The club was founded in 1995 by John Lister, just too late for hometown girl and future
England international goalkeeper
Rachel Brown-Finnis to join as a child. The club initially consisted of 15 ladies, who trained in the old sports barn at
Turf Moor and played their home games at the club's training facility at
Gawthorpe. Following the demise of the Lancashire League, the team joined the
North West Women's Regional League. The club established a junior set-up from the outset. An Under 10s side was formed by Grahame Meeks and Peter Cooper shortly after the first-team was founded. At the end of the 2016–17 season, the management and operation of the club was transferred to Burnley FC in the Community. The following season, in the
2017–18 FA Women's Cup, the team won three preliminary round games to qualify for the first round proper for the first time in their history. Burnley reached the third round, where they were eliminated by third-tier side
Cardiff City. Burnley won
promotion to the
FA Women's National League Division One North at the end of the same season. In 2018, the club was renamed
Burnley FC Women, and for the first time players of all ages were required to negotiate trials to represent the club. In the 2018–19 season, the team won the league title and were promoted to the
FA Women's National League North, the third tier in English women's football. In February 2021, it was announced that the women's team would be integrated into
Burnley F.C., as the club's new American owner Alan Pace sought to turn the women's team
professional. Several months later, Burnley became the first British side to stream their home games on the video-sharing app
TikTok, with the club hitting one million views on TikTok live in April 2023. Burnley Women played their first game at
Turf Moor on 30 April 2023, winning 2–1 against
Liverpool Feds in front of almost 3,000 supporters. It was the last game of the
2022–23 league season, with Burnley finishing third in the FA Women's National League North. They improved the
following season, finishing as runners-up to
Newcastle United. Burnley Women turned full-time professional from the
2025–26 season. The club appointed
Matt Beard as
manager in June 2025. In August, after just four games in charge, Burnley confirmed that Beard had chosen to resign from his position to follow other opportunities, placing him on
gardening leave for three months, and that the club's search for a new manager was already underway. First-team coach Louise Roberts was named as
interim manager.
Ross Wallace was appointed as Roberts's successor in February 2026, and under his guidance, Burnley ended the 2025–26 season in first place and won promotion to the second tier—the
Women's Super League 2—for the first time in the club's history. They remained undefeated throughout the campaign and conceded only 5 goals in 22 matches. == Players ==