20th century The club was founded as
Helsingin Jalkapalloklubi – Helsingfors Fotbollsklubb in 1907 by Fredrik Wathén. The founding meeting was held at a bowling alley in
Kaisaniemi Park in May. The first ever competitive fixture was played against
Ekenäs IF in
Ekenäs. HJK won 2–4. Early on, HJK became popular among Finnish-speaking students, while Swedish-speaking students preferred to play mainly for Unitas or
HIFK. In late 1908, after a heated debate, the language was switched to unilingually Finnish and this resulted in many Swedish-speaking members switching over to HIFK and other clubs, although a few chose to stay. In 1909, the colours blue and white were chosen to support the
fennoman movement and
bandy was introduced as the club's second official sport. The club moved from Kaisaniemi Ground to the new
Eläintarha Stadium. At the end of the year, Fredrik Wathen was forced to leave his post as the club's chairman due to illness. In 1910,
Lauri Tanner became the longest-running club chairman to date. The same year, the club's first international match was played, against Eriksdals IF from
Stockholm in Kaisaniemi. The first championship title was won in 1911. In 1915, the club moved to newly build
Töölön Pallokenttä. In 1916, tennis was introduced as the third official sport in HJK, and it was played in the club until the early 1920s. During the
Finnish Civil War in 1918, two HJK club members, fighting for the "
Whites", were killed. In 1921, the first
bandy championship was won and during the following five seasons, HJK reached five finals, winning three more titles. Bowling was added to the club's repertoire in 1925, but the bowlers formed their own club, Helsingin Keilaajat, the following year. In 1928,
ice hockey became an official sport and the first championship was won in 1929. League format was introduced to Finnish football in 1930 but HJK failed to qualify for the first season. In 1931, HJK played their first season in the league, however at the end of the season, they were relegated. During World War II, HJK lost 22 members serving in the military, of which nine fell in the
Winter War, twelve in the
Continuation War and one in the
Lapland War. In 1943,
handball was introduced as the club's sixth official sport. HJK won one silver and two bronze medals in handball during the following three seasons but did not gain further success. Handball was first of HJK's sports where women also competed. The
women's team played a total of 22 seasons at the highest level; their highest finish was fourth. In 1963, HJK played their last ever season in the second level of the football pyramid, winning 20 out of 22 matches and scoring 127 goals. In 1964, the newly promoted club won their tenth championship title and the following season, in
1965–66, they played their first
European Cup match, against
Manchester United at the
Helsinki Olympic Stadium. However, a 2–9 aggregate loss resulted in HJK's elimination from the competition. In 1966, the club secured their first ever cup title by winning
KTP 6–1 in the final in front of 7,000 spectators. Bandy section was disbanded in the late 1960s. The last official sport,
figure skating, was added into the club's repertoire in 1966, was abolished in 1972. The ice hockey section was also disbanded in 1972 and the last season in handball was played in 1978. Hereafter, HJK therefore only participated in football following 69 years as a multisport club.
1998–1999: First Champions League appearance The
1998–99 season saw HJK become the first and, to date, only Finnish club to play in the group stage of the
UEFA Champions League, after defeating
Metz in the
second qualifying round. The club also managed a respectable five points in their group, defeating
Benfica at home and earning draws at home to
1. FC Kaiserslautern and away to Benfica. They lost to
PSV twice and to Kaiserslautern away.
2000–2018: First Europa League appearance The club's current home stadium, the
Bolt Arena, was opened in 2000. The 20th championship title was won in 2002, and in 2008 the club won its tenth
Finnish Cup title. The
2009 season was the start of a championship run that resulted in six titles in a row from 2009 to 2014. In 2014, HJK became the first Finnish club to play in the
UEFA Europa League group stage after defeating
Rapid Wien in the
play-off round. HJK, with wins over
Torino and
Copenhagen at home, finished third in their group with six points. , located in the
Töölö district of Helsinki, was opened in 2000.|left HJK made several acquisitions during the winter of 2015, including
Córdoba forward
Mike Havenaar,
J-league playmaker
Atomu Tanaka and
Birmingham City holding midfielder
Guy Moussi. With the new signings on their side, HJK began the season on a high by winning the league cup, a feat they had not accomplished since 1998. HJK also played its first
local derby against HIFK since April 1972, drawing 1–1. However, HJK could not replicate the league success they had enjoyed for the last six seasons, finishing the 2015 season in third place, behind champions
SJK and runners-up
RoPS. During the 2017 campaign the club lost only three games, which resulted in a domestic double. HJK won the 2018 Veikkausliiga, 16 points clear at the top.
