Formation and early years Between April and May of 1992,
Antonio Peña, booker of the
Mexico City-based
Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL), broke with the promotion in favor of establishing his own group, along with
Konnan and much of the younger talent from CMLL. This split resulted in the founding of the
Televisa-backed Asistencia, Asesoría y Administración de Espectáculos (AAA) promotion. AAA would look for talent from other markets outside Mexico City, as they found and signed
Tijuana natives
Rey Misterio Sr.,
Rey Misterio Jr., and
Psicosis. The promotion became known for signing top talent away from CMLL, such as
El Hijo del Santo,
Octagón,
Blue Panther,
Heavy Metal,
Cien Caras, and
Perro Aguayo. The rising popularity of AAA caused rival promotion the
Universal Wrestling Association (UWA) to go out of business. Peña would quickly sign up top UWA
draws for AAA, including
El Canek,
Dos Caras, and
Los Villanos. In 1994, AAA co-promoted the
When Worlds Collide pay-per-view event with
World Championship Wrestling (WCW), with WCW airing the event in the United States. The event was critically-acclaimed and is credited for popularizing
lucha libre in the United States. Weeks after the show,
Art Barr (a key member of AAA's
Los Gringos Locos stable) died while visiting his family. AAA subsequently vacated the
AAA/IWC World Tag Team Championship, which Barr held with
Eddy Guerrero, and Barr's Los Gringos Locos stablemates Guerrero and
Madonna's Boyfriend made their departures from AAA. In the aftermath of When Worlds Collide, El Hijo del Santo also departed the promotion as a result of creative problems. When the Mexican economy began to slow down due to the
1994–1995 peso crisis, AAA's ability to offer consistent work was impaired, leading to wrestlers like
Fuerza Guerrera and Blue Panther departing the promotion. Talent such as Rey Misterio Jr., Psicosis,
La Parka, and
Juventud Guerrera would depart AAA in 1996 to join Konnan's short-lived
TV Azteca-backed
Promo Azteca before landing in the US-based
Extreme Championship Wrestling and WCW promotions. In the mid-1990s the name of the promotion was changed to simply be AAA (pronounced "Triple A"), with Televisa maintaining ownership of the original Asistencia, Asesoría y Administración de Espectáculos name, after Peña bought out Televisa's ownership stake and became independent of the media conglomerate. AAA events would continue to air on Televisa after the purchase. In early 1997, AAA established a working agreement with the
World Wrestling Federation (WWF), with several AAA
luchadores appearing at the WWF's
1997 Royal Rumble event. AAA developed a working relationship with American wrestling promotion
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) in early 2004. Through the relationship, AAA sent the
luchadores Juventud Guerrera,
Héctor Garza,
Abismo Negro,
Heavy Metal, and
Mr. Águila to TNA to compete in the
America's X-Cup Tournament as a contingent known as
Team Mexico, defeating
Team USA in the finals to win the cup. TNA and AAA's initial working relationship would end in late 2004. TNA continued utilizing
luchadores, but opted to contract them individually rather than booking them through AAA.
2006–2014 On October 6, 2006, AAA founder
Antonio Peña died of a heart attack. Following Peña's death, his sister Marisela Peña took over the management of AAA's finances, while Joaquín Roldán and Dorian Roldán became AAA's operational managers.
Konnan would take over the booking of AAA. In 2006, AAA would again partner with
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA), co-promoting TNA's inaugural event in Mexico, held at Arena Monterrey in November 2006. This partnership would end after AAA booker Konnan left TNA in June 2007 and filed a
racial discrimination lawsuit against the promotion; the lawsuit was later dismissed. TNA would maintain a relationship with AAA rival
CMLL from 2007 to 2009, but would begin another working relationship with AAA in February 2010. In 2008,
Lucha Libre USA presented AAA's Legendary Battles of Triplemania program on American
pay-per-view. In 2009, AAA announced the development of a
video game titled
AAA El Videojuego. The game was later retitled
Lucha Libre AAA: Héroes del Ring and released on October 12, 2010.
