Foundation Following the establishment of a
national football league in
Turkey and the growing public interest in the sport, local leagues were abolished and national leagues began to take shape. With the directive issued by the
Turkish Football Federation in 1965 for each province to have a team, various local football clubs across
Turkey merged to represent their respective cities in national competitions. This momentum also reached
Antalya, prompting the Regional Advisory Board of the Antalya Regional Directorate of Physical Education to take action. On 5 June 1966, the directors of the clubs
Yenikapı Suspor,
İlk Işık, and
Ferrokromspor convened with the intention of establishing Antalyaspor. These clubs dissolved their legal entities and declared their participation in the foundation of Antalyaspor. Shortly after, a board of directors was formed by founding members as outlined in Article 2 of the statute published in the local newspaper
İleri Gazetesi. Antalyaspor was officially registered and recognized by the authorities on 2 July 1966.
1966–1989: Early Years and Rise to Top Flight Antalyaspor entered professional football in the 1966–67 season, joining the Red Group of the
Turkish Second Division (2. Lig). Between 1966 and 1970, the club played 134 matches, recording 53 wins, 45 draws, and 46 losses, with a win rate of 39.55% and an overall success rate of 56.71%. The club played its first professional match on 11 November 1966 against
Edirnespor, which ended 1–1. Yalçın Demir scored the club's first-ever goal in professional football. After a mid-table start, Antalyaspor gradually improved its standings, finishing 11th, 4th, 5th, and 6th across the four seasons. The team reached the 2nd stage of the
Turkish Cup during the 1968–69 campaign. Throughout the 1970s, Antalyaspor mostly remained a mid-table team, struggling to establish consistent form. From the 1970–71 to 1979–80 seasons, they played 302 matches with 104 wins, 95 draws, and 103 losses achieving a win rate of 34.43% and an overall success rate of 50.15%. The club's best league finishes were two 3rd-place standings in the 1978–79 and 1979–80 seasons. In the
Turkish Cup, Antalyaspor reached the fourth round (4. Kademe) twice during this decade. The 1980s marked a turning point. Antalyaspor competed in the Second Division for most of the decade, but their performances improved significantly compared to previous years. Between 1980 and 1990, they played 332 matches, winning 139, drawing 75, and losing 118 — with a 41.86% win rate and a 53.15% success rate. In the 1981–82 season, Antalyaspor won the Second Division Group B, securing promotion to the
First Division for the first time in club history. The decisive match against
Karşıyaka, held on 10 April 1982 at
İzmir Atatürk Stadium, ended 0–0, sealing promotion. Their debut in the top flight came in the 1982–83 season, where they drew their first match against
Fenerbahçe. However, after only one season, the club was relegated. Antalyaspor spent most of the late ’80s vying for promotion again. The club finished 2nd in 1986–87, securing a return to the First Division. In the following seasons, they finished 3rd and 4th, remaining competitive and close to promotion. In the Turkish Cup, the club made it as far as the 5th round in 1983 and 1986.
1990–2009: From Instability to European Breakthrough The 1990s were a decade of fluctuation for Antalyaspor, bouncing between the First and Second Divisions. They played ten seasons across both tiers six in the top flight, four in the lower and reached their first
European competitions and
Turkish Cup final. After a rough start in the early ’90s, the club finished second in the 1991–92 Second Division and missed promotion narrowly. A brief stint in the Third Division followed, where promotion was secured in 1994 after winning playoff matches against
Denizlispor and
İstanbulspor. Antalyaspor's return to the First Division brought its best league finishes at the time. The club placed 5th in both 1994–95 and 1996–97, earning qualification to the
UEFA Intertoto Cup marking their European debut. During this period, they consistently remained mid-table but competitive, including wins over major Turkish sides. Off the pitch, the football branch was transferred to Antalyaspor A.Ş. in 1998, restructuring club operations. The decade ended on a high: a
Turkish Cup final appearance in 2000, which they lost to
Galatasaray, and qualification for the
UEFA Cup — their first ever entry into Europe's main competition. Antalyaspor opened the 2000s with their first-ever
UEFA Cup appearance, eliminating
Kapaz before being knocked out by
Werder Bremen. Domestically, the club struggled with consistency and was relegated from the
Süper Lig in 2001. The following years in the lower divisions were marked by instability, including frequent coaching changes and mid-table finishes. A notable low came in 2004 when they ended the season 13th in the Second Division. However, by 2005–06, Antalyaspor secured promotion after finishing second and returned to the
Süper Lig. The club was again relegated in 2006–07 after a poor season, but bounced back immediately by finishing second in the 2007–08 First League, earning another promotion. They also reached the
Turkish Cup quarterfinals. Under coach
Mehmet Özdilek, Antalyaspor saw improved stability. In 2008–09, they finished 12th in the Süper Lig and reached the cup quarterfinals. The 2009–10 season was one of their strongest performances to date, finishing 9th with a +11 goal difference and reaching the semi-finals of the Turkish Cup, where they lost to
Trabzonspor.
2010–2024: Return to the Top, Star Signings, and Cup Runs Antalyaspor's modern era began with turbulent
Süper Lig performances and a brief relegation in 2014. They returned to the top flight after winning the 2014–15 promotion playoffs, defeating
Adana Demirspor and
Samsunspor. Momentum built with the 2015 signing of global star
Samuel Eto’o, who scored 20 goals and guided the club to a 9th-place finish. A record-breaking 7–0 win over
Trabzonspor highlighted the season. Under
Rıza Çalımbay, the 2016–17 campaign became their most successful of the decade, finishing 5th, with
Eto’o netting 18 goals. In the
2020–21 season, which featured 21 teams, the red-and-white team appointed
Ersun Yanal as head coach midway through the season and finished 16th in the league. Their greatest achievement that season was reaching the final of the
Turkish Cup for the second time in the club's history. However, they were defeated 2–0 by
Beşiktaş in the
final. On 5 January 2022 Antalyaspor also qualified for the
2021 Turkish Super Cup against
Beşiktaş, which was held in
Doha, the capital of
Qatar. The match ended 1–1 after regular and extra time, but Antalyaspor lost 4–2 on penalties, failing to secure their first-ever Super Cup title. On 5 October 2021,
Nuri Şahin Appointed as player-coach at age 33, Şahin hung up his boots two weeks later to focus solely on management. He junked the counter-attacking setup, switching to a possession-heavy 4–1-4–1/4–3–3 that builds short from the back and presses high once the ball is lost. The change transformed results: between February and May 2022 Antalyaspor strung together a club-record 16-match unbeaten run (10 wins, 6 draws), including a 2–2 away draw with eventual champions
Trabzonspor and a run-extending win over
Konyaspor that drew national headlines. Şahin's side finished the 2021–22 season 7th with 59 points—both all-time highs for the club and reached the
Turkish Cup quarter-finals, falling to
Trabzonspor. Key contributors were
US striker
Haji Wright (14 league goals), deep-lying playmaker
Fernando Lucas Martins, and breakout winger
Doğukan Sinik, all thriving in Şahin's front-foot system. Momentum stalled the following season amid injuries and a thin squad, yet the team still collected 41 points before Şahin left in December 2023 to join
Borussia Dortmund's staff; he became their head coach the following June. The following seasons brought more stability. Antalyaspor finished 13th in 2022–23 and 10th in 2023–24 under new manager
Sergen Yalçın, again reaching the last 16 of the
Turkish Cup in both years. As of 2024, the team continues aiming for consistent top-half finishes in the
Süper Lig. == Supporters ==