United Soccer League era (2016–2018) In May 2015, rumors of a new USL club in Cincinnati were reported by the media. There was speculation regarding the relationship the team would have with the
Cincinnati Bengals, as well as a former Cincinnati soccer club, the
Cincinnati Kings, as Jeff Berding was named as part of the ownership group. Berding was employed by the Bengals and on the board of the youth soccer club
Kings Hammer FC. The Lindner family, of
American Financial Group which is headquartered in Cincinnati, was reported as the owner of the new team with
Carl Lindner III representing the owners at the press conference. Then on August 12, 2015, FC Cincinnati announced that
John Harkes would coach the new club and that the club would play in
Nippert Stadium on the campus of the University of Cincinnati. On April 16, 2016, FC Cincinnati broke the USL attendance record for a game, with 20,497 in attendance for the rivalry game against
Louisville City FC, and, on May 14, against another rival
Pittsburgh Riverhounds, broke its own record with 23,375 in attendance. On September 17, 2016, the team broke the USL record again, when they drew 24,376 for their game against
Orlando City B. The team broke its own USL record once again on August 5, 2017, when they drew 25,308 for their game against
Orlando City B. On July 16, 2016, FC Cincinnati set the record for highest attendance at a soccer match in the state of Ohio when 35,061 people came for an
exhibition game against
Crystal Palace. This would later be broken on July 27, 2016, when an
International Champions Cup match between
Real Madrid and
Paris Saint-Germain drew 86,641 people in
Ohio Stadium in
Columbus. On October 2, 2016, FC Cincinnati hosted their first-ever playoff match against
Charleston Battery, losing 2–1 in the quarterfinals of the 2016 USL playoffs. In the process, the club broke the playoff and single-game attendance record at 30,187. celebrates during FC Cincinnati's 2017 win over
Chicago Fire. On June 14, 2017, FC Cincinnati played their first match against a
Major League Soccer team,
Columbus Crew, during the
Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup. Cincinnati won 1–0, with player
Baye Djiby Fall scoring the only goal of the game. In the process, Cincinnati broke the attendance record for the U.S. Open Cup Fourth Round with 30,160 tickets sold, only 5,000 behind their club attendance record of 35,061. On June 28, 2017, FC Cincinnati played their second match against a Major League Soccer team,
Chicago Fire, in the Round of 16 during the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup. Cincinnati would prevail 3–1 on penalty kicks after a 0–0 draw, with goalkeeper
Mitch Hildebrandt stopping three of four penalty kicks. He totaled 10 saves during the match. The attendance of 32,287 was the second largest Modern Era crowd in U.S. Open Cup history. The match was televised nationally on
ESPN. On August 15, 2017, FC Cincinnati were defeated at home in front of a sold-out crowd by the
New York Red Bulls 3–2 in the US Open Cup semi-final. FCC was leading 2–0 in the second half before eventually losing in extra time. On April 7, 2018, the club set the USL attendance record for a home opener at 25,667 in a 1–0 loss to rival Louisville City. On September 29, 2018, the club broke the USL attendance record once again in its final regular-season home match before its MLS move, drawing in 31,478 in a 3–0 win over rival
Indy Eleven. After the match, they were awarded the USL regular season championship title, having clinched the trophy the prior week away to
Richmond Kickers.
Major League Soccer expansion The club owners began negotiations with Major League Soccer over a potential expansion franchise in early 2016, and Cincinnati was announced as one of ten cities that had expressed interest in the slots for teams 25 to 28. MLS commissioner
Don Garber visited Cincinnati in December 2016 to tour Nippert Stadium and meet with city and club officials, complimenting the city and its fans. FC Cincinnati formally submitted its expansion bid in January 2017, including a shortlist of potential stadium locations. On May 29, 2018, Major League Soccer announced that Cincinnati would join the league in 2019 as an expansion team under the FC Cincinnati brand. Plans for the development of
TQL Stadium, a 26,000-seat soccer-specific venue in the
West End set to open in 2021, were soon underway. (left) was signed in July 2018 as the team's first
Designated Player. FC Cincinnati signed its first two MLS players,
Fanendo Adi and
Fatai Alashe, in July 2018. Adi was the team's first
Designated Player. Both players were loaned to the FC Cincinnati
USL team for the remainder of the 2018 season. FC Cincinnati selected five players from certain MLS teams in the
expansion draft, which took place on December 11, 2018. The players were Darren Mattocks (D.C United), Kei Kamara (Vancouver Whitecaps FC), Roland Lamah (FC Dallas), Eric Alexander (Houston Dynamo), and Hassan Ndam (New York Red Bulls). Kei Kamara was then traded to the Colorado Rapids for an international roster spot.
