Nine titles. 75 matches were played. 367 goals scored. China did not just dominate the AFC Women’s Asian Cup – they turned it into their personal trophy cabinet for three straight decades.
The tournament has been running since 1975, starting as the Asian Cup Women’s Tournament before becoming the AFC Women’s Asian Cup in 2006. Australia hosts the 2026 edition, with Uzbekistan set to follow in 2029.
This article breaks down every champion, every finalist, and the overall team records that tell the full story of women’s football in Asia.
AFC Women’s Asian Cup: Successful Teams
China and Japan have the most top-four appearances in AFC Women’s Asian Cup history. China appeared in the top four 15 times, while Japan also reached 15 top-four finishes despite winning fewer titles.

Here is the complete breakdown of every nation’s top-four record across all 20 completed editions.
| Nation | Champions | Runners-up | Third Place | Fourth Place | Semi-finalists | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| China | 9 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 15 |
| North Korea | 3 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 9 |
| Chinese Taipei | 3 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 9 |
| Japan | 2 | 4 | 5 | 3 | 1 | 15 |
| Australia | 1 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 7 |
| Thailand | 1 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 6 |
| New Zealand | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
The tournament has been held 20 times since 1975. China won nine of those editions, North Korea and Chinese Taipei each won three, and Japan, Australia, Thailand, and New Zealand each claimed one title.
Now, let us look at what makes each of the most successful nations’ stories truly special.
1. China – 9 Titles
China is the most successful nation in AFC Women’s Asian Cup history by a significant margin. Their nine titles include a run of seven consecutive championships between 1986 and 1999, a stretch that has no parallel in Asian women’s football history.
| Stats | Value |
|---|---|
| Titles | 9 |
| Participations | 15 |
| Matches Played | 75 |
| Wins | 61 |
| Draws | 5 |
| Losses | 9 |
| Goals For | 367 |
| Goals Against | 38 |
| Goal Difference | +329 |
| Total Points | 188 |
China’s goal difference of +329 across 75 matches is the most dominant record in the tournament’s history by a very wide margin.

Their 61 wins from 75 matches give them a win rate of over 81 percent, which no other nation comes close to matching across a comparable number of appearances.
2. North Korea – 3 Titles
North Korea won three AFC Women’s Asian Cup titles in 2001, 2003, and 2008, making them the second most successful nation in tournament history, alongside Chinese Taipei. Their 2001 and 2003 wins came in back-to-back editions, and they were runners-up on three more occasions.
| Stats | Value |
|---|---|
| Titles | 3 |
| Participations | 10 |
| Matches Played | 53 |
| Wins | 36 |
| Draws | 6 |
| Losses | 11 |
| Goals For | 242 |
| Goals Against | 38 |
| Goal Difference | +204 |
| Total Points | 114 |
North Korea conceded only 38 goals across 53 matches, the same number as China despite playing 22 fewer games.

That defensive record shows just how difficult it was to score against North Korean women’s teams during their peak years in Asian football.
3. Chinese Taipei – 3 Titles
Chinese Taipei won three titles in the early editions of the tournament, with their most dominant display coming in the 1981 edition when they beat Thailand 5-0 in the final. They reached the top four in 9 of their 14 appearances and were runners-up twice and third-place finishers twice after their title-winning years.
| Stats | Value |
|---|---|
| Titles | 3 |
| Participations | 14 |
| Matches Played | 64 |
| Wins | 38 |
| Draws | 6 |
| Losses | 20 |
| Goals For | 175 |
| Goals Against | 84 |
| Goal Difference | +91 |
| Total Points | 120 |
Chinese Taipei’s three titles all came before 1990, during a period when they were one of the most organised and technically developed women’s football programs in Asia.

They have not won the tournament since 1983, but their overall record still places them third in all-time titles won.
4. Japan – 2 Titles
Japan won back-to-back AFC Women’s Asian Cup titles in 2014 and 2018, both times beating Australia in the final by a 1-0 scoreline. They have also been runners-up four times and reached the top four on 15 occasions, which is equal to China’s record for most top-four appearances in tournament history.
| Stats | Value |
|---|---|
| Titles | 2 |
| Participations | 17 |
| Matches Played | 81 |
| Wins | 55 |
| Draws | 6 |
| Losses | 20 |
| Goals For | 365 |
| Goals Against | 60 |
| Goal Difference | +305 |
| Total Points | 171 |
Japan has played the most matches of any nation in AFC Women’s Asian Cup history with 81 appearances, and their 55 wins place them second only to China in total victories.

Their consistent presence in the latter stages of every tournament makes them the most reliable performers in the competition’s modern era.
5. Australia – 1 Title
Australia won their only AFC Women’s Asian Cup title in 2010, beating North Korea on penalties after a 1-1 draw in China. They have been runners-up three times, including consecutive final defeats to Japan in 2014 and 2018. Australia will host the 2026 edition, giving tita strong chance to add a second title on home soil.
| Stats | Value |
|---|---|
| Titles | 1 |
| Participations | 8 |
| Matches Played | 40 |
| Wins | 21 |
| Draws | 6 |
| Losses | 13 |
| Goals For | 88 |
| Goals Against | 43 |
| Goal Difference | +45 |
| Total Points | 69 |
Australia’s win rate of over 52 percent across 40 matches is a solid record for a nation that only began competing regularly in the tournament from the mid-2000s.

As hosts of the 2026 edition, they will carry enormous home support and a strong squad built around several players now performing in Europe’s top leagues.
6. Thailand – 1 Title
Thailand won the AFC Women’s Asian Cup in 1983, beating India 3-0 in the final on home soil. They have been runners-up three times and reached the top four on six occasions across 17 appearances. Thailand is the only ASEAN nation to have won the tournament and remains one of the region’s most consistent women’s football programs.
| Stats | Value |
|---|---|
| Titles | 1 |
| Participations | 17 |
| Matches Played | 69 |
| Wins | 34 |
| Draws | 2 |
| Losses | 33 |
| Goals For | 115 |
| Goals Against | 171 |
| Goal Difference | -56 |
| Total Points | 104 |
Thailand’s 17 participations are tied with Japan for the most in tournament history. Their negative goal difference reflects the wide gap between the top Asian nations and the rest, but their single title and three runner-up finishes show that they have been competitive at the highest level at various points in the tournament’s history.
7. New Zealand – 1 Title
New Zealand is the only nation in AFC Women’s Asian Cup history to have a perfect tournament record. They won all four of their matches in the inaugural 1975 edition, beating Thailand 3-1 in the final to claim the first-ever title. They have not appeared in the tournament since and remain the only champion with a 100 percent win record.
| Stats | Value |
|---|---|
| Titles | 1 |
| Participations | 1 |
| Matches Played | 4 |
| Wins | 4 |
| Draws | 0 |
| Losses | 0 |
| Goals For | 11 |
| Goals Against | 3 |
| Goal Difference | +8 |
| Total Points | 12 |
New Zealand’s single appearance in 1975 produced a perfect tournament run that no nation has managed to replicate since. They won all four matches, conceded only 3 goals, and lifted the first AFC Women’s Asian Cup trophy in Hong Kong.

Their absence from every subsequent edition makes them one of the most unusual champions in Asian football history.
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Conclusion: China Leads, But The Race Keeps Getting Closer
China built the AFC Women’s Asian Cup around their dominance, and that record of nine titles may never be matched. But the tournament has grown far beyond any single nation.
Japan aispushing hard, Australia arisosting 2026, and South Korea is rising fast. The history is remarkable, but the future of women’s football in Asia promises to be even more competitive than what has come before.
