2024–25 Women's Super League
| Season | 2024–25 |
|---|---|
| Dates | 20 September 2024 – 10 May 2025 |
| Champions | Chelsea 8th title 6th in a row |
| Relegated | Crystal Palace |
| Champions League | Chelsea Arsenal Manchester United |
| Matches played | 132 |
| Goals scored | 424 (3.21 per match) |
| Top goalscorer | Alessia Russo Khadija Shaw (12 goals) |
| Best goalkeeper | Hannah Hampton Phallon Tullis-Joyce (13 clean sheets) |
| Biggest home win | Arsenal 5–0 Brighton & Hove Albion (8 November 2024) Arsenal 5–0 Crystal Palace (19 January 2025) Arsenal 5–0 Tottenham Hotspur (16 February 2025) |
| Biggest away win | Crystal Palace 0–7 Chelsea (27 September 2024) |
| Highest scoring | Crystal Palace 1–7 West Ham United (27 April 2025) |
| Longest winning run | 9 games Chelsea |
| Longest unbeaten run | 22 games Chelsea |
| Longest winless run | 12 games Crystal Palace |
| Longest losing run | 6 games Aston Villa |
| Highest attendance | 56,784 Arsenal 5–0 Tottenham Hotspur (16 February 2025) |
| Lowest attendance | 502 Crystal Palace 1–1 Everton (10 November 2024) |
← 2023–24 2025–26 → | |
The 2024–25 Women's Super League season (also known as the Barclays Women's Super League for sponsorship reasons) was the 14th season of the Women's Super League (WSL) since it was formed in 2010. It was the sixth season after the rebranding of the four highest levels in English women's football.
Chelsea were the defending champions, having won their fifth consecutive and seventh overall title in the previous season.
After Arsenal's 2–5 defeat to Aston Villa and Chelsea's 1–0 victory over Manchester United, Chelsea were confirmed to have won their sixth consecutive and eighth overall title. At the end of the season, Chelsea also became the first team to finish a 22-game WSL season unbeaten.
Crystal Palace, who in the previous season had been promoted to the WSL for the first time in their history, were relegated back to the Women's Championship after just one season in the top flight on 27 April 2025, after a 1–7 defeat at home to West Ham United.
Ahead of the season, the WSL announced a change to the way games were broadcast domestically in the UK. The FA Player streaming service was replaced by the league's YouTube channel for the live broadcast of all 66 league matches not televised by BBC or Sky Sports. The transition followed the creation and subsequent takeover of the running of the league by the Women's Professional Leagues Limited (initially called 'NewCo' on a temporary basis), an independent, club-owned entity, which replaced The Football Association after recommendations from a government-backed review into the women's game in 2023.