Thrilling crowds, jaw-dropping passes, last-minute goals—women’s soccer has delivered unforgettable moments and unstoppable stars. Once overlooked, the women’s game now draws fans in record numbers, inspiring the next generation across the globe.
But among so much talent, who truly stands at the top? After rigorously analyzing achievements, skills, and impact, here’s our definitive list of the 25 greatest female soccer players ever. From trailblazing pioneers to today’s headline-making stars, these athletes have changed the game—and made history.
Years Active: 2000-2023
Position: Forward
Key Achievements: 6x FIFA World Player of the Year, World Cup all-time leading scorer (17 goals), 5 World Cup appearances
They call her "Pelé in skirts," though Marta Vieira da Silva needs no comparison to validate her greatness. The Brazilian maestro's left foot is a paintbrush, creating art where others see only grass and defenders.
What makes Marta the undisputed greatest? It's not just her six FIFA World Player of the Year awards—more than any player, male or female. It's the way she glides past opponents with an almost supernatural grace, how she scores impossible goals from impossible angles, and how she's maintained this excellence across more than two decades.
Growing up in poverty in Dois Riachos, Brazil, Marta used improvised balls made from grocery bags. Today, she holds the record for most World Cup goals (17) and has inspired millions of young girls to believe that their dreams matter. Despite never capturing that elusive World Cup trophy, her individual brilliance transcends team achievements. When you watch Marta play, you're not just watching soccer—you're witnessing poetry in motion.
Years Active: 1987-2004
Position: Forward/Midfielder
Key Achievements: 2x World Cup winner, 2x Olympic gold medalist, 158 international goals
Before packed stadiums and primetime television slots, before million-dollar contracts and global recognition, there was Mia Hamm—the quiet assassin who made the world pay attention to women's soccer.
Hamm didn't just excel on the field; she transformed it into a stage for women's sports. Her 158 international goals stood as a monument to consistency and excellence, while her partnership with brands like Nike proved that female athletes could be marketable superstars. But beyond the statistics and endorsements, Hamm possessed something invaluable: the ability to deliver when it mattered most.
Watch footage of the 1999 World Cup, and you'll see Hamm orchestrating attacks with surgical precision, creating space where none existed, and inspiring a generation of American girls to lace up their cleats. She was the face that launched a thousand dreams, proving that greatness isn't just measured in goals—it's measured in the paths you create for others to follow.
Years Active: 1994-2011
Position: Striker
Key Achievements: 3x FIFA World Player of the Year, 2x World Cup winner, 282 goals in 282 club matches
Some players score goals. Birgit Prinz collected them like stamps, methodically and inevitably. The German striker's statistics read like fiction: 282 goals in 282 club matches, 128 goals in 214 international appearances, and a trophy cabinet that required constant expansion.
What separated Prinz from her contemporaries wasn't just her lethal finishing—it was her timing. She seemed to exist a half-second ahead of everyone else, positioning herself where the ball would be rather than where it was. Her headers were guided missiles, her volleys were thunderbolts, and her composure in front of goal was ice-cold.
During Germany's dominant era, Prinz was the spear point of an unstoppable machine. She scored in World Cup finals, European Championship deciders, and every crucial match in between. If you needed a goal to save your life, you'd want Birgit Prinz taking the shot.
Years Active: 2013-present
Position: Midfielder
Key Achievements: 2x Ballon d'Or winner, World Cup winner, 3x Champions League winner
In Barcelona's mesmerizing tiki-taka symphony, Alexia Putellas is the conductor, orchestrating movements with a precision that borders on telepathy. The Catalan midfielder doesn't just play soccer—she solves it like a complex equation, finding solutions others can't even see.
Putellas represents the evolution of the modern female footballer: technically flawless, tactically brilliant, and mentally unbreakable. Her back-to-back Ballon d'Or awards in 2021 and 2022 weren't just personal triumphs; they signaled Spain's arrival as a women's soccer superpower. When she suffered an ACL injury before Euro 2022, it felt like watching Michelangelo forced to paint with his non-dominant hand.
But champions adapt, and Putellas returned to lead Spain to its first World Cup title in 2023. Watching her dictate play from midfield is like watching a chess grandmaster think three moves ahead—except she's doing it at full sprint with a ball at her feet.
