The first ASEAN Championship took place in
1996 with the six founding members of the ASEAN Federation competing with four nations being invited that came in that region. The final saw Thailand becoming the first champions of ASEAN as they defeated Malaysia 1–0 in
Singapore. The top four nations automatically qualified through to the finals in the
following edition. This meant the other six nations had to compete in qualifying for the remaining four spots.
Myanmar, Singapore,
Laos and
Philippines all made it through to the main tournament. The tournament has been the only regional competition for national teams since
men's football at the
SEA Games was for U23 in 2001. No country has ever won the AFF Championship title three times in a row.
Singapore (2004 and 2007) and
Thailand (2000 and 2002 and again in 2014 and 2016) have won twice in a row. In February 2024, the AFF announced that the competition will be rebranded as the ASEAN Championship. Although having joined the AFF on 27 August 2013,
Australia, because of its superior level compared to Southeast Asia, has not played the ASEAN Championship as part of the initial agreement, though Australia has started searching for ways to enter the tournament in recent years due to growth of various Southeast Asian national teams, due to internal pressures, and due to Southeast Asian interests in seeing more competitive football to improve consistency. On October 26, 2025, FIFA announced the launch of the FIFA ASEAN Cup following the signing of a memorandum of agreement at the
47th ASEAN Summit. It was initially unclear what implication the new FIFA tournament would mean for the conduct of the ASEAN Championship, but on March 20, 2026, FIFA announced it already approved the FIFA ASEAN Cup following an online meeting with the first edition to be held around September to October after the
2026 ASEAN Championship of July to August. ==Organisation==