This list encompasses the major honours won by Juventus and records set by the club, their managers and their players. The individual records section includes details of the club's leading goalscorers and those who have made most appearances in first-team competitions. The club's players have received, among others, a record twelve Serie A Footballer of the Year, the award given by the Italian Footballers' Association (AIC), eight Ballon d'Or awards and four FIFA World Player of the Year awards, more than any other Italian club and third overall in the latter two cases.
A partial view of the club's trophy room with the titles won between 1905 and 2013 at the J-Museum
Italy's most successful club of the 20th century[2] with the most title in the history of Italian football,[3] Juventus have won the Italian League Championship, the country's premier football club competition and organised by Lega Nazionale Professionisti Serie A (LNPA), a record 36 times and have the record of consecutive triumphs in that tournament (nine, between 2011–12 and 2019–20).[4][5] They have also won the Coppa Italia, the country's primary single-elimination competition, a record fifteen times, becoming the first team to retain the trophy successfully with their triumph in the 1959–60 season, and the first to win it in three consecutive seasons from the 2014–15 season to the 2016–17 season, going on to win a fourth consecutive title in 2017–18 (also a record).[6] In addition, the club holds the record for Supercoppa Italiana wins with nine, the most recent coming in 2020.
Overall, Juventus have won 71 official competitions,[nb 1]more than any other club in the country: 60 at national level (which is also a record) and eleven at international stage,[7] making them, in the latter case, the second most successful Italian team.[8] The club is currently sixth in Europe and twelfth in the world with the most international titles won officially recognised by their respective continental football confederation and Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA).[9] In 1977, the Torinese side become the first in Southern Europe to have won the UEFA Cup and the first—and only to date—in Italian football history to achieve an international title with a squad composed by national footballers.[10] In 1993, the club won its third competition's trophy, an unprecedented feat in the continent until then, a confederation record for the next 22 years and the most for an Italian team. Juventus was also the first club in the country to achieve the title in the European Super Cup, having won the competition in 1984, and the first European side to win the Intercontinental Cup in 1985, since it was restructured by Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) and Confederación Sudamericana de Fútbol (CONMEBOL)'s organizing committee five years beforehand.[11]
The European Cup (left), the Cup Winners' Cup (middle), and the UEFA Cup (right) trophies, assembling the original European Treble in the Experience Juventus exhibition at Hong Kong in 2021.[12]
The club has earned the distinction of being allowed to wear three golden stars (Italian: stelle d'oro) on its shirts representing its league victories: the tenth of which was achieved during the 1957–58 season, the twentieth in the 1981–82 season and the thirtieth officially in the 2013–14 season. Juventus were the first Italian team to have achieved the national double four times (winning the Italian top tier division and the national cup competition in the same season), in the 1959–60, 1994–95, 2014–15 and 2015–16 seasons. In the 2015–16 season, Juventus won the Coppa Italia for the eleventh time and their second-straight title, becoming the first team in Italy's history to complete Serie A and Coppa Italia doubles in back-to-back seasons; Juventus would go on to win another two consecutive doubles in 2016–17 and 2017–18.[13][14][15]
Only in the 1910s the club has not won any official competition, a unique case in the country. In terms of overall official trophies won, Juventus' most successful decade was the 2010s. In that period the club won eighteen competitions, ahead of the 1980s and 1990s (both with eleven titles).[21]
Nominated Italy's most successful club and sixth best world football club of the second decade of the 21st Century (2011–2020 period) by the IFFHS[45]
