Establishment Although Seattle never had a professional women's soccer team in the
Women's United Soccer Association nor
Women's Professional Soccer (WPS) during either league's existence, the city was home to
Seattle Sounders Women, a
USL W-League team mainly composed of amateur players that was affiliated with
Seattle Sounders FC of
Major League Soccer; following news of the imminent demise of WPS in January 2012, a handful of players from the
United States women's national soccer team (USWNT) joined the Sounders Women for part of the 2012 W-League season.
The Athletic cited the resulting close relationship between the Sounders Women and the
United States Soccer Federation (USSF) in conditioning the USWNT players, along with significant fan interest generated during their stint with the team, as major factors that led the USSF to consider Seattle as a viable candidate for a team in a new professional league. In response to the demise of WPS, the USSF announced in June that it would found a new professional women's soccer league (later named
National Women's Soccer League) and invite prospective team owners to submit applications. Bill Predmore, founder and CEO of Seattle-based digital marketing agency, POP, submitted his application pitch for a team tentatively named Seattle Sirens FC. In November 2012, it was confirmed that Predmore's application had been accepted and there would be a Seattle-based women's professional soccer team in 2013. On December 19, 2012, the team name was unveiled as Seattle Reign FC, named in honor of the 1990s
Seattle Reign women's basketball team.
2013: Inaugural season makes a save during a match against the
Chicago Red Stars on July 25, 2013, at
Starfire Stadium in Tukwila, Washington. On December 21, 2012, the team announced
Laura Harvey as its first head coach. Harvey was head coach of
Arsenal L.F.C. from 2010 to 2012 after serving as an assistant for two years, assisted and then coached
Birmingham City L.F.C. from 2002 to 2008, and served as an assistant coach for England's
U-17,
U-19 and
U-23 women's national teams from 2005 to 2011. Before the regular season, Harvey took over as general manager after Amy Carnell resigned. On January 11, 2013,
Kaylyn Kyle,
Teresa Noyola,
Megan Rapinoe,
Amy Rodriguez,
Jenny Ruiz,
Hope Solo, and
Emily Zurrer were named to the team as part of the
NWSL Player Allocation. On January 18, the Reign selected
Christine Nairn, Mallory Schaffer,
Kristen Meier, and
Haley Kopmeyer at the
2013 NWSL College Draft. On February 4, 2013, it was announced that the team had signed four free agents:
Kate Deines,
Jess Fishlock,
Tiffany Cameron, and
Lindsay Taylor. During the
2013 NWSL Supplemental Draft, the team selected
Nikki Krzysik,
Lauren Barnes,
Laura Heyboer,
Liz Bogus,
Michelle Betos and
Kaley Fountain. on July 25, 2013. Leading into the preseason, it was learned that the Reign would be without all of their American allocated players for almost half of the season. Amy Rodriguez announced she was pregnant with her first child and would not be playing during the inaugural season. Hope Solo would be away for the first part of the season after recovering from wrist surgery and Megan Rapinoe had already signed with French club
Olympique Lyonnais from January to June and would miss at least nine games. After traveling to Japan in the preseason to play matches against defending L. League champion
INAC Kobe Leonessa,
Fukuoka J. Anclas, and
Nojima Stella Kanagawa, the Reign faced their first regular season match against the
Chicago Red Stars at
Benedictine University, in which Seattle's
first college draft pick Christine Nairn scored the Reign's first goal of the season via a header off an assist from
Liz Bogus. The point that Seattle earned in the game would be its only for the next nine games. In June 2013, head coach
Laura Harvey began making some trades and signing new international players. With the trades and the return of Solo and Rapinoe, the Reign began to turn the season around with a 1–1 tie against the
Western New York Flash. The game would be the first of a six-game undefeated streak for the Reign with two ties and four wins. After losing to regional rival Portland Thorns FC 2–1 in the season finale in front of a sold-out crowd of 3,855, the Reign ended the
2013 NWSL season seventh in the league with a 5–14–3 record.
2014–2018: Seattle years 2014 season During the 2014 season, the Reign set a league record unbeaten streak of 16 games. During the 16-game stretch, the Reign compiled a 13–0–3 record. The streak came to an end July 12, 2014, in a match against the
Chicago Red Stars that ended 1–0 in favor of the Red Stars. The team finished first in the regular season clinching the
NWSL Shield for the first time. After defeating the
Washington Spirit 2–1 in the playoff semifinals, the Reign was defeated 2–1 by
FC Kansas City during the championship final. Following the regular season, the team earned several league awards.