Years Active: 2000-2023
Position: Forward
Key Achievements: All-time international goal scorer (190 goals), 5 World Cup appearances, Olympic bronze medalist
The record books will forever show Christine Sinclair's name at the top: 190 international goals, more than any player in soccer history. But reducing Sinclair to statistics is like describing the ocean as "wet"—technically accurate but missing the profound depth.
For over two decades, Sinclair carried Canadian soccer on her shoulders with a quiet dignity that defined her leadership. While other nations boasted superior resources and deeper talent pools, Canada had Sinclair—and often, that was enough. Her goals came in every conceivable fashion: headers from impossible angles, strikes from distance that defied physics, and tap-ins that showcased her predatory instincts.
What makes Sinclair's achievement more remarkable is the context. She didn't play for a traditional powerhouse; she made Canada one through sheer force of will. Every young Canadian girl who dreams of soccer glory does so because Sinclair proved it was possible.
Years Active: 1985-2000
Position: Forward/Defensive Midfielder
Key Achievements: 2x World Cup winner, FIFA Female Player of the Century, 105 international goals
Michelle Akers played two different careers, excelling at both in ways that defied logic. The first Akers was a goal-scoring machine, netting 10 goals in the 1991 World Cup including both strikes in the final. The second Akers, battling chronic fatigue syndrome, reinvented herself as a defensive midfielder—and somehow became even more dominant.
This transformation wasn't just positional; it was philosophical. Akers went from being the finisher to the destroyer, from the glory-seeker to the foundation-builder. Her performance in the 1999 World Cup, despite requiring IV fluids at halftime of the final, epitomized her warrior spirit.
Akers proved that greatness isn't about maintaining one skill—it's about adapting, evolving, and finding new ways to impact the game. She remains the only player to be equally comfortable scoring hat-tricks and breaking up attacks, a testament to her unmatched soccer intelligence.
Years Active: 2016-present
Position: Midfielder
Key Achievements: Ballon d'Or winner, World Cup winner, 3x Champions League winner
If soccer were a language, Aitana Bonmatí would be its most eloquent speaker. The Spanish midfielder communicates in one-touch passes, speaks volumes with her movement off the ball, and punctuates sentences with perfectly timed runs into the box.
Bonmatí's 2022-23 season reads like fiction: Champions League winner, World Cup champion, and MVP of both finals. She doesn't just participate in matches; she authors them, writing storylines with her feet that leave defenders reading yesterday's news. Her goal in the World Cup final against England wasn't just a strike—it was a declaration that Spain's golden generation had arrived.
What sets Bonmatí apart is her completeness. She defends with intelligence, creates with imagination, and scores with regularity. In an era of specialists, she's a generalist who does everything at an elite level. Watching her play is like watching the future of women's soccer unfold in real-time.
Years Active: 2001-2015
Position: Forward
Key Achievements: World Cup winner, 2x Olympic gold medalist, 184 international goals (former record)
Abby Wambach didn't just score goals—she hunted them with the determination of a predator stalking prey. Her signature diving headers became the stuff of legend, transforming crosses into goals with a reliability that bordered on automatic.
Standing at 5'11", Wambach used every inch to dominate aerial battles, but her game extended far beyond headers. She possessed an uncanny ability to find space in crowded penalty areas and the mental fortitude to convert chances when the pressure was suffocating. Her last-minute equalizer against Brazil in the 2011 World Cup quarterfinals remains one of the most dramatic moments in soccer history.
Wambach's 184 international goals stood as the world record until Sinclair surpassed it, but numbers only tell part of her story. She was the player teammates looked for when they needed a goal, the striker defenders feared most in the dying minutes, and the leader who refused to accept anything less than victory.
Years Active: 2011-present
Position: Striker
Key Achievements: First Ballon d'Or Féminin winner, 6x Champions League winner, Champions League all-time top scorer
Ada Hegerberg breaks records like others break eggs—casually and frequently. The Norwegian striker's goal-scoring statistics at Lyon read like a video game played on easy mode: over 250 goals, six Champions League titles, and the first-ever women's Ballon d'Or.
But Hegerberg's legacy extends beyond goals. Her decision to step away from the Norwegian national team in 2017 to protest the treatment of female players showed that principles matter more than caps. She sacrificed potential World Cup glory to fight for equality, becoming a symbol of athlete activism.
