 Polish Championship titles.
The current (as of July 2020) officially sanctioned Championship stars are:
- Golden Star 10 or more Polish Championship titles:
- Silver Star 5–9 Polish Championship titles:
- White Star 1-4 Polish Championship titles
Statistics
| Template:Location map+ | |
| Template:Location map+ | Template:Location map+ |
At the end of 2024–25 Ekstraklasa.
Bold indicates clubs currently playing in the top division.
Italics indicates clubs not existing anymore.
Source: 90minut
See also
Notes
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References
External links
- List of Polish football champions Template:In lang
- List of Polish football championships Template:In lang
Template:Football in Poland Template:UEFA national champions