Kim Little won the Golden Boot and Most Valuable Player awards;
Laura Harvey was named Coach of the Year;
Kendall Fletcher,
Jess Fishlock, Little and
Nahomi Kawasumi were named to the NWSL Best XI team while goalkeeper
Hope Solo and defenders Lauren Barnes and
Stephanie Cox were named to the Second XI team.
2015 season The Reign finished the 2015 season in first place clinching the
NWSL Shield for the second consecutive time. After defeating the
Washington Spirit 3–0 in a playoff semifinal, the Reign was defeated 1–0 by
FC Kansas City during the championship final in Portland. Following the regular season, the team earned several league award nominations. Kim Little, Jess Fishlock, and
Bev Yanez were nominated for league Most Valuable Player, Laura Harvey was nominated for Coach of the Year; and Lauren Barnes and
Kendall Fletcher were nominated for Defender of the Year.
Laura Harvey was ultimately named Coach of the Year for a second consecutive year. Barnes, Little, Yanez, and Fishlock were named to the NWSL Best XI team while Kendall Fletcher,
Stephanie Cox, Megan Rapinoe, and
Keelin Winters were named to the Second XI team.
2016 season The Reign finished the 2016 season in fifth place with a record, narrowly missing a playoff spot by two points. The season was complicated by a number of players being unavailable during the early part of the season due to injury including
Manon Melis,
Jess Fishlock and
Megan Rapinoe. In early July,
Nahomi Kawasumi returned to the Reign for the first time since the 2014 season and scored a brace in her first match with the team.
Rachel Corsie and
Haley Kopmeyer suffered injuries during a match in July against the
Western New York Flash that was controversially played on a baseball field. Schedule changes from previous years were announced in February that resulted in an imbalance amongst team matchups. In late August, the Reign announced that
Hope Solo was taking a leave of absence for the remainder of the season after being suspended from the U.S. national team. In September, four-year team captain
Keelin Winters announced her retirement for the end of the season. On October 17, midfielder
Kim Little announced that she would leave the Reign and return to
Arsenal. Harvey said Little was given an "incredible offer" of a multi-year contract, though no other details were disclosed.
2017 season and Megan Rapinoe in a match against the
Chicago Red Stars, June 28, 2017.|thumb|Seattle Reign forwards
Beverly Yanez and Megan Rapinoe in a match against the
Chicago Red Stars, June 28, 2017. Following the loss of core players Kim Little and Keelin Winters following the 2016 season, the Reign faced a bit of re-structuring for the
2017 season. Three
2017 NWSL College Draft rookies were signed including defender
Maddie Bauer, forward
Katie Johnson, and midfielder
Kristen McNabb. With Kim Little moving back to Arsenal, the Reign re-signed attacking midfielder
Christine Nairn, who had played for the team during its inaugural season. The team also signed Canadian international
Diana Matheson and Australian international
Larissa Crummer, though they spent the majority of the season injured, as well as New Zealand international defender
Rebekah Stott. Megan Rapinoe was the team's leading scorer (and league's third highest) with 12 goals.
2018 season After two consecutive seasons of fifth-place finishes and thus outside of the playoffs, head coach and general manager
Laura Harvey stepped down and was replaced by former rival
Vlatko Andonovski as new head coach of the team. secured the team's long-term future by addressing long-standing stadium issues. A new soccer-specific 5,000 capacity stadium that would host Reign and
Tacoma Defiance games was planned adjacent to Cheney Stadium.
