, inaugural Intercontinental Champion, carrying the 2011–2019 design of the championship
WWF North American Heavyweight Champion Pat Patterson became the inaugural champion on September 1, 1979. It was said he had
unified his title with the South American Heavyweight Championship, in a tournament in
Rio de Janeiro, although both the tournament and South American Championship were entirely fictional. On April 1, 1990, at
WrestleMania VI, Intercontinental Champion
the Ultimate Warrior defeated
WWF Champion Hulk Hogan to win the world title; so the Intercontinental Championship was
vacated for the first time soon after.
Mr. Perfect then won a tournament to crown a new Intercontinental Champion. has the fourth-longest combined reign of all time, shown here with the first design of the championship On October 17, 1999,
Chyna became the only woman to hold the Intercontinental Championship by defeating
Jeff Jarrett at
No Mercy. Following the
World Wrestling Federation's (WWF) purchase of
World Championship Wrestling (WCW) in March 2001, the title was
unified with the
WCW United States Championship at
Survivor Series, causing the United States Championship to become inactive. Then-United States Champion
Edge defeated then-Intercontinental Champion
Test. In 2002, after the first
brand split had begun and the WWF was renamed WWE, Raw general manager
Eric Bischoff began unifying his brand's singles championships. On July 22, 2002, the Intercontinental Championship was
unified with the
European Championship in a
ladder match, in which then-Intercontinental Champion
Rob Van Dam defeated then-European Champion
Jeff Hardy. On August 19, 2002, Bischoff made a six-minute gauntlet match for the
Hardcore Championship, with the winner facing Van Dam in a second unification match the next week on
Raw.
Tommy Dreamer successfully retained his title in that match, and lost to Van Dam in a hardcore match the next week. As a result of the victories over Hardy and Dreamer, Van Dam is regarded as the last European and Hardcore champion in WWE history; these were his first and fourth reigns with those respective titles. On September 30, 2002, Bischoff scheduled a match to unify the Intercontinental Championship with the recently created Raw-exclusive
World Heavyweight Championship. The unification match took place at
No Mercy the following month and saw then-World Heavyweight Champion
Triple H defeat then-Intercontinental Champion
Kane, making him the Raw brand's sole male singles champion. Over Bischoff's objections, Raw co-general manager
Stone Cold Steve Austin reactivated the Intercontinental Championship on the May 5, 2003 episode of
Raw and declared any former champion on the Raw roster eligible to enter a battle royal at
Judgment Day for the title.
Christian won the battle royal to win the championship and restore a secondary singles title for Raw wrestlers to compete for. Eventually, WWE did the same thing for SmackDown and created a separate set of titles for that brand; for its secondary title, SmackDown reactivated the
United States Championship that had been unified with the Intercontinental Championship in 2001, placing the WWE name on it while claiming the lineage of the old WCW title of the same name (much as they did with the
Cruiserweight Championship when that became WWE exclusive). On May 31, 2015, the championship was contested in an
Elimination Chamber match for the first time. has the longest single and combined reign at 666 days In July 2016, WWE reintroduced the brand split. During the
2016 draft, then-Intercontinental Champion The Miz was drafted to SmackDown. Just days later, he successfully defended the title against Raw draftee
Darren Young at
Battleground, making the title exclusive to SmackDown. During the following year's
Superstar Shake-up, Intercontinental Champion
Dean Ambrose was moved to the Raw brand, making the title exclusive to Raw. Two years later during the
2019 WWE Superstar Shake-up, Intercontinental Champion
Finn Bálor moved to SmackDown, making the title exclusive back to SmackDown. Later that year, the
NXT brand, WWE's
developmental territory, became WWE's third major brand when it was moved to the
USA Network in September, thus making the
NXT North American Championship a third secondary title in WWE. However, this recognition was reversed when NXT reverted to being WWE's developmental brand in September 2021. In late 2024, the WWE introduced the
women's counterpart to the Intercontinental Championship. ==Belt design==