2019–2023: Toni Koskela era HJK failed to win the 2019 championship, as
KuPS won the league. HJK's season was unusually unsuccessful, manager
Mika Lehkosuo was replaced by
Toni Koskela mid-season, and the club finished in a disappointing 5th place in the league with 37 points. During the season, HJK named
Miika Takkula their new
sporting director in July. Koskela's first three full seasons have seen HJK win three titles in a row, including the club's 30th championship in 2020. HJK also won the Finnish cup in 2020. For the
2022 season, HJK loaned in some new additions like
Conor Hazard,
Nassim Boujellab,
Bojan Radulović and
Malik Abubakari. The club's 2022 title was a remarkable 11th in 15 years. The club has also fared well in European competitions under Koskela. During the 2021 season, HJK qualified for the
2021–22 UEFA Europa Conference League group stage, where they finished 3rd in the group with six points. During the 2022 season, HJK qualified for the
2022–23 UEFA Europa League for only the second time in the club's history, by defeating
Silkeborg IF 2–1 on aggregate in the play-off round. HJK's group included Italian
AS Roma, Spanish
Real Betis, and Bulgarian
Ludogorets. Despite valiant home performances, HJK performed poorly on the road, losing all three away games with a total goal difference of 0–7. HJK ended the campaign fourth in the group with a single point, from a 1–1 draw to Ludogorets at home. HJK started the
2023 Veikkausliiga season relatively poorly, and eventually head coach Koskela was dismissed, following a 1–0 home victory against
Larne FC in the Champions League qualifiers in July.
2023: Korkeakunnas Koskela was replaced by his last season's assistant coach
Toni Korkeakunnas. Korkeakunnas led HJK to a third consecutive European group stage, advancing to the
2023–24 UEFA Europa Conference League, by defeating Romanian champions
Farul Constanța in the play-off round 3–2 on aggregate. HJK also renewed their league title for the fourth straight season, on a goal difference against
KuPS. After the season, the club announced that Korkeakunnas will not receive a contract extension, and that the new manager would be announced soon. It was also announced earlier in late August 2023, that sporting director
Miika Takkula departs from the club. In September,
Vesa Mäki was named as his replacement as a new sporting director.
2024: Sibila and Virta On 3 November 2023, the club announced that they had appointed Spanish coach
Ferran Sibila as the manager of HJK on a two-year deal, starting in January 2024. On 21 December, it was reported by
Helsingin Sanomat that Sibila lacks the required UEFA Pro -coaching licence, and thus would not be eligible to work solely as a head coach in
Veikkausliiga. The club's new sporting director
Vesa Mäki, who was in charge of recruiting Sibila, said in the media that Sibila is going to start the required UEFA Pro -training in February 2024 in Sweden, or the club could name their assistant coach
Ossi Virta as an associate head coach with Sibila. On 3 January 2024, it was reported in Swedish media that Sibila was not granted a spot in the aforementioned UEFA Pro -training class by
Swedish FA. The next day, HJK announced that the club will comply with the licence requirements set by
Veikkausliiga,
Finnish FA and
UEFA. On 12 January, HJK appointed Ossi Virta as the club's new interim head coach, until Sibila is able to attend the UEFA Pro -class. During the 2024 pre-season, reigning Veikkausliiga Top Goalscorer
Bojan Radulović was sold to
Huddersfield Town for £1.2 million and Defender of the Year
Tuomas Ollila was acquired by
Paris FC.
2024–2025: Korkeakunnas returns On 20 May 2024, Ferran Sibila and the sporting director Vesa Mäki were both sacked and
Toni Korkeakunnas was appointed the head coach of the first team again. Winger
Topi Keskinen joined
Aberdeen FC in August for an estimated transfer fee of around €1 million. During the summer of 2024, as has become routine, HJK made a slate of transfers mid-season as the team's form remained poor. The club brought in striker and former Veikkausliiga golden boot winner
Lee Erwin, goalkeeper
Thijmen Nijhuis, centre-backs
Georgios Antzoulas and
Daniel O'Shaughnessy, midfielder
Kevor Palumets, and wingers
Alessandro Albanese and
Ozan Kökcü. Despite being knocked out of the Champions League earlier in the 1st qualifying round by
Panevėžys, HJK managed to qualify for the
2024–25 UEFA Conference League new league phase, after defeating
KÍ Klaksvík in the play-off round 3–2 on aggregate with two stoppage-time goals, making it the club's fourth consecutive appearance in the final phase of a European competition. During the club's European qualification campaign, Erwin scored five goals in six matches, including three goals over the two games against Klaksvik. After HJK was not able to defend their championship and had finished third in Veikkausliiga, in late October 2024 the club appointed
Petri Vuorinen the new sporting director to fill the vacancy. Korkeakunnas led the club to start the 2025 Veikkausliiga season with a historical record-breaking six-game losing streak. Korkeakunnas was fired on 4 May, after 1–1 draw against
Inter Turku. Assistant coach
Miika Nuutinen was named the interim manager.
Nuutinen as interim HJK started their European campaign poorly by losing 4–0 away against Faroese club
NSÍ Runavík in the first leg game of the
2025–26 UECL qualifiers. However, they managed to advance to the second round, thanks to a 5–0 comeback win at home. Next round they were knocked out by Bulgarian
Arda Kardzhali on penalties. In late-September, HJK won the
2025 Finnish Cup title by 1–0 win over
KuPS, which was the club's first cup title since 2020. They finished the 2025 season in disappointing 5th place, having not won a single game in Veikkausliiga championship group in over two years. ==Crest and colours==