Major League Soccer era (2019–present) FC Cincinnati played their first match as a Major League Soccer franchise on March 3, 2019, a 4–1 road loss to
Seattle Sounders FC. They played their first MLS home opener on March 17, 2019, a 3–0 win over
Portland Timbers before a sellout crowd of 32,350. On May 7, 2019, the club fired head coach
Alan Koch after a 2–7–2 start to the 2019 MLS season. Assistant coach
Yoann Damet was named as interim head coach. President and general manager
Jeff Berding cited a culmination of on-field performance and off-field matters for the dismissal. On August 8, 2019,
Ron Jans was officially hired and made head coach of FC Cincinnati. However, Jans resigned on February 17, 2020, amidst an investigation into his alleged use of a racial slur. On August 6, 2021, FC Cincinnati announced that the club and then general manager
Gerard Nijkamp had "parted ways effective immediately". On September 27, 2021, the club relieved the duties of head coach
Jaap Stam, 2-time interim head coach
Yoann Damet, and assistant coach
Said Bakkati. Former MLS defender
Tyrone Marshall was named interim coach. On October 4, 2021, FC Cincinnati announced the hiring of
Chris Albright as the general manager of the club. On December 14, 2021, FC Cincinnati officially hired
Pat Noonan as the new head coach of the team. Under the first season of the Albright-Noonan regime, the Orange and Blue would qualify for their first post-season in
2022 on 49 points (12–9–13), good for fifth in the East (eighth in the league).
Brenner and
Brandon Vázquez would score a joint-best 18 goals in the regular season, the first time in MLS history teammates had made such a mark; in addition,
Luciano Acosta contributed 10 goals and a league-leading 19 assists to a Cincinnati side that netted 64 goals on the season. Cincinnati defeated
New York Red Bulls in their first
MLS Cup Playoffs match (2–1) before losing to top-seeded
Philadelphia Union in the conference semifinals, 1–0. FC Cincinnati would follow up their 2022 success by producing a season that would prove to be the best in the club's short MLS history. The club's June 21, 2023, win against
Toronto FC tied the MLS record for consecutive home wins in a single-season, a record held since 2002 by the San Jose Earthquakes. The club reached the semifinals of the
Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup for the second time in its history, and first since joining MLS, losing on penalties after a 3–3 home draw in the club's first matchup with a
Lionel Messi led
Inter Miami. The club was the first in the 2023 season to clinch a playoff berth in the MLS Cup Playoffs, doing so away at
Atlanta United FC on August 30. On September 23, a 3–0 victory against
Charlotte FC earned the club its first qualification to the
2024 CONCACAF Champions Cup. holds up the Supporters' Shield after Cincinnati clinched it in 2023. FC Cincinnati won the MLS
Supporters' Shield on September 30, 2023, after beating Toronto FC away 3–2. The trophy awards the regular season's top-finishing club across both conferences. It is the second trophy the club has won in its existence and the first in its MLS era. FCC is the second-fastest active expansion club to win the Supporters' Shield since the league's first expansion in 1998; 2019's LAFC, in their second season, is the only club to have done so sooner. In the
2023 MLS Cup Playoffs, the club advanced past the
New York Red Bulls in a best of 3 series format used for the opening round of playoffs, sweeping the series 2–0. FC Cincinnati then defeated
Philadelphia Union 1–0 in dramatic fashion thanks to an extra time game winner by
Yerson Mosquera. This clinched the club's first appearance in the Conference Finals of a playoff. On November 27, 2023,
Lucho Acosta was named
2023 MLS Most Valuable Player. He became the club's 3rd league MVP and first in the MLS era. On December 2, 2023, FCC would face rivals
Columbus Crew at TQL stadium in the MLS Eastern Conference Finals, losing in extra-time by a score of 3–2. This was the first
"Hell is Real' matchup to take place in the playoffs. On February 22, 2024, FC Cincinnati played their first ever match in the
CONCACAF Champions Cup, a 2–0 away win at
Cavalier FC of Jamaica. The club advanced past Cavalier 6–0 on aggregate before falling to
CF Monterrey of Mexico 3–1 on aggregate in the Round of 16. The club would start hot in MLS play, topping the table into late summer until an injury to reigning MVP Lucho Acosta threatened to derail the season. Furthermore, DP striker
Aaron Boupendza would have his contract terminated by MLS on August 4. The team regrouped to finish 3rd in the eastern conference. The first round of the MLS Cup playoffs pitted them against
New York City FC in a best of 3 series. FCC would defeat NYCFC 1-0 at TQL stadium on October 28, 2024. They would fall on the road a week later by a score of 3-1, setting up a winner take all game 3 at TQL. On November 7, FCC would fall on penalties 6-5 to end their 2024 season. Following the game, Lucho Acosta would express his desire to leave the club in a post-game press conference. == Stadium ==