Pre-professional career Toft started playing handbold at
Team Helsinge, before joining
Virum-Sorgenfri Håndboldklub in 2002 at the age of 14. In 2007, she joined
Team Tvis Holstebro for her first professional contract.
Team Tvis Holstebro At TTH Holstebro, she was part of the team that reached the 2010/2011
Women's EHF European League final, where they lost to league rivals
FC Midtjylland Håndbold. In 2012/2013, TTH Holstebro with Toft in goal manage to reach the final once again and win it this time. Toft almost missed the match due to an injury in her left knee in January 2012.
Car crash in 2009 In 2009, Toft was driving back home from
North Zealand when she lost control over her vehicle. At 10 pm, north of the city
Give, the car spun off the road, flew 50 metres across a field and made four rollovers. Toft survived the car crash, but suffered a severe neck vertebra collapse. Only five months later, she was back on court for
Team Tvis Holstebro.
Larvik In the summer 2014, Toft signed with Norwegian club
Larvik HK. Here, she won the Norwegian Championship and the norwegian cup three times each in the four years she played for the club. She also reached the
EHF Champions League final in
2015 where Larvik HK lost to
Montenegrin side
ŽRK Budućnost. After the tournament She was a part of the tournament all star team as the Best EHF Goalkeeper 2014/2015.
Team Esbjerg Toft returned to Danish handball in 2017/2018 on a two-year contract. She won the
Danish Cup in 2017 and the
2018–19 Danish League with the club. In 2019, Toft once again reached the
Women's EHF European League final, but this time her club lost to Hungarian side
Siófok KC.
Brest In 2019, she joined the French top club
Brest Bretagne Handball, where she reached the final of the
2020–21 Women's EHF Champions League. Once again, Toft lost a European final, this time to Norwegian
Vipers Kristiansand. The same season she won the domestic double with the club.
Győr In 2022, she signed with Hungarian side
Győri ETO KC, where she won the
Hungarian Championship in her first season. She then won the
2023–24 and
2024–25 Women's EHF Champions League. ==Achievements==