2023–24 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying rounds

The 2023–24 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying rounds began on 6 September and ended on 18 October 2023.[1]

A total of 66 teams competed in the group stage qualifying rounds of the 2023–24 UEFA Women's Champions League, which included two rounds, with 44 teams in the Champions Path and 22 teams in the League Path. The 12 winners in the round 2 (seven from Champions Path, five from League Path) advanced to the group stage, to join the four teams that entered in that round.

Times are CEST (UTC+2), as listed by UEFA (local times, if different, are in parentheses).

Teams[edit]

Champions Path[edit]

The Champions Path included all league champions which do not qualified directly for the group stage, and consisted of the following rounds:

  • Round 1 (41 teams playing one-legged semi-finals, final and third place match): 41 teams entered in this round.
  • Round 2 (14 teams): three teams entered in this round and eleven winners of the round 1 finals.

Below are the participating teams of the Champions Path (with their 2023 UEFA club coefficients),[2] grouped by the starting rounds.

Key to colours
Winners of round 2 advance to group stage
Round 2
Team Coeff.[2]
Czech Republic Slavia Prague 39.233
Sweden Rosengård 33.399
Italy Roma 21.000
Round 1
Team Coeff.[2]
Austria St. Pölten 30.050
Scotland Glasgow City 29.100
Kazakhstan BIIK Shymkent 25.700
Portugal Benfica 22.800
Switzerland Zürich 22.250
Netherlands Ajax 18.400
Albania Vllaznia 16.800
Serbia Spartak Subotica 16.800
Belgium Anderlecht 14.400
Bosnia and Herzegovina SFK 2000 13.800
Denmark Køge 12.150
Ukraine Vorskla Poltava 12.000
Cyprus Apollon Ladies 11.800
Lithuania Gintra 11.400
Iceland Valur 10.200
Hungary Ferencváros 9.900
Romania U Olimpia Cluj 9.600
Slovenia Mura 9.000
Belarus Dinamo Minsk 7.200
Montenegro Breznica 7.200
Norway Brann 7.100
Greece PAOK 6.400
Croatia Osijek 6.100
Estonia Flora 5.600
Luxembourg Racing Union 5.400
Finland KuPS 5.200
Malta Birkirkara 4.800
Israel Kiryat Gat 4.600
Latvia SFK Rīga 4.200
Faroe Islands 3.600
Moldova Agarista Anenii Noi 3.600
Republic of Ireland Shelbourne 3.500
Slovakia Spartak Myjava 3.300
Kosovo EP-COM Hajvalia 2.900
Bulgaria Lokomotiv Stara Zagora 2.800
Georgia (country) Samegrelo 2.000
Poland Katowice 1.900
North Macedonia Ljuboten 1.600
Turkey Fomget Gençlik 1.500
Wales Cardiff City 1.100
Northern Ireland Cliftonville 0.900

League Path[edit]

The League Path included all league non-champions and consisted of the following rounds:

  • Round 1 (16 teams playing one-legged semi-finals, final and third place match): 16 teams entered in this round.
  • Round 2 (10 teams): six teams entered in this round and four winners of the round 1 finals.

Below are the participating teams of the League Path (with their 2022 UEFA club coefficients),[2] grouped by the starting rounds.

Key to colours
Winners of round 2 advance to group stage
Round 2
Team Coeff.[2]
Germany VfL Wolfsburg 104.333
France Paris Saint-Germain 97.166
Spain Real Madrid 37.233
Czech Republic Sparta Prague 27.233
Sweden BK Häcken 22.399
England Manchester United 12.366
Round 1
Team Coeff.[2]
England Arsenal 56.366
Italy Juventus 43.000
Denmark Brøndby 29.650
Belarus FC Minsk 22.200
France Paris FC 18.166
Germany Eintracht Frankfurt 17.333
Spain Levante 17.233
Netherlands Twente 15.400
Sweden Linköping 13.399
Norway Vålerenga 12.100
Czech Republic Slovácko 7.233
Austria Sturm Graz 6.550
Kazakhstan Okzhetpes 5.700
Scotland Celtic 5.100
Ukraine Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih 4.000
Iceland Stjarnan 3.700