On the field, Hegerberg is inevitable. Her movement in the box is balletic, her finishing clinical, and her hunger for goals insatiable. She doesn't just score; she devours chances with an efficiency that makes defenders question their career choices. When she returned to international soccer in 2022, it felt like a superhero returning from exile—except this hero's superpower is finding the back of the net.
Years Active: 1990-2006
Position: Forward
Key Achievements: FIFA Female Player of the Century (co-winner), World Cup runner-up, 106 international goals
Before Asian women's soccer captured global attention, Sun Wen was writing the blueprint. The Chinese forward played with a technical sophistication that seemed decades ahead of her time, combining silky skills with tactical intelligence that revolutionized how the women's game was played.
Sun Wen's impact transcended borders. She showed that greatness could emerge from anywhere, that technical ability could triumph over physicality, and that women's soccer in Asia deserved respect on the global stage. Her performances in the 1999 World Cup, where she won both the Golden Ball and Golden Boot despite China's final loss, announced Asian women's soccer to the world.
Watching old footage of Sun Wen is like discovering a lost masterpiece—you wonder how someone so talented isn't mentioned more often in greatest-ever discussions. She paved the way for every Asian player who followed, proving that excellence knows no geographic boundaries.
Years Active: 1993-2015
Position: Midfielder
Key Achievements: 2011 World Cup winner, FIFA World Player of the Year, 6 World Cup appearances
Homare Sawa's extra-time equalizer in the 2011 World Cup final wasn't just a goal—it was destiny manifesting through a perfectly placed heel flick. That moment, with Japan trailing the mighty United States with minutes remaining, encapsulated everything Sawa represented: grace under pressure, technical brilliance, and perfect timing.
Sawa didn't just lead Japan to its first World Cup; she showed the world that soccer success wasn't reserved for traditional powers. Her six World Cup appearances span an era of transformation in women's soccer, from obscurity to the mainstream. She scored in each tournament, a testament to her longevity and adaptability.
What made Sawa special was her ability to make the extraordinary look effortless. She glided rather than ran, caressed rather than struck the ball, and created rather than destroyed. In a sport often defined by athleticism, Sawa proved that intelligence and technique could be equally devastating.
Years Active: 2005-2021
Position: Midfielder
Key Achievements: 2x FIFA World Player of the Year, World Cup winner, 2x Olympic gold medalist
Some players rise to big occasions. Carli Lloyd lived for them. Her hat-trick in the 2015 World Cup final, completed in just 16 minutes, wasn't just a performance—it was a statement that she belonged among the all-time greats.
Lloyd's midfield dominance came from a unique combination of physical power and technical precision. She could strike a ball from 40 yards with the same accuracy most players showed from 10. Her goal from midfield in that 2015 final remains one of the most audacious strikes in World Cup history, a moment of pure instinct and supreme confidence.
But Lloyd was more than spectacular goals. She was the engine that drove the USWNT through two Olympic gold medals and a World Cup, the player who grabbed games by the throat when they threatened to slip away. Her 316 caps tell a story of consistency, but her trophy cabinet tells one of a serial winner.
Years Active: 2009-present
Position: Forward
Key Achievements: Australia's all-time leading scorer, Golden Boot winner in 3 different leagues, 5x WSL champion
Sam Kerr doesn't run—she explodes. The Australian striker possesses a gear that defenders simply don't have, turning routine through balls into scoring opportunities through sheer acceleration. Her backflip celebration has become iconic, but it's her ability to consistently find the net that truly sets her apart.
Kerr's journey to the top is uniquely global. She conquered the American NWSL, dominated the Australian W-League, and now terrorizes defenses in England's WSL. This geographic diversity proves her adaptability—she doesn't just succeed in one system; she thrives wherever soccer is played.
Her goal against England in the 2023 World Cup semifinal, a thunderbolt from outside the box, announced to her home country that their hero had arrived on the biggest stage. Though Australia fell short, Kerr's performance throughout the tournament proved she belongs among the world's elite. At her current trajectory, she might climb even higher on this list before she's done.
Years Active: 2009-present
Position: Forward/Attacking Midfielder
Key Achievements: Multiple league titles in 4 countries, Former world's most expensive female transfer
Pernille Harder possesses a soccer IQ that turns good teams into great ones. The Danish star doesn't just play; she elevates, transforming every squad she joins into a title contender through her versatility and vision.
