On October 3, 2010, American promotion
Jersey All Pro Wrestling announced that it had reached an agreement with NJPW to co-promote NJPW's first shows in the United States. NJPW officially announced the
NJPW Invasion Tour 2011: Attack on East Coast tour on January 4, 2011, with shows taking place on May 13 in
Rahway, New Jersey, May 14 in
New York City and May 15 in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The following day, NJPW added that, during the tour, the promotion would introduce the IWGP Intercontinental Championship, with the inaugural champion to be crowned in a tournament taking place over the three shows.
Inaugural championship tournament (2010–2011) Participants for the tournament were announced on April 8, 2011. The list of participants included: former
World Wrestling Entertainment performer
MVP, who had signed a contract with New Japan in January 2011;
Kazuchika Okada, who had been on a learning excursion to American promotion
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) since February 2010;
Hideo Saito, who had been on a similar tour of
Puerto Rico's
World Wrestling Council since September 2010; former
IWGP Tag Team and
IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Champions Tetsuya Naito and
Yujiro Takahashi of
No Limit; NJPW regulars
Tama Tonga and
Toru Yano, and; American independent worker
Dan Maff, who made his first appearance for NJPW during the tour. On May 6, it was announced that Tonga had suffered an injury which would force him out of the tournament. He was replaced by former TNA and
Ring of Honor performer Josh Daniels. On May 15, MVP defeated Yano in the final of the tournament to become the inaugural champion. ;Tournament bracket
Nakamura and elevation is credited with establishing the prestige of the title Through MVP's inaugural reign and the subsequent reigns of
Masato Tanaka and
Hirooki Goto, the IWGP Intercontinental Championship was largely a
midcard title, remaining firmly behind the
IWGP Heavyweight Championship and
IWGP Tag Team Championship in importance. However, after
Shinsuke Nakamura captured the title from Goto on July 22, 2012, the title began gaining importance. He was already a former three-time IWGP Heavyweight Champion and his first reign lasted days. Nakamura also made the title international again, defending it in both the United States and
Mexico. On May 31, 2013, while on tour with Mexican promotion
Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL), with whom NJPW has a working relationship, Nakamura lost the title to
La Sombra. This marked the first time the title had changed hands outside of NJPW. Nakamura regained the title back in NJPW two months later on July 20, and in the process became the first two-time holder of the title. Nakamura continued elevating the IWGP Intercontinental Championship, culminating with the IWGP Intercontinental Championship match receiving top billing over the IWGP Heavyweight Championship match at NJPW's biggest annual event,
Wrestle Kingdom 8 on January 4, 2014, where former multi-time IWGP Heavyweight Champion
Hiroshi Tanahashi became the new champion. Afterwards,
Tokyo Sports wrote that the Intercontinental and Heavyweight Championships were now equals, while
Dave Meltzer wrote that Nakamura and Tanahashi made the Intercontinental Championship feel like "the real world title belt". Nakamura regained the title from Tanahashi in another main event match on April 6 at
Invasion Attack 2014. Nakamura's association with the championship continued to 2016, when he successfully defended it against former IWGP Heavyweight Champion
A.J. Styles at
Wrestle Kingdom 10. On January 25, 2016, Nakamura was stripped of the title due to his departure from the promotion at the end of the month. From 2012 to 2016, Nakamura held the IWGP Intercontinental Championship five times and defended it at four consecutive
Wrestle Kingdom events. The title was also associated with Nakamura as it was he who personally introduced the new title belt design shortly into his first reign in August 2012. He was outspokenly disapproving of the first belt design—which had bronze plates on a black strap—for its resemblance to a
10 yen coin and saw it as a mockery of the IWGP. The new design featured gold plates on a white strap. The white strap was unprecedented for the IWGP,
Naito and unification with Heavyweight Championship After Nakamura's departure, the title was most associated with
Tetsuya Naito, who held the title for a record eight times. During his first reign, he began systematically destroying the title belt, forcing NJPW to have it repaired in June 2017. Unlike Nakamura, Naito firmly saw the Heavyweight Championship as the top title, and had no desire for the Intercontinental Championship when he first won it. On January 5, 2020, at
Wrestle Kingdom 14, Tetsuya Naito won the Heavyweight and Intercontinental Championships. Both titles keep their individual history, but were defended at the same time. Sometimes, they were called "Double Championship". On March 4, 2021, one year after Naito's victory, the titles were unified to form the new IWGP World Heavyweight Championship. The championship would remain functionally retired until January 6, 2026, when the history of the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship would be retroactively inserted into the histories of both the reactivated IWGP Heavyweight Championship and (still retired) IWGP Intercontinental Championship; as a result, along with being recognized as Heavyweight Champions, all previous IWGP World Heavyweight Champions were credited as having been IWGP Intercontential Champions, with
Yota Tsuji being recognized as the 41st and final champion. ==Reigns==