The
MLS Cup is the post-season championship of
Major League Soccer (MLS), the top-flight club
soccer league in the United States and Canada. The
2024 season was the 29th in MLS history, and was contested by 29 teams organized into the
eastern and
western conferences. Each team played 34 matches during the regular season, which runs from February to October, twice against each intra-conference opponent and six to seven times for inter-conference opposition in an unbalanced schedule. The regular season included a month-long break for the
Leagues Cup, which comprised all MLS and
Liga MX teams. The nine clubs in each conference with the most
points qualified for the
MLS Cup playoffs, which was played over five rounds from October to December. Most rounds were a
single-elimination match hosted by the higher-
seeded team; the exception was Round One, which was a
best-of-three series with the first and third (if necessary) match hosted by the higher-seeded team. Both of the finalists, the
LA Galaxy and
New York Red Bulls, were among the ten original teams that joined the league for the
inaugural season in 1996. The 2024 final is the first MLS Cup to not feature an
expansion team since
MLS Cup 2014, which was contested by the Galaxy and
New England Revolution. It is also the first championship match between teams from
New York City and
Los Angeles—the two largest metropolitan areas in the United States. The metropolitan areas also each have two MLS teams, with their newer counterparts established in the 2010s having each won the MLS Cup. The Galaxy and Red Bulls last played each other during the
2021 regular season, which ended in a 3–2 victory for the Galaxy.
LA Galaxy The LA Galaxy are the most successful team in MLS Cup history, having won five titles in nine appearances in the final; their most recent was in 2014 against the New England Revolution, who they previously defeated in
2002 and
2005. The team had won three MLS Cup championships in a four-year span under head coach
Bruce Arena, who left in 2016. In the following seven seasons, the Galaxy qualified for the playoffs only twice and finished with the
worst record in the league once despite making several star signings. They finished in 26th place during the
2023 season, their worst performance in club history, and fired longtime club president
Chris Klein and technical director
Jovan Kirovski in response to a boycott from fans. Head coach
Greg Vanney was retained and worked with new
general manager Will Kuntz to acquire 20 players over a 16-month period to overhaul the Galaxy roster; the attack would also remain under the leadership of star midfielder
Riqui Puig. The club remained under transfer sanctions during the 2023 season that limited their early rebuild to
free agent signings and trades. Starting goalkeeper
Jonathan Bond was replaced by free agent
John McCarthy, who had won
MLS Cup 2022 with cross-town rivals
Los Angeles FC. The moves marked a change from the club's traditional Designated Player signings, which had included veteran European stars, but aligned with other MLS teams who pursued younger talent. The team were undefeated in their first six matches of the regular season, including two matches where they were trailing 2–0, until a loss to Los Angeles FC in the
El Tráfico derby. The Galaxy's schedule included nine away matches in the first fourteen weeks of the season, which was followed by a home stand of four matches during a five-week stretch. Prior to the home stand, the team had a five-match winless streak in May that included four consecutive draws that dropped them to fourth place in the Western Conference. The team entered the midseason break for the Leagues Cup atop the Western Conference standings with a record of 14 wins, 5 losses, and 7 draws. The Galaxy advanced from their Leagues Cup group but were eliminated in the round of 32 by
Seattle Sounders FC. Before MLS play resumed in late August, the team signed German midfielder
Marco Reus from
Borussia Dortmund; he scored in his debut match for the club, a 2–0 defeat of
Atlanta United FC that was also the 400th win in franchise history. The Galaxy had a pair of losses on the road in September, but clinched a playoff spot and remained atop the conference standings. The team lost on
Decision Day to
Houston Dynamo FC and ended the regular season tied on points with Los Angeles FC, but finished second in the conference on
goal differential. The Galaxy finished with an undefeated record at their primary home stadium,
Dignity Health Sports Park, and equaled their franchise records for wins (19) and goals scored (69) in the season. Pec, who was awarded
Newcomer of the Year, led the team in scoring with 16 goals and 14 assists, followed by Puig with 13 goals and 15 assists; the Galaxy set an MLS record with four players who scored ten or more goals during the season. The two-match sweep gave the team a three-week break until the next playoff match, which Puig criticized in a tweet directed at the league. LA hosted the Western Conference Final against Seattle Sounders FC, who had defeated top-seeded Los Angeles FC in the previous round and had the fewest goals conceded during the 2024 regular season. The Galaxy won 1–0 with a goal in the 85th minute by Joveljić after struggling against Seattle's defense and control of the game.
