Manchester City Arteta had three options upon retirement. He was offered to lead the Arsenal Academy, by
Arsène Wenger, join
Mauricio Pochettino's (his teammate from PSG) backroom staff at
Tottenham Hotspur or join Pep Guardiola's coaching team at
Manchester City. On 3 July 2016, Arteta was appointed an assistant coach at Manchester City, alongside
Brian Kidd and
Domènec Torrent, who operated as deputies to
Pep Guardiola. Guardiola and Arteta first met at the
Barcelona academy, although Guardiola was already established in the first team, being 11 years older than Arteta. Since then, the two kept in touch. Guardiola was convinced Arteta – who was an Arsenal player at the time – would make a good coach when he called him to get information on Chelsea, prior to their
2012 Champions League semi-finals against Barcelona. Arteta earned his
UEFA Pro Licence after completing the course run by the
Football Association of Wales. In 2015, when Guardiola was exiting
Bayern Munich, Arteta, in his final year as a player, re-connected and decided to work together. Arteta stood in as Man City manager in a 2–1
Champions League loss against
Lyon on 19 September 2018, because of Guardiola's touchline ban. At Man City, Arteta won two
Premier League titles, an
FA Cup, and two
EFL Cups. In 2018, Arteta became strongly linked with the Arsenal manager's vacancy, following the departure of his former manager Arsène Wenger, but
Unai Emery was eventually hired.
Arsenal 2019–22: Early years and FA Cup win On 20 December 2019, Arteta was appointed head coach at his former club
Arsenal, signing a deal until 2023. Upon his appointment, he stated that he believed the club had lost direction and that he didn't want players to shirk responsibility: "I want people to take responsibility for their jobs and I want people who deliver passion and energy in the football club. Anyone who doesn't buy into this, or that has a negative effect or whatever, is not good enough for this environment or this culture." Arteta named his coaching staff on 24 December, with assistants
Albert Stuivenberg and
Steve Round, and goalkeeping coach
Iñaki Caña joining the club. Interim head coach
Freddie Ljungberg remained as assistant coach, and goalkeeping coach
Sal Bibbo stayed to work with Caña. On 26 December 2019, Arteta took charge for the first time as an Arsenal manager for their
Premier League match against
Bournemouth which ended in a 1–1 draw, thanks to a second half equaliser from
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang. Despite the draw, he stated he was pleased with the "attitude, passion and the fighting spirit" of his players. On 1 January 2020, Arteta got his first win as Arsenal coach: a 2–0 win over
Manchester United at the
Emirates. On 18 July 2020, Arsenal beat Arteta's former employer Manchester City 2–0 in the
FA Cup semi-final, leading Arsenal to their fourth
FA Cup final in seven years, and Arteta's first in charge. Arsenal went on to win the
final 2–1 over
Chelsea for a
record 14th victory, making Arteta the first person to win the FA Cup as both captain and coach of Arsenal. Moreover, he became the first head coach or manager to win a major trophy in his first season in charge of the club since
George Graham in 1986–87. Prior to the start of the
2020–21 season, Arsenal announced that assistant coach
Freddie Ljungberg and goalkeeping coach
Sal Bibbo had departed the club; while assistant coaches
Carlos Cuesta and
Miguel Molina, and
set-piece coach
Andreas Georgson joined Arteta's backroom staff. On 29 August, Arteta won his second trophy as manager after Arsenal beat
Liverpool 5–4 on penalties in the
FA Community Shield. On 10 September, Arteta's role was formally changed from first team head coach to manager, reflecting a wider remit at the club. On 23 January 2021, Arteta had his first defeat in the
FA Cup in his managerial career as Arsenal was knocked out by
Southampton in the fourth round, unable to defend the title. On 14 March 2021, Arteta claimed his first victory in the
North London derby as a manager thanks to goals from
Martin Ødegaard and
Alexandre Lacazette in a 2–1 win. That was also Arsenal's first victory over
Tottenham since December 2018. In the
Europa League, he led Arsenal to the semi-finals, in which they lost 2–1 on aggregate to Unai Emery's