2014–2020 On January 12, 2014, it was announced that, with the backing of
Mark Burnett, AAA would co-produce a show for the American
El Rey Network in the second half of the year. The one-hour weekly program would be accompanied by monthly and quarterly specials as well as live
pay-per-view events. The show, titled
Lucha Underground, premiered on October 29, 2014. The series ran for four seasons, and received generally positive reviews. Beginning in March 2015, the promotion announced that it would be known as Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide from that point on, marking the second name change since its founding in 1992. On April 8, 2017, AAA operational manager Joaquín Roldán died. On June 14, AAA events began airing on the Front Runner TV free-to-air channel in the United Kingdom. In April and May 2018, some
Lucha Libre Elite (Elite) talent including
Teddy Hart,
Juventud Guerrera, and
Taurus made their returns to AAA wearing their Elite jerseys, launching an interpromotional
angle between the two promotions. On June 4, at
Verano de Escándalo,
Jeff Jarrett returned to AAA after three years away from the promotion to defeat
Rey Wagner and
Rey Mysterio Jr. and win the
AAA Mega Championship. Jarrett was assisted in the match by
Konnan, who also returned to AAA at the event after two years. On February 1, 2019, AAA announced the end of their relationship with
Televisa after 27 years, with the promotion's programming moving to the
Multimedios television station. On February 3, AAA announced that they had reached an agreement with
TV Azteca to broadcast their programming on
Azteca 7. On April 4, 2019, AAA announced that it would be holding an event in the United States,
AAA Invading NY, which would take place at
New York City's
Madison Square Garden on September 15, 2019. The promotion also announced that it would hold a second event in the United States, titled AAA Invading Los Angeles, at
The Forum in
Inglewood, California on October 13, 2019. On August 16, 2019, it was reported by
Pro Wrestling Insider that AAA Invading NY would be moved to the nearby
Hulu Theater due to poor ticket sales. AAA Invading NY was held on September 15 at the Hulu Theater, headlined by Dr. Wagner Jr. vs.
Blue Demon Jr. in a
No Disqualification match. AAA Invading Los Angeles would later be canceled.
COVID-19 pandemic and aftermath AAA would postpone and cancel its televised events in mid-March 2020 as a result of the
COVID-19 pandemic, with its final pre-pandemic event being the
AAA vs. MLW Super Series on March 13. In April 2020, AAA hosted a tournament called Lucha Fighter, which consisted of 12 male wrestlers and 8 female wrestlers; all Lucha Fighter matches were held without a
live audience. As a response to the indefinite recess of live sporting events in Mexico, on July 20, 2020, AAA announced a project called AutoLuchas, which consisted of events at
Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez where fans could attend from their
car. In December 2020,
FactoryMade Ventures, one of the co-producers of
Lucha Underground, filed a lawsuit with AAA; claiming to have exclusive rights to distribute AAA events and merchandise outside of Mexico. The lawsuit resulted in the
geo-blocking of AAA's
YouTube and
Twitch channels in the United States. On February 2, 2021, AAA secured an alliance with
SECTUR to promote Mexico's tourist destinations. The alliance resulted in the launch of the Lucha por la Identidad Nacional Tour shows, which were held behind closed doors and included major AAA events like
Rey de Reyes and
Verano de Escándalo. On August 14, 2021,
Triplemanía XXIX was held at
Arena Ciudad de México. It was the first AAA event since the COVID pandemic began to have a limited number of ticketed fans in attendance. October's
Héroes Inmortales XIV would also have a limited live audience present.
Acquisition by WWE On April 19, 2025, shortly after announcing a
joint event between its
NXT brand division and AAA,
WWE commentator
Michael Cole announced during the
WrestleMania 41 pre-show that WWE had reached an agreement to acquire AAA, as part of a joint venture with Mexican sports and entertainment company Fillip. The following month, it was reported that WWE will own 51% of AAA with Fillip owning the remaining 49%; the acquisition closed on August 1, 2025. On November 25, 2025, WWE announced a media rights agreement with
Fox, which will see AAA events air on Fox properties in Mexico and
Latin America beginning in 2026. ==Contracts==