Four months have passed since the last FIFA Women’s World Ranking was published in August; during that time, over 400 international matches have taken place. Never before have so many fixtures been fulfilled in an equivalent period.
Qualifiers for the Women’s Olympic Football Tournament Paris 2024 and UEFA Women’s Nations League games were on the agenda for European teams. Nations in the AFC, CAF, and Concacaf zones, meanwhile, were involved in qualifying matches for their respective continental tournaments, with OFC representatives, except Aotearoa New Zealand, competing at the Pacific Games.
This plethora of events inevitably had an impact on December’s FIFA/Coca-Cola Women’s World Ranking, the last of 2023.
Consequently, reigning world champion Spain (1st) claimed the top spot for the first time. They are the fourth team in football history to reach the coveted position, after the USA, Germany, Sweden, and France make up the podium.
England (4th) remains just below those three highflyers, ahead of previous leaders Sweden (5th, down 4). Germany (6th), the Netherlands (7th), Japan (8th), Korea DPR (9th), and Canada (10th) complete the top ten, which no longer features Brazil (11th, down 2).
As for the remainder of the top 50, Italy (14th, up 3), the Philippines (38th, up 6), and Uzbekistan (47th, up 3) made noteworthy advances. The biggest moves came further down the standings, however, where Congo DR (102nd, up 9), El Salvador (104th, up 11), and Namibia (126th, up 14) all made considerable progress.
In addition to La Roja, the Philippines, Haiti (51st), Cambodia (116th), and Cabo Verde (131st) attained their highest-ever placings.
Six nations either appear for the first time (Central African Republic and Macau) or reappear (Korea DPR, American Samoa, Madagascar, and the Bahamas) in the World Ranking, which brings the number of teams listed to 192—a new record! And with six other national sides just one match away from joining, it could grow even further in March.