, pictured here with the original design of the championship belt (2016–2023). The championship was established on April 3, 2016. During the
WrestleMania 32 pre-show that day,
WWE Hall of Famer
Lita appeared: after recapping the history of
women's professional wrestling in
WWE, she declared that WWE's women would no longer be referred to as WWE Divas, but as "
WWE Superstars" like their male counterparts. The term "Diva" had been criticized by some commentators, fans, and several past and present female wrestlers, including reigning
Divas Champion Charlotte, as diminishing the athletic abilities of female wrestlers and relegating them to "eye candy". Lita also unveiled a new title belt and revealed that the Divas Championship would be retired in favor of a new WWE Women's Championship. The inaugural champion was determined by a
triple threat match between Charlotte,
Becky Lynch, and
Sasha Banks later that night, which was originally scheduled for the Divas Championship. Charlotte, the final Divas Champion, became the first WWE Women's Champion by winning that match. The title shares its name with the
original WWE Women's Championship. However, the newer title does not share the same title history as the original, which was unified with the Divas Championship in 2010 and subsequently retired. WWE acknowledges the original championship as its predecessor, However, this recognition was reversed when NXT reverted to being WWE's developmental brand in September 2021. The championship was the first women's title to be defended in the main event of a
WWE pay-per-view and livestreaming event, which was at
Hell in a Cell in October 2016; this was also the first-ever women's
Hell in a Cell match and the first women's match to main event a WWE
pay-per-view and
livestreaming event. At the event, Charlotte (whose ring name was lengthened to Charlotte Flair) defeated Sasha Banks to become a three-time champion. After two years, it was again featured in the main event match of a pay-per-view and livestreaming event, which was the first-ever all-women's event
Evolution in October 2018, where
Ronda Rousey retained the title against
Nikki Bella. Rousey then defended the title in a
winner takes all triple threat match against SmackDown Women's Champion Charlotte Flair and Becky Lynch in the main event of
WrestleMania 35 in April 2019, which Lynch won. This was the first women's match to main event a
WrestleMania – WWE's flagship event. On May 10, 2020, the championship became the first in history to be directly rewarded as a result of winning the
Money in the Bank ladder match (taped April 15, 2020), which was revealed when the briefcase was opened by Becky Lynch the following night on
Raw. Lynch announced that she was forfeiting the title due to pregnancy and announced the Money in the Bank match winner, Asuka, as the new champion. As a result of the
2023 WWE Draft, the Raw and SmackDown women's championships switched brands and there were no title changes for either championship before draft results went into effect on May 8. The issue of the Raw Women's Championship being on SmackDown was then resolved on the June 9, 2023, episode of
SmackDown. That night, WWE official
Adam Pearce unveiled a new championship belt to reigning champion
Asuka, with the title subsequently reverting to its original name WWE Women's Championship as to when Lita first introduced it at WrestleMania 32. == Brand designation history ==