Early history Originally part of the gymnastics and sports club TSV Hachinger, SpVgg Unterhaching was established as an independent football club on 1 January 1925. Their first promotion to a higher division came in 1931 and they went on to be promoted to the A-Klasse a year later. However, the club was dissolved in 1933 as it was regarded as "politically unreliable" by the
Nazis and was not re-established until after the end of World War II in 1945 to resume play in the amateur fourth division B-Klasse.
A rise through the ranks Unterhaching's football team was only an anonymous local amateur team with no significant successes until a climb through league ranks that began in 1976 with promotion from B-Klasse to A-Klasse play. A first-place finished earned the club quick promotion to the Bezirksliga in 1977. Continued good play put the team into the fourth-division
Landesliga Bayern-Süd in 1979 and then the
Oberliga Bayern (III), the highest amateur division at the time, by 1981. Unterhaching finished first there in 1983 to earn an appearance in the playoff round for the
2. Bundesliga, but failed to advance. They suffered a similar fate in 1988 when they next appeared in the promotion round. The club finally emerged from the Oberliga to play in the 2. Bundesliga in 1989, but were quickly relegated after a 20th-place finish. Promoted a second time in 1992, they were once again sent down after a marginally better 18th-place result. Unterhaching next appeared in the second division in 1995 after a first-place finish in the new
Regionalliga Süd (III).
Unterhaching in Bundesliga With their return to the 2. Bundesliga in the 1995–96 season the club would begin a period that would see them earn their best ever results. They finished 4th that season, then slipped to 6th and 11th-place results in their next two campaigns before securing promotion to the top-flight
Bundesliga after a 2nd-place finish in 1999 season. They went on to surprise everyone with a respectable 10th-place result in their inaugural Bundesliga season and also famously played the spoiler's role in deciding who would win the championship that year. Their first Bundesliga win came in just their second match of the season, with a 2–0 victory over
MSV Duisburg at home. While struggling in away matches, Unterhaching remained undefeated at home in nine games before losing 0–2 to their stronger neighbours,
Bayern Munich. Prior to this loss, they had earned wins at home in matches against highly favoured teams like
VfB Stuttgart and
Borussia Dortmund, beating them 2–0 and 1–0 respectively. They earned their first away win in the Bundesliga by beating VfB Stuttgart 2–0 once again. On the final matchday of the season, visiting
Bayer Leverkusen needed only a draw in Unterhaching to secure their first national title, but instead went down to defeat to the determined home side. Things took a sinister turn for Leverkusen when
Michael Ballack scored an
own goal that put home side ahead in the 20th minute. Their title hopes ended when Haching midfielder
Markus Oberleitner made the score 2–0 in the 72nd minute. Meanwhile, Bayern Munich beat
Werder Bremen 3–1 at home and were able to overtake Leverkusen on goal difference to snatch away the title. With a 10th-place result, Unterhaching finished ahead of long-established sides Borussia Dortmund and
Schalke 04. They ended the season with the league's fifth best home record with 10 wins and 5 draws in 17 matches having lost only to Bayern Munich and
1. FC Kaiserslautern. Goalkeeper
Gerhard Tremmel, defenders
Alexander Strehmel and
Jochen Seitz, midfielders
Markus Oberleitner and
André Breitenreiter and striker
Altin Rraklli were memorable players of the team. Breitenreiter and Rraklli scored 13 Bundesliga goals between them that season. However, the start of the
2000–01 season was a nightmare for Unterhaching as they would win only one and draw two of their first eight matches. While the team went undefeated in its next six matches, they were unable to maintain that form and at the mid-season break were only out of the relegation zone on goal difference. The second half of the season was just as dismal, and although they earned wins over local rivals
Bayern Munich and
1860 Munich, their campaign would end with a 16th-place result and relegation. As the season drew to a close Unterhaching was once again in a position to help Bayern Munich win another title. Needing only to hold second-place
Schalke 04 to a draw in their final match to ensure Bayern's win, Unterhaching held 2–0 and 3–2 advantages before finally succumbing 3–5 to Schalke. Bayern then had to make their own way to the championship with at least a draw against
Hamburger SV which they only narrowly managed on a
Patrik Andersson equalizer (1–1) deep into stoppage time. Ironically, in the middle of their poor season, SpVgg Unterhaching would emerge as winners of the last
DFB-Hallenpokal, an indoor football tournament staged during the winter break of the Bundesliga season from 1987 to 2001.
Recent history The club's struggles continued after their relegation to the
2. Bundesliga. Needing an away win in their final match of the season in order to avoid being sent down to the Regionalliga Süd (III), they instead went down to a 0–3 defeat to
Karlsruher SC and finished in 15th place. They re-bounded the following season, taking the Regionalliga title, and making their way back to second division competition. Subsequently, Haching has delivered poor results in the 2. Bundesliga, narrowly avoiding being relegated again in both 2004 and 2006 before finally dropping into the Regionalliga in 2007, finishing 16th in the table due to
FC Carl Zeiss Jena's 2–1 win against
FC Augsburg. In the 2007–08 season, the club was never really in contention for a 2. Bundesliga return but did qualify for the new
3. Liga. In its first season in the new, nationwide 3. Liga, the club was close to promotion, but a loss 3–4-loss against Carl Zeiss Jena on the 37th matchday earned them a fall from second to fourth place, and a prolonged stay in the third league. In 2009–10 the club started well, but went down the table during winter. 2008–09's successful coach
Ralph Hasenhüttl got replaced by the 1990-world champion
Klaus Augenthaler, who led the team to a finish on a secure 11th place. The club finished one place above the relegation zone in the 3. Liga in 2013–14, coming 17th but was relegated to the tier four
Regionalliga Bayern at the end of the 2014–15 season. It qualified for the
2015–16 DFB-Pokal where it knocked-out
FC Ingolstadt 04 and
RB Leipzig before losing to
Bayer Leverkusen in the third round. In the
2022–23 season, Unterhaching returned to the 3. Liga as champions of the
Regionalliga Bayern. ==Honours==