Barça Women won their seventh consecutive league title, sealing a run of domestic supremacy that is now the longest in Spain and the second-longest in Europe's top leagues.
Alexia Putellas, who has collected nine recent league titles, is at the center of that run. The trophy this season marked FC Barcelona's 11th league championship overall and extended a streak that saw Barcelona win seven league titles in the last seven seasons.
The scale of the achievement is stark: Barça Women have now claimed seven straight championships while conceding 15 goals or less across those seasons, and this campaign was the sixth time the club has won the league with more than 100 goals scored. Barcelona's goal totals in recent title-winning seasons underline the point — 167 goals in 2020/21, 159 in 2021/22, 137 in 2022/23, 118 in 2023/24 and 137 in 2024/25 — and the team had already reached 116 goals with five games still to go in the current title year.
That offensive record sits alongside a defensive consistency few clubs can match. Aitana Bonmatí, now a seven-time league winner, is part of a squad that has combined prolific scoring with stingy defending to a degree that has reshaped the domestic landscape.
Barcelona's run also resets Spain's historical hierarchy. The club moved ahead of Athletic Club, which has five league titles, widening the gap at the top of the national roll of honor. On a wider stage, Barça Women surpassed a previous benchmark of six consecutive league crowns held by Chelsea, and now occupy the second-longest consecutive-title run among Europe's major domestic leagues.
The only longer sequence belongs to Olympique Lyonnais, which won the French league 14 times in a row between 2006 and 2020. That record remains the continental yardstick: Barcelona's seven titles are historic in Spain and unprecedented for fcb's women's team, but they still sit well short of Lyon's fourteen-season run.
The tension in this story is precise. Barcelona's dominance is unambiguous domestically, yet it exists inside a broader European context where longevity at the very top has been achieved elsewhere. The club's pattern — seasons of extraordinary scoring followed by similarly tight defensive tallies — proves the model works, but the Lyon comparison highlights that domination can be taken further and that a new benchmark still stands between Barcelona and the continental record.
What happens next is now clear in sporting terms: Barcelona must decide whether to treat seven consecutive titles as the peak of a generation or the opening chapter of a campaign to chase Lyon's 14-year mark. Practically, that will shape recruitment, minutes for veterans such as Putellas and Bonmatí, and how the club balances domestic fixtures with European ambitions.
For now, the close is simple: Barcelona have rewritten the record books in Spain — an 11th league crown and a seventh straight domestic title — and left a single, larger question in place: can Barça convert this domestic mastery into a sustained, decade-long continental monopoly that finally matches the French benchmark?




