Formation , the home ground of Halifax Town Huge tax debts buried
Halifax Town A.F.C. after almost 100 years as a football club. In May 2008, it was revealed that Halifax owed over £814,000 to
Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs. It was originally thought the club owed the taxman around £500,000, which might have left scope for a deal. At a meeting of the
FA, discussing the makeup of the
football pyramid for the
2008–09 season, it was decided that FC Halifax Town would be placed in the
Northern Premier League Division One North (the eighth tier of English football) despite various appeals.
Northern Premier League (2008–2011) The club's first game under the new name FC Halifax Town was a friendly defeat against
Tamworth on 19 July 2008. The Shaymen's first competitive match came in a 3–0 loss to
Bamber Bridge. FC Halifax's first ever
season was filled with inconsistency: ending outside the play-off positions in 8th place. In April 2009,
Neil Aspin was appointed as the new manager, which would prove to be an excellent appointment. His first season in charge was a successful one; winning the league with 100 points (scoring 108 goals in the process). The title was sealed with a 2–2 home draw against
Clitheroe. Halifax started the 2010–11 season in the
Northern Premier League, (the 7th tier of English football). New-signing
Jamie Vardy (who would later play for
Leicester City and the
England National Team) helped fire Halifax to back-to-back promotions to the
Conference North as top scorer with 22 goals. Once again, Halifax would lose in the fourth qualifying round of the
FA Cup to a fifth tier side; this time it would be a narrow defeat to
Mansfield Town. On New Year's Day 2011, Town beat
FC United of Manchester 4–1 at the Shay which attracted a crowd of 4,023, an attendance that at the time held the record crowd for the Northern Premier League. They finally won the title after winning 2–0 at
Retford United and gained automatic promotion to the Conference North.
Conference North years (2011–2013) Four games into the 2011-12 season, star-striker
Jamie Vardy signed for
Fleetwood Town. Vardy was replaced as Halifax's main striker by
Lee Gregory (who would later play for
Millwall and
Stoke City in the
Championship). Halifax had a sluggish start to their first ever season in the 6th tier. For the first ever time, Halifax reached the 1st round of the
FA Cup: a televised home tie against
League One leaders
Charlton Athletic. The result was a 4–0 defeat in front of 4,601 supporters. The club rose from 13th at the start of the match to 3rd by the end of the season. Halifax lost in the play-offs to
Gainsborough Trinity (3–2 on aggregate). The 2012–13 season was the club's second consecutive season in the 6th tier. The season was defined by successful cup-runs and another promotion. In the
FA Cup, Halifax took
Conference Premier side
Lincoln City to a replay in the 4th qualifying round. In the
FA Trophy Halifax reached the quarter-finals of the tournament, eventually losing out to 5th tier side
Dartford. Due to Town's cup-runs and postponements from poor weather caused a huge back-log in fixtures. By February, Halifax had ten games in hand on certain teams. Halifax had a difficult run at the end of the season (despite playing 12 games in 27 days), reaching the play-offs in 5th. In the play-off semi-final, Halifax won 3–1 (on aggregate) against local side
Guiseley. The play-off final was won 1–0 against
Brackley Town with a solitary goal by Lee Gregory.
National League years (2013–) The
National League (5th tier) was the highest level that the newly formed FC Halifax Town side had played at since formation. Neil Aspin started the 2013–14 season by signing a two-year contract. Their first season in the 5th tier started with a disappointing 5–1 defeat to
Cambridge United. Town's first win in the 5th tier was against
Wrexham. From March onwards, the Shaymen won 9 of 10 matches (keeping 7 clean-sheets) Halifax finished their first season in the
Conference play-off positions (the highest placed semi-professional team in the country). Halifax lost 2–1 to Cambridge United in the play-off semi-final, rounding off a sensational first season in the 5th tier. During pre-season, Lee Gregory was sold for £250,000 to Millwall after being Halifax's top scorer for three consecutive seasons (scoring 18, 20 and 29 goals respectively). Halifax started the new season with five consecutive wins, placing the Shaymen at the top of the league. In the 1st round of the
FA Cup, Halifax were drawn against old rivals
Bradford City. The televised match attracted 8,042 spectators (FC Halifax Town's record attendance): which Town lost 2–1. Eventually, form dropped off in the league with too many draws (15), leaving Halifax Town in 9th place at the end of the season. The Shaymen's third season in the
National League was a poor one, culminating in relegation back to the 6th tier.
Neil Aspin was sacked and replaced by
Darren Kelly. Kelly oversaw disastrous results against
Grimsby Town (7–0),
Cheltenham Town (7–1) and
Braintree Town (6–3). The Braintree defeat forced the hand of the board who sacked him after less than two months in charge.
Jim Harvey became caretaker manager, he turned the club's fortunes around but could not prevent Halifax's relegation back to the
National League North following a draw against
Macclesfield Town. Meanwhile, Halifax reached the
2016 FA Trophy final, defeating Grimsby Town 1–0 at
Wembley Stadium. Harvey was replaced by
North Ferriby United manager Billy Heath. Town made an immediate return to the National League, finishing in 3rd place. Halifax met
Salford City in the play-off semi-final, drawing 1–1 (winning 3–0 on penalties). In the play-off final, Halifax beat Chorley 2–1 after extra time in front of nearly 8,000 fans. Halifax's return to the
National League was largely uneventful. Despite mid-season doubts, Halifax were never in serious danger of relegation. Billy Heath was replaced by
Jamie Fullarton mid-season who guided them to 16th place. For the second consecutive season, Halifax finished the
season in 16th place. Halifax were top of the league at the end of August having just switched to a hybrid full-time model. The highlight of the season was an impressive win against
League Two side
Morecambe. In 2018, it was announced that FC Halifax would become full-time. During pre-season, Jamie Fullarton was replaced with
Pete Wild. This time though, the positive start to the season did not end like in previous seasons. By March, the
COVID-19 pandemic forced the cancellation of the season. The final league position was decided on a points per game decision, meaning Halifax would end up in the play-off positions. However, the Shaymen lost 2–1 in the play-offs to
Boreham Wood. Halifax finished the following season in 10th place – four points outside the play-offs. Due to the recent coronavirus pandemic, the vast majority of fixtures were played
behind closed doors during
2020–21. In the
2021–22 season, FC Halifax posted their highest ever league finish of 4th place, qualifying for the play-offs. In the play-off eliminator, they lost 2–1 at home to
Chesterfield. At the end of the season, Pete Wild left for League Two side
Barrow. Wild was replaced by
Chris Millington. Under Millington, FC Halifax finished 11th and won the
2023 FA Trophy final at Wembley, defeating
Gateshead 1–0. They reached the National League play-offs in the
2023–24 season after finishing 7th, but lost 4–2 to
Solihull Moors in the eliminator. They were eliminated at the same stage of the play-offs in the following season, losing 4–0 to
Oldham Athletic. Following the defeat, Chris Millington announced his resignation as manager. In June 2025 Adam Lakeland was appointed as the new manager; he left in April 2026 to become manager of
Morecambe after guiding the Shaymen to an 8th-place finish. ==Club identity==