Format[edit]

Round 1 consisted of mini-tournaments with two semi-finals, a final and a third-place play-off hosted by one of the participating teams. If the score was level at the end of normal time, extra time would have been played, and if the same number of goals was scored by both teams during extra time, the tie would have been decided by a penalty shoot-out. Round 2 was played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that scored more goals on aggregate over the two legs advance to the next round. If the aggregate score was level at the end of normal time of the second leg, extra time would have been played, and if the same number of goals was scored by both teams at the end of normal time, the tie would have been decided by a penalty shoot-out. An additional preliminary round consisting of two-legged home-and-away matches would have been played by the champions from the lowest-ranked associations if more than 50 associations had entered the tournament and the title holders had not qualified through league position. Since only 50 associations entered, this round was skipped.[1]

In the draws for each round, teams were seeded based on their UEFA club coefficients at the beginning of the season, with the teams divided into seeded and unseeded pots containing the same number of teams. Prior to the draws, UEFA may form "groups" in accordance with the principles set by the Club Competitions Committee, but they were purely for convenience of the draw and did not resemble any real groupings in the sense of the competition. Teams from associations with political conflicts as decided by UEFA were not drawn into the same tie. After the draws, the order of legs of a tie could have been reversed by UEFA due to scheduling or venue conflicts.

Schedule[edit]

The schedule of the competition was as follows (all draws were held at the UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland).[3]

Schedule for 2023–24 UEFA Women's Champions League qualifying rounds
Round Draw date First leg Second leg
Round 1 30 June 2023 6 September 2023 (semi-finals) 9 September 2023 (third-place play-off & final)
Round 2 15 September 2023 10–11 October 2023 18–19 October 2023

Round 1[edit]

Seeding[edit]

The draw for Round 1 was held on 30 June 2023.[4]

Seeding of teams for the semi-final round was based on their 2023 UEFA club coefficients,[2] with 22 seeded teams and 19 unseeded teams in the Champions Path, and eight seeded teams and eight unseeded teams in the League Path. Teams were drawn into two semi-finals within each four team group and, for the groups with three teams, the team with the highest coefficient was given a bye to the final. In the semi-finals, seeded teams were considered the "home" team, while in the third-place play-offs and finals, the teams with the highest coefficients were considered the "home" team for administrative purposes. Due to political reasons, teams from the following associations could not be drawn into the same group: Kosovo / Bosnia and Herzegovina; Kosovo / Serbia; Kosovo / Russia; Ukraine / Belarus.

Champions Path
Seeded Unseeded
League Path
Seeded Unseeded

Champions Path[edit]

Tournament 1[edit]

Bracket[edit]

Hosted by U Olimpia Cluj.

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
6 September
 
 
Hungary Ferencváros2 (1)
 
9 September
 
Israel Kiryat Gat (a.e.t.) (p)2 (3)
 
Israel Kiryat Gat0 (3)
 
6 September
 
Romania U Olimpia Cluj (a.e.t.) (p)0 (4)
 
Romania U Olimpia Cluj6
 
 
Slovakia Spartak Myjava2
 
Third place
 
 
9 September
 
 
Hungary Ferencváros7
 
 
Slovakia Spartak Myjava0
Semi-finals[edit]
Ferencváros Hungary2–2 (a.e.t.)Israel Kiryat Gat
Report
Penalties
1–3
Attendance: 250[5]
Referee: Irena Velevačkoska (North Macedonia)

U Olimpia Cluj Romania6–2Slovakia Spartak Myjava
Report
Attendance: 350[6]
Referee: Lisa Benn (England)
Third-place play-off[edit]
Ferencváros Hungary7–0Slovakia Spartak Myjava
Report
Attendance: 60[7]
Referee: Maria Ennsgraber (Austria)
Final[edit]
U Olimpia Cluj Romania0–0 (a.e.t.)Israel Kiryat Gat
Report
Penalties
4–3
Attendance: 628[8]
Referee: Lucie Šulcová (Czech Republic)

Tournament 2[edit]

Bracket[edit]

Hosted by SFK 2000.