Villarreal. Later on, Arsenal finished 8th in the
Premier League, and the 25-year run of participating in European competitions came to an end. In July 2021, set-piece coach
Nicolas Jover joined Arteta's coaching team, replacing
Andreas Georgson who had departed the club. On 13 August, Arsenal started their season with a 2–0 loss to newly promoted
Brentford, followed by losses to
Chelsea and
Manchester City which left the club bottom of the league without a point or a goal, and left Arteta in a precarious position going into the international break. Arsenal resisted calls from supporters for Arteta to be sacked, and the club duly went on to win all their league games in September, leading to Arteta receiving his first
manager of the month award. On 1 April 2022, Arteta received his second Manager of the Month award and on 6 May extended his contract to the end of the 2024–25 season. Having sat in fourth place throughout much of the second half of the campaign, successive defeats away at both
Tottenham Hotspur and
Newcastle United in the closing weeks of the season saw Arsenal slip to 5th in the final table, and having to settle for a campaign in the
UEFA Europa League for the following season.
2022–24: Title challengers and Champions League return Arsenal began their
2022–23 campaign with a 2–0 win away to
Crystal Palace on 5 August 2022. The victory was Arteta's 50th league win as Arsenal boss, making him the second-quickest manager to reach 50 top-flight wins for the Arsenal after
Arsène Wenger. On 20 August, the
Gunners beat
Bournemouth 3–0 in matchweek 3. The win vaulted them to the top of the Premier League for the first time since 2016, and ensured it was the first time Arsenal had won their opening three fixtures since the
2004–05 season. On 27 August, Arsenal beat
Fulham 2–1 at
Emirates Stadium, marking Arteta's 100th Premier League game in charge. The
Gunners finished the month with a 2–1 win at home over
Aston Villa on 31 August. It was the fourth time Arsenal had started a top-flight season with a run of five wins, after
1930–31,
1947–48 and 2004–05. Mikel Arteta became the 11th manager to have won the first five games of a Premier League season, after
Kevin Keegan,
Carlo Ancelotti,
Alex Ferguson,
Arsène Wenger,
Alan Curbishley,
José Mourinho,
Manuel Pellegrini,
Pep Guardiola,
Maurizio Sarri, and
Jürgen Klopp. After leading the
Gunners to wins in all five of their Premier League matches of August, Mikel Arteta was named
Premier League Manager of the Month, winning the award for the third time following his previous successes in September 2021 and March 2022. On 16 October 2022, Arteta's side beat
Leeds United 1–0 at
Elland Road. This was the club's best start to a top-flight campaign as the
Gunners had won nine of their first ten league games for the first time ever. The result also moved Arsenal four points clear at the top of the Premier League. On 6 November, the
Gunners beat
Chelsea 1–0 at
Stamford Bridge. This was Arteta's 87th victory in 150 games in charge of Arsenal – more than any of his predecessors, including
George Graham and
Arsène Wenger, over the equivalent period. After guiding Arsenal to four wins from four Premier League games in November and December, Mikel Arteta picked up his second Premier League Manager of the Month award of the campaign, winning the award for the fourth time since December 2019. On 22 January 2023, Arteta's side beat
Manchester United 3–2 at home. The victory put them a five-point advantage at the top of the Premier League with a game in hand, and meant that Arsenal had 50 points from 19 games at the halfway stage of the league season – their best start to a top-flight campaign – 15 more than they had at the same stage last season. After leading the
Gunners to two wins and a draw in January from their Premier League games against three teams vying for a place in the top four, Mikel Arteta was named Premier League Manager of the Month for the third time this season – the fifth time since December 2019. He was the first manager to win the award in successive months since
Manchester City's
Pep Guardiola did so in November and December 2021. Arteta also became the first Arsenal manager to win the award three times in a single campaign, which was the first time that had happened in the league since
