The league was created in 1945, incorporating clubs from all four sectors of the
allied-occupied Berlin. It replaced the
Gauliga Berlin-Brandenburg as the highest league in the region. In its first year, it was staged in four groups with the winner of each group taking part in a finals tournament. In 1946, three clubs from each of those four groups went to form the single-division, twelve team, Oberliga Berlin. Alongside the Oberliga Berlin, four other Oberligas were formed in Germany in those years: •
Oberliga West (formed in 1947) •
Oberliga Nord (formed in 1947) •
Oberliga Südwest (formed in 1945) •
Oberliga Süd (formed in 1945) The clubs in Berlin were originally not permitted to carry their pre-war names and had to be simply named after the suburb they represented. This rule was slowly lifted in the three western sectors and by 1948, clubs in what was to become West-Berlin carried their original names again. In the
Soviet sector, the future
East Berlin, clubs took up names in accordance with the requirements of the new
Communist regime. With the reintroduction of the German championship in 1948, the winner of the Oberliga Berlin went on to the finals tournament with the other Oberliga champions. Being the smallest of the five Oberligas it is not surprising that no club from Berlin won a German championship in these years or even reached the final. After the 1949–50 season, the clubs from East Berlin left the unified Berlin league system and joined the
East German leagues instead.
Union Oberschöneweide, qualified for the German championship finals in 1950, was not permitted to participate in this tournament either. The Oberliga Berlin carried on with clubs from West Berlin only. Below the Oberliga Berlin ranked the
Amateurliga Berlin as a second tier. Originally staged in a varying number of groups, it became a single-group competition from 1950. With the construction of the
Berlin Wall in 1961 the clubs in West Berlin suffered a substantial loss of revenue because they were cut off from supporters in the Eastern part of the city, causing the Oberliga clubs to suffer financially. Novel ideas were floated to combat the problem, like, instead of players receiving the maximum legal wage for a footballer in West Germany's top tier at the time,
DM 400 per month, the players should only be paid for results, meaning they would not receive any money for games the club lost. In 1963, after 18 seasons, the Oberliga Berlin was disbanded in favor of the new Bundesliga. The champion of the 1962–63 season, Hertha BSC Berlin, was admitted to the new Bundesliga. ==Reforming of the Oberliga Berlin==