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
6 September
 
 
Ukraine Vorskla Poltava (a.e.t.)4
 
9 September
 
Estonia Flora3
 
Ukraine Vorskla Poltava3
 
6 September
 
Croatia Osijek0
 
Bosnia and Herzegovina SFK 20000
 
 
Croatia Osijek4
 
Third place
 
 
9 September
 
 
Estonia Flora3
 
 
Bosnia and Herzegovina SFK 20005
Semi-finals[edit]
Vorskla Poltava Ukraine4–3 (a.e.t.)Estonia Flora
Report
Attendance: 50[9]
Referee: Sofik Torosyan (Armenia)

SFK 2000 Bosnia and Herzegovina0–4Croatia Osijek
Report
Attendance: 1,002[10]
Referee: Marisca Overtoom (Netherlands)
Third-place play-off[edit]
SFK 2000 Bosnia and Herzegovina5–3Estonia Flora
Report
Attendance: 100[11]
Referee: Silvia Gasperotti (Italy)
Final[edit]
Vorskla Poltava Ukraine3–0Croatia Osijek
Report
Attendance: 85[12]
Referee: Miriama Matulová (Slovakia)

Tournament 3[edit]

Bracket[edit]

Hosted by Mura.

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
6 September
 
 
Cyprus Apollon Ladies9
 
9 September
 
North Macedonia Ljuboten0
 
Cyprus Apollon Ladies3
 
6 September
 
Georgia (country) Samegrelo0
 
Slovenia Mura0 (4)
 
 
Georgia (country) Samegrelo (a.e.t.) (p)0 (5)
 
Third place
 
 
9 September
 
 
North Macedonia Ljuboten1
 
 
Slovenia Mura7
Semi-finals[edit]
Apollon Ladies Cyprus9–0North Macedonia Ljuboten
Report
Attendance: 121[13]
Referee: Tatyana Sorokopudova (Kazakhstan)

Third-place play-off[edit]
Mura Slovenia7–1North Macedonia Ljuboten
Report Silva 23'
Attendance: 120[15]
Referee: Jeļena Jermolajeva (Latvia)
Final[edit]
Apollon Ladies Cyprus3–0Georgia (country) Samegrelo
Report
Attendance: 130[16]
Referee: Simona Ghisletta (Switzerland)

Tournament 4[edit]

Bracket[edit]

Hosted by Køge.

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
6 September
 
 
Serbia Spartak Subotica7
 
9 September
 
Faroe Islands 0
 
Serbia Spartak Subotica2
 
6 September
 
Finland KuPS1
 
Denmark Køge1
 
 
Finland KuPS2
 
Third place
 
 
9 September
 
 
Faroe Islands 1
 
 
Denmark Køge3
Semi-finals[edit]
Spartak Subotica Serbia7–0Faroe Islands
Report
Attendance: 270[17]
Referee: Cristina Trandafir (Romania)

Køge Denmark1–2Finland KuPS
Fløe 30' Report
Third-place play-off[edit]
Køge Denmark3–1Faroe Islands
Report Hummeland 61'
Attendance: 367[19]
Referee: Ioanna Allayiotou (Cyprus)
Final[edit]
Spartak Subotica Serbia2–1Finland KuPS
Boaduwaa 11', 63' Report Kröger 3'
Attendance: 247[20]
Referee: Liudmyla Telbukh (Ukraine)

Tournament 5[edit]

Bracket[edit]

Hosted by Katowice.

