Origins Although the club was officially founded in 1926, Napoli traces its roots to the first relevant Neapolitan club, founded as "Naples Foot-Ball & Cricket Club" in 1905 by English sailor William Poths and his associate Hector M. Bayon. Neapolitans such as Conforti, Catterina and Amedeo Salsi were also involved; Salsi was named the club's first president. The original kit of the club was a
sky blue and navy blue striped shirt, with black shorts. Naples' first match was a 3–2 win against the English crew of the boat
Arabik with goals from William MacPherson, Michele Scafoglio and Léon Chaudoir. Early into its existence, the
Italian Football Championship was limited to just
northern clubs, so southern clubs competed against sailors The foreign contingent at the club broke off in 1911 to form
Internazionale Napoli, who wore blue shirts with white shorts, Each of the teams won a Prima Categoria southern Italian titles and therefore competed in the national semi-finals, Naples doing so in 1912–13 and Internazionale Napoli in
1913–14. They were set to face each other for the southern titles again in
1914–15 but it was cancelled due to World War I. Due to financial pressure, the two rival clubs merged as the "Foot-Ball Club Internazionale-Naples", abbreviated as "FBC Internaples" in October 1922. Internaples', and later Napoli's kits are derived from those of Naples FBC and Internazionale Napoli; adopting the sky blue from Naples' shirts and the white shorts from Internazionale Napoli.
FBC Internaples The merged club was seen by some media and fans to be a continuation of Internazionale Napoli rather than a new club; it played its games at Internazionale Napoli's Terme di Agnano rather than Naples FBC's Campo del Poligono and kept Internazionale Napoli's nickname of
Gli Azzurri (The Blues) rather than
I Blucelesti (The Navy Blue and Sky Blues) used by Naples. Internaples were also given the nickname
I Puledri (the foals), as the horse is a symbol of Naples. Internaples were immediately enrolled in the top-flight
Prima Divisione Lega Sud championship, as both Internazionale Napoli and Naples competed in that division pre-merger. Since the end of World War I both clubs had lost dominance of the region to the likes of
Puteolana and
Savoia. Even with the combined strength of Internaples, Savoia still proved to be the top team in southern Italy. Internaples reached the interregional semi-finals of Lega Sud in each of its first two seasons, and reached the Lega Sud finals in
1925–26. This secured the club a spot in the new
Divisione Nazionale for the following season. Internaples changed its name to
Associazione Calcio Napoli on 25 August 1926. The newly renamed team also moved from the Terme di Agnano to a new stadium, the Stadio Militare dell'Arenaccia. After a poor start, with a sole point in an entire championship, Napoli was re-admitted to Serie A's forerunner, the Divisione Nazionale, by the
Italian Football Federation ("FIGC"), and began to improve thanks in part to Paraguayan-born
Attila Sallustro, who was the first fully fledged hero to the fans. He was a capable goal-scorer and eventually set the all-time goal-scoring record for Napoli, which was later surpassed by players like
Diego Maradona and
Marek Hamšík. in 1959, where they have played since. Napoli entered the Serie A era under the management of
William Garbutt. During Garbutt's six-year stint, the club would be dramatically transformed, frequently finishing in the top half of the table. However, in the years leading up to World War II, Napoli went into decline, only surviving relegation in
1939–40 by goal average. The club won the Serie B titles that season to ensure top flight football at the start of the 1950s. Napoli moved to their new home ground
Stadio San Paolo in 1959. Despite erratic league form with highs and lows during this period, including multiple relegations and promotions, Napoli won their first major trophy when they beat
SPAL to lift the
Coppa Italia in 1962, with goals from Gianni Corelli and
Pierluigi Ronzon. The victory made Napoli the first team to win the Coppa while in Serie B, and they were promoted to Serie A that season. Their fourth relegation cut celebrations short the following season. Napoli were entered into the
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup for
1976–77, where they reached the semi-finals, losing 2–1 on aggregate to
Anderlecht. In the Italian league, Napoli were still very much a consistent top six side for much of the late 1970s. However, by 1983, they had slipped dramatically and were involved in relegation battles. The squad was gradually re-built, with the likes of
Ciro Ferrara,
Salvatore Bagni and
Fernando De Napoli filling the ranks. trophy after beating
VfB Stuttgart, May 1989 The club were unsuccessful in the
European Cup in the following season and finished runners-up in
Serie A. However, Napoli were entered into the UEFA Cup for
1988–89 and won their first major European title. Napoli added their second Serie A title in
1989–90, defeating Milan by two points in the title race. The Stadio San Paolo was the only stadium during the competition where the
Argentine National Anthem was not jeered, Maradona bowed to the Napoli fans at the end and his country went on to reach the finals. However, after the finals, the
Italian Football Federation (FIGC) forced Maradona to take a doping test, which he failed testing positive for
cocaine; both Maradona and Napoli staff later claimed it was a revenge plot for events at the World Cup.
Decline Though the club finished fourth during the
1991–92 season, Napoli's league form had dropped lower, and relegation to Serie B came at the end of
1997–98 when they won only two matches all season. To secure football in the city, film producer
Aurelio De Laurentiis re-founded the club under the name Napoli Soccer, as they were not allowed to use their old name until the next season.
FIGC placed Napoli in
Serie C1, where they missed out on promotion after losing 2–1 in play-offs to local rivals
Avellino in
2004–05.