Harder's career reads like a European tour of excellence: league titles in Denmark, Sweden, Germany, and England. When Chelsea paid a reported £250,000+ for her services in 2020, she became the world's most expensive female player—a fee that looks like a bargain considering her impact. She doesn't just score goals; she creates entire attacking systems through her movement and passing.
What makes Harder special is her positional flexibility. She can play as a false nine, a traditional striker, an attacking midfielder, or on either wing—and excel in each role. This adaptability makes her a coach's dream and a defender's nightmare. She's the Swiss Army knife of women's soccer, equipped with every tool needed to unlock any defense.
Years Active: 2011-present
Position: Center Back
Key Achievements: 8x Champions League winner, 7x FIFPro World XI selection, 38 international goals as a defender
At 6'2", Wendie Renard doesn't just defend—she dominates airspace like an air traffic controller. The French center-back has redefined what's possible for defenders, scoring 38 international goals while anchoring one of the most successful club teams in history.
Renard's trophy collection at Lyon is staggering: eight Champions League titles, 16 French league championships, and counting. But she's more than a serial winner; she's the foundation upon which Lyon's dynasty was built. Her leadership from the back organizes defenses, while her forays forward terrorize opponents on set pieces.
In 2023, Renard took a stand by temporarily retiring from international soccer to protest the French federation's management. Her eventual return under new leadership showed that her influence extends beyond the pitch. She's not just a defender; she's a leader who stands up for what's right, making her impact on women's soccer immeasurable.
Years Active: 1988-2004
Position: Midfielder
Key Achievements: 2x World Cup winner, 2x Olympic gold medalist, First woman to receive FIFA Fair Play Award
Julie Foudy captained with her brain, led with her heart, and played with a joy that made soccer look fun. The midfielder's 274 international caps tell a story of durability, but her impact on American soccer culture reveals something deeper.
Foudy wasn't the flashiest player or the biggest goal scorer, but she was the metronome that kept the USWNT's rhythm for over a decade. Her ability to control tempo, distribute precisely, and arrive in the box at perfect moments made her indispensable. She was the player who made everyone else better, the conductor of an orchestra that played beautiful soccer.
Beyond her playing career, Foudy's advocacy for women's sports and her work as a broadcaster have kept her at the forefront of the game's growth. She proved that leadership doesn't end when you hang up your boots—it evolves into new forms of impact.
Years Active: 2013-present
Position: Striker
Key Achievements: WSL all-time leading scorer, European Championship winner, Netherlands all-time top scorer
Vivianne Miedema treats scoring records like suggestions rather than limits. The Dutch striker became the WSL's all-time leading scorer before her 26th birthday, rewriting history with a nonchalance that makes excellence look easy.
What separates Miedema from other prolific scorers is her unselfishness. She averages nearly as many assists as goals, proving that true greatness involves making teammates better. Her link-up play is exquisite, her finishing clinical, and her football intelligence off the charts. She sees passes others don't and makes runs that defenders can't track.
Miedema's impact on Dutch soccer has been transformative. She helped the Netherlands win their first major tournament (Euro 2017) and reach their first World Cup final. For a country with a rich men's soccer tradition but limited women's success, Miedema represents a new golden generation that's changing perceptions and inspiring young Dutch girls to dream big.
Years Active: 2011-present
Position: Winger
Key Achievements: 3x Champions League winner, 40+ goal contributions in 2023-24 season
Caroline Graham Hansen might be the most underrated player in women's soccer. The Norwegian winger doesn't seek spotlight; she creates it for others while quietly being one of the world's most effective attackers.
At Barcelona, Hansen has formed one of the most lethal attacking partnerships in soccer history alongside players like Putellas and Bonmatí. Her ability to beat defenders one-on-one is matched only by her decision-making in the final third. She can score spectacular goals or deliver inch-perfect crosses, adapting her game to what the moment demands.
The 2023-24 season saw Hansen explode statistically, contributing over 40 goals and assists combined. This output from a wide position is extraordinary, proving that she's not just a creator but a finisher of the highest caliber. In a team full of superstars, Hansen shines brightest when the stakes are highest.