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
6 September
 
 
Norway Brann5
 
9 September
 
Bulgaria Lokomotiv Stara Zagora0
 
Norway Brann3
 
6 September
 
Belgium Anderlecht0
 
Belgium Anderlecht5
 
 
Poland Katowice0
 
Third place
 
 
9 September
 
 
Bulgaria Lokomotiv Stara Zagora0 (1)
 
 
Poland Katowice (a.e.t.) (p)0 (3)
Semi-finals[edit]
Brann Norway5–0Bulgaria Lokomotiv Stara Zagora
Report
Attendance: 74[21]
Referee: Marina Živković (Serbia)

Anderlecht Belgium5–0Poland Katowice
Report
Attendance: 1,965[22]
Referee: Araksya Saribekyan (Armenia)
Third-place play-off[edit]
Lokomotiv Stara Zagora Bulgaria0–0 (a.e.t.)Poland Katowice
Report
Penalties
1–3
Attendance: 271[23]
Referee: Teresa Oliveira (Portugal)
Final[edit]
Anderlecht Belgium0–3Norway Brann
Report
Attendance: 58[24]
Referee: Anastasiya Romanyuk (Ukraine)

Tournament 6[edit]

Bracket[edit]

Hosted by Benfica.

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
6 September
 
 
Kazakhstan BIIK Shymkent0
 
9 September
 
Latvia SFK Rīga1
 
Latvia SFK Rīga0
 
6 September
 
Portugal Benfica4
 
Portugal Benfica8
 
 
Northern Ireland Cliftonville1
 
Third place
 
 
9 September
 
 
Kazakhstan BIIK Shymkent4
 
 
Northern Ireland Cliftonville2
Semi-finals[edit]
BIIK Shymkent Kazakhstan0–1Latvia SFK Rīga
Report
Attendance: 56[25]
Referee: Katalin Sipos (Hungary)

Benfica Portugal8–1Northern Ireland Cliftonville
Alidou 25'
Norney 34' (o.g.)
Alves 36', 73'
Falcón 42'
Martins 49', 55'
Nogueira 76'
Report McGuinness 61'
Attendance: 1,014[26]
Referee: Oxana Cruc (Moldova)
Third-place play-off[edit]
BIIK Shymkent Kazakhstan4–2Northern Ireland Cliftonville
Report
Attendance: 54[27]
Referee: Zoe Stavrou (Cyprus)
Final[edit]
Benfica Portugal4–0Latvia SFK Rīga
Report
Attendance: 1,119[28]
Referee: Kateryna Usova (Ukraine)

Tournament 7[edit]

Bracket[edit]

Hosted by Vllaznia.

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
6 September
 
 
Iceland Valur2
 
9 September
 
Turkey Fomget Gençlik1
 
Iceland Valur2
 
6 September
 
Albania Vllaznia1
 
Albania Vllaznia4
 
 
Kosovo EP-COM Hajvalia2
 
Third place
 
 
9 September
 
 
Turkey Fomget Gençlik6
 
 
Kosovo EP-COM Hajvalia0
Semi-finals[edit]
Valur Iceland2–1Turkey Fomget Gençlik
Report
Attendance: 50[29]
Referee: Anastasia Mylopoulou (Greece)

Vllaznia Albania4–2Kosovo EP-COM Hajvalia
Report
Attendance: 150[30]
Referee: Jelena Kumer (Croatia)
Third-place play-off[edit]
EP-COM Hajvalia Kosovo0–6Turkey Fomget Gençlik
Report
Attendance: 40[31]
Referee: Franziska Wildfeuer (Germany)
Final[edit]
Vllaznia Albania1–2Iceland Valur
Doci 90+1' Report
Attendance: 1,700[32]
Referee: Olivia Tschon (Austria)

Tournament 8[edit]

Bracket[edit]

Hosted by Gintra.