Resurgence The
following season, they secured promotion to
Serie B and De Laurentiis brought back the club's history, restoring its name to Società Sportiva Calcio Napoli in May 2006. In 2010, under manager
Walter Mazzarri, Napoli finished in sixth place to qualify for a
2010–11 UEFA Europa League spot. Napoli finished third in the
2010–11 season, qualifying directly for the
group stage of the
2011–12 UEFA Champions League. In the
2011–12 season, Napoli ended in fifth place in
Serie A, but defeated unbeaten champions Juventus at the
Stadio Olimpico to win the
Coppa Italia for the fourth time in the club's history, 25 years after their last cup win. The team finished second in its group of the 2011–12 UEFA Champions League, progressing to the round of 16, where they were eliminated by eventual winners
Chelsea. In
2012–13, Napoli finished in second place in
Serie A, the club's best performance since winning the
1989–90 Scudetto.
Edinson Cavani finished as
top scorer in the division with 29 goals, which resulted in him being sold to
Paris Saint-Germain for a club-record fee of €64 million. win In the 2013 close-season, Mazzarri left Napoli and
Rafael Benítez became the club's
manager. They finished the
2013–14 season by winning the
2014 Coppa Italia finals, their fifth title in the tournament, with a 3–1 win against
Fiorentina, as well as qualifying for the Champions League, but missed out on the group stage as they lost to
Athletic Bilbao in the play-off round. Their subsequent run in the Europa League ended when they lost 2–1 on aggregate to
Dnipro in the semi-finals. They finished the
2014–15 season in fifth, with Benítez then leaving for
Real Madrid and being replaced by
Maurizio Sarri. In Sarri's first season in charge in the
2015–16 season, Napoli finished in second place with 82 points, and were knocked out of the Europa League in the round of 32 against
Villarreal. In the following season, Napoli finished in third place on 86 points and were knocked out of the Champions League in the round of 16 against Real Madrid. This year saw the breakout season for
Dries Mertens who scored 34 goals in all competitions after he was moved from the left-wing to centre-forward following
Milik's torn
Anterior cruciate ligament. In the
2017–18 season, Napoli challenged for the title for the entire season, and finished with a club record of 91 points. However, the title ultimately went to Juventus in the penultimate round of matches. On 23 December 2017, Marek Hamšík overtook Diego Maradona as Napoli's all-time leading scorer after scoring his 115th goal. At the end of the season, Sarri left for Chelsea, succeeded by
Carlo Ancelotti in May 2018. He managed the club to another second-place finish, but was sacked on 10 December 2019, following a poor run of results in the
2019–20 season which left them seventh in the table.
Gennaro Gattuso was named head coach the next day. On 14 June 2020, Dries Mertens became Napoli's all-time top scorer after scoring his 122nd goal in a Coppa Italia semi-finals match against
Inter. Napoli went on to win the
2019–20 Coppa Italia in a
penalty shoot-out against Juventus in the
finals. In December 2020, Napoli renamed Stadio San Paolo after club icon
Diego Maradona, following his passing. Napoli finished fifth in Serie A that season after a draw on the finals day, missing a Champions League berth by one point. In the
2021–22 season,
Luciano Spalletti replaced Gennaro Gattuso as head coach and led the team to the third place in Serie A, securing a Champions League spot for the azzurri after a two-years absence.
Scudetto return In the
2022–23 season, Napoli clinched the Serie A title for the first time since the 1989–90 season, and their third title overall, following a 1–1 draw against
Udinese on 4 May 2023, their first time as titleholders since the days of Diego Maradona. Meanwhile, in the
Champions League, Spalletti led them to the quarter-finals for the first time in their European history, where they were beaten 2–1 (1–0 away and 1–1 at home) by fellow Serie A side Milan. The
2023–24 season proved to be extremely difficult for the club, as they went through three different coaches –
Rudi Garcia, a returning Walter Mazzarri, and
Francesco Calzona; this managerial instability, as well as the new hires largely not performing to the club's expectations, led the Azzurri to finish 10th in the league, 41 points behind eventual champions Inter. In Europe, the club passed the group stage of the
2023–24 UEFA Champions League in a group with
Real Madrid,
Union Berlin and
Braga, but were ultimately eliminated by
Barcelona in the round of 16. The club also faced criticism in 2023 for a TikTok video featuring Victor Osimhen that used audio with the lyric “I’m a coconut.” For the
2024–25 season, the club signed
Antonio Conte in a bid to contest the title again. Their season started out with a 3–0 away loss against
Hellas Verona, but the Azzurri quickly bounced back with five wins and one draw in the following six matches. The team also signed
Scott McTominay and
Romelu Lukaku late during summer, both players turning out to be very important for the title campaign. Napoli maintained strong form throughout the campaign and entered the final matchday one point ahead of
Inter Milan, and won the title by winning 2–0 over
Cagliari on 23 May, winning their fourth title, the second in a three-year span, cementing Napoli as a consistent contender in the Serie A. Napoli continued to see success during the
2025-26 season. Although the Serie A league hasn't finished yet, and current predictions make them unlikely to win another scudetto (with
Inter Milan likely to win it instead) , Napoli won the
2025-26 Supercoppa italiana by defeating
Bologna 2-0 at the
King Saud University Stadium in Riyadh. In addition, Napoli currently (as of April 2026) occupies a third position in the Serie A , thus making its title defence far better than the disappointing 2023-24 season. Despite this, Napoli's
2025-26 UEFA Champions League run has been very disappointing, only managing two wins (against
Sporting CP and
Qarabag FK, both at home in Naples) in the
league phase , with the club ultimately being knocked out of the competition following a 2-3 home loss to
Chelsea on the 28th of January 2026. ==Club staff==