Years Active: 1995-2017
Position: Forward
Key Achievements: England's former all-time leading scorer, WSL Hall of Fame inductee, Arsenal quadruple winner
Before England became European champions, before the WSL attracted global stars, Kelly Smith was showing the world that English women could play. The forward's technical ability seemed imported from another planet, making her stand out in an era when English soccer prioritized physicality over finesse.
Smith's career statistics—117 goals in 177 England appearances—only hint at her impact. She was the player who made young English girls believe they could make it professionally, the star who proved that homegrown talent could match anyone globally. Her performances for Arsenal, including a historic quadruple in 2006-07, set standards that clubs still chase today.
Watching Smith play was like seeing the future before it arrived. Her close control, vision, and finishing ability were decades ahead of her time. She didn't just score goals; she scored them with style, making the extraordinary look routine and inspiring a generation of English players who would eventually conquer Europe.
Years Active: 1987-2010
Position: Midfielder/Winger
Key Achievements: 354 caps (all-time record), 2x World Cup winner, 3x Olympic medalist
Three hundred fifty-four international appearances. Let that number sink in. Kristine Lilly didn't just play for the United States; she was the United States for 23 years, a constant presence on the wing who defined consistency and excellence.
Lilly's most famous moment came in the 1999 World Cup final when her goal-line clearance saved a certain Chinese goal in extra time. That split-second reaction preserved American dreams and epitomized her career: always in the right place, always making the right play, always delivering when it mattered.
But reducing Lilly to one clearance ignores her offensive contributions—130 international goals and countless assists from her tireless runs down the flanks. She was perpetual motion personified, a player who never stopped running, never stopped caring, and never stopped winning. Her longevity record may never be broken in the modern game, making her achievement even more remarkable.
Years Active: 2007-present
Position: Right Back
Key Achievements: European champion, 5x Champions League winner, UEFA Women's Player of the Year
Lucy Bronze redefined what a modern fullback could be. The English defender doesn't just stop attacks; she launches them, racing down the right flank with the speed of a winger and the power of a midfielder.
Bronze's club career has taken her across Europe's elite: England, France, Spain, and back to England. At each stop, she's won trophies and earned acclaim as the world's best in her position. Her performances for England during their Euro 2022 triumph showcased her complete game: defensively solid, offensively explosive, and mentally unshakeable.
What makes Bronze special is her athleticism combined with technical ability. She can outmuscle forwards, outpace wingers, and outthink midfielders. Her long-range strikes have become a trademark, proving that defenders can be match-winners too. In an era of specialized positions, Bronze does everything at an elite level.
Years Active: 1995-2021
Position: Midfielder
Key Achievements: 7 World Cup appearances (record), Olympic silver medalist, Played until age 43
Miraildes Maciel Mota, known simply as Formiga, defied Father Time with a grace that made aging seem optional. Playing elite soccer until 43 isn't just rare—it's unprecedented, requiring a dedication and professionalism that borders on superhuman.
Formiga's seven World Cup appearances span from 1995 to 2019, a journey through the entire modern history of women's soccer. She played alongside and against multiple generations, adapting her game as the sport evolved from semi-professional to fully professional. Her longevity wasn't just about fitness; it was about intelligence, reading the game so well that speed became secondary.
While she never won the World Cup that would have capped her career perfectly, Formiga's legacy transcends trophies. She proved that careers don't have expiration dates if the passion burns bright enough. Every player who extends their career into their late 30s owes a debt to Formiga, who showed it was possible to age gracefully while competing fiercely.
Years Active: 1996-2015
Position: Goalkeeper
Key Achievements: Only goalkeeper to win FIFA World Player of the Year, 2007 World Cup winner without conceding
In the 2007 World Cup, Nadine Angerer did something that seems impossible: she played six matches without conceding a single goal. Not one. Zero. In a tournament where the best attackers in the world took their best shots, Angerer turned her goal into an impenetrable fortress.
This performance earned her a unique distinction as the only goalkeeper to win FIFA World Player of the Year, recognition that goalkeepers rarely receive in a sport that celebrates goal scorers. But Angerer was more than one tournament; she was Germany's last line of defense during their most dominant era, a penalty-saving specialist who thrived under pressure.