Liverpool's
Jürgen Klopp won five in the 2019–20 season. On 12 March, Arsenal beat Fulham 3–0 at
Craven Cottage. This was Arteta's 100th win in his 168th game in charge of Arsenal, meaning he has the best win percentage of any Arsenal manager. Arteta said afterwards "there is still a lot to improve." The following day, he was awarded
Manager of the Year at the 2023 London Football Awards. He won his fourth
Manager of the Month award of the season in March. Following a loss on penalties to
Sporting CP after a 2–2 aggregate draw in the
UEFA Europa League round of 16, injuries to key players
William Saliba and
Takehiro Tomiyasu would prove detrimental, as Arsenal's seven-game winning streak spanning from mid-February to early April would derail with three consecutive draws to Liverpool, West Ham United, and bottom-of-the-table Southampton, before a 4–1 loss at the
Etihad Stadium to allow second-place Manchester City to capitalise on Arsenal's drop in form. By 20 May, Arsenal could no longer mathematically win the title after consecutive losses to Brighton and Nottingham Forest, finishing in second-place and handing the title to Manchester City, being crowned Premier League champions for the third consecutive season before completing the continental treble. The team's second-place finish meant Arteta was the first manager since
Arsène Wenger six years earlier to guide Arsenal to a Champions League qualification spot, and was the highest position Arsenal had finished in since being league runners-up in
2015–16. It was reported in July 2023 that assistant coach
Steve Round had departed the club. Arsenal opened their
2023–24 campaign with a 4–1 victory via penalty shoot-out following a 1–1 draw against reigning champions Manchester City, winning the
2023 FA Community Shield accounting for Arteta's third trophy as Arsenal manager. On 8 October, Arteta's Arsenal defeated
Manchester City at the Emirates Stadium 1–0 to end Arsenal's 12-game straight losing run against City in the Premier League. Arteta's 200th game as Arsenal manager came on 25 November, which saw Arsenal win 1–0 away at
Brentford to take top spot of the Premier League for the first time in the season. On 29 November, Arteta led Arsenal to the Champions League knockout stages for the first time since
2016–17, following a 6–0 win over
Lens to win Group B. Arteta was named Premier League Manager of the Month for February due to Arsenal's 100% win record throughout the month as well as scoring 18 goals in the process. In the Champions League round of 16, Arsenal defeated
Porto on penalties to reach the quarter-finals of the tournament for the first time since
2009–10. On 12 May 2024, Arsenal defeated
Manchester United in a 1–0 away win at
Old Trafford to secure 27 wins in the 2023–24 campaign at that point, the most for a 38-game season in the club's history; surpassing the record set by
the Invincibles in the
2003–04 season. However despite beating
Everton 2–1 on the final day of the season, Arsenal finished runner up to Manchester City for the second season in a row missing out on the title by two points.
2024–present: Contract extension On 12 September 2024, Arteta extended his contract to remain Arsenal manager for three years. In the
2024–25 season, Arsenal finished second in the league for the third consecutive year, behind Liverpool. In the
Champions League, the club defeated reigning European champions
Real Madrid in the quarter-finals to reach the semi-finals for the third time and the first time since 2008–09, before being eliminated by eventual winners Paris Saint-Germain. During the
2025–26 season, Arteta secured his 200th win as a club manager in a 3–2 Champions League victory over
Kairat on 28 January 2026. On 22 March, Arsenal lost the
EFL Cup final 2–0 to Manchester City. In their following match, they were knocked out by
Southampton in the
FA Cup quarter-final, where they lost 2–1. In their subsequent Premier League matches, Arsenal lost 2–1 to Bournemouth and Manchester City, narrowing their lead over the latter. However, he led the club to their second consecutive
semi-final in the Champions League after 1–0 victory on aggregate against Sporting CP. ==Style of management==