New York Red Bulls (
pictured in 2018) led the Red Bulls in scoring during the regular season after returning from injuries in 2023 The New York Red Bulls joined MLS in the inaugural season as the MetroStars and adopted their current name after their acquisition by Austrian energy drink company
Red Bull GmbH was completed in 2006. The team finished as runners-up to the
Columbus Crew in
MLS Cup 2008, their first championship appearance, and had yet to return to the MLS Cup. The Red Bulls had the MLS record for longest playoffs streak, having qualified for 15 consecutive seasons between 2010 and 2024. They finished the
2023 regular season as the eighth seed in the Eastern Conference and defeated
Charlotte FC in the wild card round of the playoffs before being eliminated by
FC Cincinnati in two matches. It was the fifth consecutive season where the Red Bulls had not advanced beyond the first round proper of the playoffs. German manager
Sandro Schwarz was hired as head coach in December 2023 from
Hertha BSC in the
Bundesliga; the hiring was intended to align with the "high-press" style used by the Red Bull teams. Later that month, New York signed Swedish midfielder
Emil Forsberg from sister club
RB Leipzig to a Designated Player contract. He was acquired to become captain of the team, which primarily relied on a core of young homegrown players from New York and New Jersey. The Red Bulls began the regular season with 14 points in their first seven matches as they led the Eastern Conference and league standings. Through their first ten matches, the team lost only once, but also had five draws from goals conceded late in matches; by early May, they had dropped to third in the conference standings. After a 6–2 loss to
Inter Miami CF in early May, the Red Bulls won four of their next five matches and maintained a fourth-place position in the conference. The team lost Forsberg to a leg injury while he was playing for the
Sweden national team during an international
friendly on June 8; he was placed on the injury list at the end of the month after attempting to play as a late substitute. The Red Bulls entered the Leagues Cup break on an eight-match unbeaten streak but only won twice despite outshooting their opponents—an attacking discrpency that was blamed on the absence of Forsberg. New York finished at the bottom of their group in Leagues Cup play after losing two
penalty shootouts to
Toronto FC and
C.F. Pachuca. During their tournament break in August, Uruguayan midfielder
Felipe Carballo was acquired on
loan from
Grêmio in Brazil and filled the team's last remaining Designated Player slot. The Red Bulls had their 12-match home unbeaten streak in league play snapped by the
Philadelphia Union and won once in their final nine matches of the regular season. Forsberg returned to the team in October as the team finished seventh in the Eastern Conference and qualified for the playoffs for the 15th consecutive season. Lewis Morgan was the top goalscorer for the Red Bulls, with 14 in MLS matches, and named the
Comeback Player of the Year for his performance during the regular season. The Red Bulls opened the playoffs with a two-match sweep of the Columbus Crew, the defending MLS Cup champions and top seed in the Eastern Conference. They earned an
upset 1–0 victory in
Columbus through a goal by Carballo and a
shutout by goalkeeper
Carlos Coronel. In the second match, the Red Bulls played to a 2–2 draw and defeated the Crew in the penalty shootout with three saves from Coronel to advance to their first Conference Semifinals since 2018. They then faced cross-town rivals
New York City FC for the first time in the playoffs; the match was played at
Citi Field, which was used in place of
Yankee Stadium due to a scheduling conflict with the
Army–Notre Dame college football game. The Red Bulls won 2–0 with goals in the first half by Carballo from a long-distance strike and
Dante Vanzeir on a
corner kick. The team clinched their second Eastern Conference championship with a 1–0 defeat of hosts
Orlando City SC; the lone goal was a
header scored by defender
Andrés Reyes, while Coronel kept a shutout amid nine shots from Orlando City.
Summary of results :
Note: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away). ==Venue==