What made Angerer exceptional was her calmness. While other keepers relied on athleticism, she relied on positioning. While others guessed on penalties, she studied. Her approach was cerebral, turning goalkeeping into a science rather than an art. She didn't just stop shots; she solved them like mathematical equations.
Years Active: 2010-present
Position: Attacking Midfielder
Key Achievements: 7x Champions League winner, European champion, Olympic gold medalist
Dzsenifer Marozsán plays soccer like a jazz musician—improvisational, creative, and always in perfect rhythm. The German midfielder possesses the rare ability to slow down time with the ball at her feet, surveying options while defenders scramble frantically around her.
Marozsán's career has been defined by clutch moments. Her goal in the 2016 Olympic final secured Germany's gold medal. Her performances for Lyon in multiple Champions League finals turned close matches into convincing victories. She doesn't just play in big games; she decides them with passes that split defenses and shots that find corners.
What sets Marozsán apart is her two-footedness—she's equally devastating with either foot, making her unpredictable and undefendable. Defenders can't show her onto a weaker side because one doesn't exist. This ambidexterity, combined with her vision and technique, makes her one of the most complete midfielders in soccer history.
Years Active: 2009-2024
Position: Forward
Key Achievements: World Cup winner, Olympic gold medalist, 123 international goals
Alex Morgan transcended soccer to become a cultural icon, proving that athletes could excel on the field while building brands off it. Her tea-sipping celebration against England in the 2019 World Cup became instantly iconic, showing personality in a sport that often demands conformity.
While some critics argue Morgan wasn't even the best player on her own team, her impact on women's soccer's growth is undeniable. She scored crucial goals in major tournaments, including the winner against Canada in the 2012 Olympic semifinal that sent the USA to the gold medal match. Her 123 international goals place her among America's all-time greats.
Morgan's legacy extends beyond statistics. She fought for equal pay, spoke out against discrimination, and used her platform to advance women's soccer globally. Her marketability helped attract sponsors and fans to the women's game, creating opportunities for players who followed. Sometimes greatness isn't just about what you do—it's about the doors you open for others.
Looking across these 25 extraordinary careers, certain patterns emerge that separate the great from the greatest:
Technical Mastery: Every player on this list possesses exceptional technical skills, but the truly elite combine this with tactical intelligence. They don't just execute skills; they know when and where to deploy them for maximum impact.
Mental Fortitude: The greatest players deliver in the biggest moments. Whether it's Sawa's World Cup equalizer, Lloyd's final hat-trick, or Kerr's semifinal thunderbolt, these players thrive when pressure would crush others.
Longevity: Maintaining elite performance across decades requires extraordinary dedication. Players like Formiga, Sinclair, and Lilly proved that greatness isn't a sprint—it's a marathon requiring constant adaptation and evolution.
Leadership: The best players elevate those around them. They lead through example, communication, and sheer force of personality. They make good teams great and great teams legendary.
Innovation: Many of these players changed how their positions were played. Renard showed defenders could be goal threats. Bronze redefined the modern fullback. Marta proved that creativity could overcome physicality.
This list spans multiple generations, each building upon the last:
The Pioneers (1990s-early 2000s): Players like Hamm, Akers, and Foudy didn't just play soccer—they fought for its right to exist. They performed in near-empty stadiums while building the foundation for future success.
The Revolutionaries (2000s-2010s): Stars like Marta, Prinz, and Wambach elevated technical and athletic standards. They proved women's soccer could be both powerful and beautiful, attracting global audiences and inspiring young players worldwide.
The Professionals (2010s-present): Current stars like Putellas, Bonmatí, and Kerr benefit from professional environments their predecessors could only dream of. They train full-time, play in packed stadiums, and compete for transfer fees that validate women's soccer as a serious business.
Each generation stands on the shoulders of the previous one, pushing boundaries and setting new standards. Today's players are faster, stronger, and more tactically sophisticated than ever before—evolution made possible by those who came before.
Women’s soccer has evolved from humble beginnings to a global phenomenon, thanks to the brilliance and resilience of these 25 legendary players. Each athlete on this list has not only excelled individually but also paved the way for future generations—shattering barriers, inspiring millions, and proving that greatness knows no gender. As women's football continues to rise, their legacy endures, ensuring the beautiful game remains inclusive, competitive, and deeply inspiring.
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