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
6 September
 
 
Scotland Glasgow City2
 
9 September
 
Republic of Ireland Shelbourne0
 
Scotland Glasgow City3
 
6 September
 
Lithuania Gintra0
 
Lithuania Gintra2
 
 
Wales Cardiff City0
 
Third place
 
 
9 September
 
 
Republic of Ireland Shelbourne3
 
 
Wales Cardiff City0
Semi-finals[edit]
Glasgow City Scotland2–0Republic of Ireland Shelbourne
Report
Attendance: 100[33]
Referee: Ifeoma Kulmala (Finland)

Gintra Lithuania2–0Wales Cardiff City
Report
Attendance: 550[34]
Referee: Martina Molinaro (Italy)
Third-place play-off[edit]
Shelbourne Republic of Ireland3–0Wales Cardiff City
Report
Attendance: 120[35]
Referee: Caroline Lanssens (Belgium)
Final[edit]
Glasgow City Scotland3–0Lithuania Gintra
Report
Attendance: 550[36]
Referee: Andromachi Tsiofliki (Greece)

Tournament 9[edit]

Bracket[edit]

Hosted by St. Pölten.

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
 
 
 
9 September
 
 
Austria St. Pölten3
 
6 September
 
Greece PAOK0
 
Greece PAOK6
 
 
Luxembourg Racing Union1
 
Semi-final[edit]
PAOK Greece6–1Luxembourg Racing Union
Report Estevez 69'
Final[edit]
St. Pölten Austria3–0Greece PAOK
Report

Tournament 10[edit]

Bracket[edit]

Hosted by Agarista Anenii Noi.

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
 
 
 
9 September
 
 
Netherlands Ajax3
 
6 September
 
Belarus Dinamo Minsk0
 
Belarus Dinamo Minsk9
 
 
Moldova Agarista Anenii Noi0
 
Semi-final[edit]
Dinamo Minsk Belarus9–0Moldova Agarista Anenii Noi
Report
Attendance: 234[39]
Referee: Lovisa Johansson (Sweden)
Final[edit]
Ajax Netherlands3–0Belarus Dinamo Minsk
Report
Attendance: 320[40]
Referee: Karoline Wacker (Germany)

Tournament 11[edit]

Bracket[edit]

Hosted by Birkirkara.

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
 
 
 
9 September
 
 
Switzerland Zürich3
 
6 September
 
Malta Birkirkara1
 
Montenegro Breznica0
 
 
Malta Birkirkara1
 
Semi-finals[edit]
Breznica Montenegro0–1Malta Birkirkara
Report García Falero 90+2'
Attendance: 366[41]
Referee: Frederikke Lydia Søkjær (Denmark)
Final[edit]
Zürich Switzerland3–1Malta Birkirkara
Report Chircop 90+4'
Attendance: 305[42]
Referee: Fabienne Michel (Germany)

League Path[edit]

Tournament 1[edit]

Bracket[edit]

Hosted by Twente.

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
6 September
 
 
Spain Levante4
 
9 September
 
Iceland Stjarnan0
 
Spain Levante2
 
6 September
 
Netherlands Twente3
 
Netherlands Twente6
 
 
Austria Sturm Graz0
 
Third place
 
 
9 September
 
 
Iceland Stjarnan (a.e.t.) (p)0 (7)
 
 
Austria Sturm Graz0 (6)
Semi-finals[edit]
Levante Spain4–0Iceland Stjarnan
Report
Attendance: 52[43]
Referee: Stacey Pearson (England)

Twente Netherlands6–0Austria Sturm Graz
Report
Attendance: 523[44]
Referee: Volha Blotskaya (Belarus)
Third-place play-off[edit]
Final[edit]
Levante Spain2–3Netherlands Twente
Report
Attendance: 720[46]
Referee: Minka Vekkeli (Finland)

Tournament 2[edit]

Bracket[edit]

Hosted by Eintracht Frankfurt.

 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
6 September
 
 
Italy Juventus6
 
9 September
 
Kazakhstan Okzhetpes0
 
Italy Juventus1 (4)
 
6 September
 
Germany