2019 season In their first season playing in Tacoma, the Reign finished 4th in the regular season, to qualify for the
NWSL Playoffs but were knocked out by the
North Carolina Courage in the semi-final.
2020 season Due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, the regular season was cancelled in 2020. Instead, the newly renamed OL Reign took part in the
2020 NWSL Challenge Cup and the
NWSL Fall Series.
2021 season Head coach
Farid Benstiti resigned in July for undisclosed reasons; a joint investigation by the league and the players' association in December 2022 found that he abused players by "weight-shaming" them. The Reign finished 2nd in the regular season, led first by interim coach
Sam Laity and then by
Laura Harvey after her return. They fell once again in the semi-final, this time to the eventual champions
Washington Spirit.
Since 2022: Return to Seattle 2022 season The club announced in December 2021 that it would be returning to Seattle with
Lumen Field as their new home stadium while continuing to train and operate out of Tacoma. In the
Challenge Cup, the Reign finished first in the West Division and earned the top seed overall but lost in the semifinal against the
Washington Spirit in a
penalty shoot-out. The team also won the mid-season invitational
Women's Cup final against
Louisville. In their final regular-season match, the Reign won the 2022
NWSL Shield, the team's third. The club will become Starfire's main soccer tenant and operate out of there in 2024, after
Seattle Sounders FC moves to their own facility. The team finished the 2023 season as runners-up in the
NWSL Championship, losing 2–1 to
NJ/NY Gotham FC. At the end of this season, forward
Megan Rapinoe announced her retirement after eleven seasons with the club.
2024 season Prior to the 2024 season, it was announced that
OL Groupe was putting the team up for sale. With OL ownership inevitably ending, the club returned to its original Seattle Reign FC name. The badge was also changed to an updated version of the original, featuring a gold crown instead of silver. The impending sale of the team created a period of uncertainty, which contributed to the club failing to retain some of the key players who had led them to the prior year's Championship match. Free agents such as
USWNT stars
Rose Lavelle and
Emily Sonnet signed with other teams during the off season. Throughout the 2024 season, the team struggled, and finished with a record of 6–5–15. This left them in the 13th position out of 14 teams, and missing playoffs. In June, it was announced that
Seattle Sounders and
The Carlyle Group had purchased the team for $58 million.
2025 season After a disappointing prior year, the Seattle Reign FC front office acted to improve the roster of the club. In December 2024, Seattle Reign traded midfielder
Jaelin Howell for goalkeeper
Cassie Miller and USWNT forward and all-time NWSL leading goalscorer
Lynn Biyendolo The team also signed forward Maddie Dahlien, who had just won the
NCAA Championship with the
North Carolina Tar Heels in the fall of 2024. In July 2025, the club signed
Mia Fishel. Fishel had been with
Chlesea FC the two years prior, but missed significant playing time during that period due to a torn ACL. Prior to Chelsea, Mia Fishel won the Golden Boot in the 2022 Apertura season of
Liga MX Femenil while leading the team to a title. The roster modifications and continued development of young players led Seattle Reign to improve their performance from the season prior. The team never lost more than two matches in a row, and ended the season with a five-game unbeaten streak. The club finished with a record of 10–9–7, and placed 5th out of 14 teams. Seattle qualified for playoffs, and were matched up again
Orlando Pride in the quarterfinals. Orlando beat Seattle 2–0 to eliminate the Reign from the post-season. Defender
Jordyn Bugg was nominated for the
FIFA Marta Award for her first professional goal, which was scored from 35 yards out during a match against the
North Carolina Courage on March 22. Bugg was also a nominee for
NWSL Defender or the year, and made the
NWSL Second Best XI. Goalkeeper
Claudia Dickey was nominated for
NWSL Goalkeeper of the year, and was also named to the Second Best XI. Additionally, forward
Maddie Dahlien was a finalist for
NWSL Rookie of the Year.
2026 season ==Colors and badge==