23 March 2021
Nominated Italy's most successful club and sixth best European football club of the second decade of the 21st Century (2011–2020 period) by the IFFHS[46]
As one of the most successful sportive clubs in Italy and the world, Juventus have received during their history of important national and international special recognitions, among them:
received on 22 June 1967 at Rome from the CONI in recognition for the club's outstanding contribution to the Italian sport.[62]
Collare d'oro al Merito Sportivo: 2001
received on 10 November 2004 at Rome from the Italian National Olympic Committee in recognition for the club's contribution to the Italian football and sport.[63][64]
Longest period without conceding a goal in the Italian Football Championship/Serie A: 934 minutes,[68]Gianpiero Combi, matchdays 3–13 (10*90 minutes); from Juventus 6–0 Milan (25 October 1925) to Parma 0–3 Juventus + 34 minutes of Juventus 3–2 Padova (7 March 1926) in 1925–26[69]
Longest period without conceding a goal in the Serie A: 974 minutes,[70]Gianluigi Buffon, 26 minutes of Sampdoria 1–2 Juventus (10 January 2016) + matchdays 20–29 (10*90 minutes) + 48 minutes of Torino 1–4 Juventus (20 March 2016) in 2015–16.[71]
Most clean sheets for the club: 308, Gianluigi Buffon (2001–2018, 2019–2021)
Most clean sheets for the club in Serie A: 296, Gianluigi Buffon (2001–2018, 2019–2021)
In a single Italian competition match: 6, Omar Sívori (vs. Internazionale 9–1, 1960–61 Serie A, 28. matchday, 10 June 1961) Joint Serie A record with Silvio Piola (Pro Vercelli–Fiorentina 7–2) on 29 October 1933
ECC/CL = European Champions Cup/Champions League, CWC = Cup Winners' Cup, EuSC = European Super Cup, IntCup = Intercontinental Cup, ITC = Intertoto Cup.
ECC/CL = European Champions Cup/Champions League, CWC = Cup Winners' Cup, EuSC = European Super Cup, IntCup = Intercontinental Cup, ITC = Intertoto Cup.
* Juventus is the Italian team, and second overall, with the most players recognized with the FIFA World Player of the Year Award (3 players in 4 times).
* Juventus is the Italian team with the most goalkeepers recognized with a Serie A Goalkeeper of the Year title (2 players on 8 occasions), including the only goalkeeper to win it 8 times, Gianluigi Buffon.[82]
* Juventus is the Italian team with the most goalkeepers recognized with a Serie A Team of the Year title (1 player on 5 occasions), including the only goalkeeper to win it 5 times, Gianluigi Buffon.
* Juventus is the Italian team with the most defenders recognized with a Serie A Defender of the Year title (7 players on 9 occasions), including the only defender to win it 5 times, Giorgio Chiellini.
* Juventus is the Italian team with the most midfielders recognized with a Serie A Midfielder of the Year title (5 players on 10 occasions), including 2 of the 3 midfielders to win it 4 times, Andrea Pirlo and Miralem Pjanić.
* Juventus is the Italian team with the most forwards recognized with a Serie A Forward of the Year title (4 players on 8 occasions), including the only forward to win it 4 times, Paulo Dybala.
* Juventus is the Italian team with the most players recognized with the Ballon d'Or (6 players on 8 occasions), as well as the team with the third most overall.
* Juventus is the Italian team, and second overall, with the most players recognized with the World Soccer Player of the Year Award (7 players in 8 times).
^Sixth most successful European club for confederation and FIFA competitions won with eleven titles. Sixth most successful club in Europe for confederation club competition titles won (11), cf. "Confermato: I più titolati al mondo!". A.C. Milan S.p.A. official website. 30 May 2013. Retrieved 22 April 2017.
^"Giovanni Trapattoni". Union of European Football Associations. 31 May 2010. Retrieved 22 April 2017.
^In addition, Juventus F.C. were the first club in association football history to have won all possible confederation competitions (e.g. the international tournaments organised by UEFA) and remained the only in the world to achieve this until the first Europa Conference League final in 2022, cf. "Legend: UEFA club competitions". Union of European Football Associations. 21 August 2006. Archived from the original on 31 January 2010. Retrieved 26 February 2013. "1985: Juventus end European drought". Union of European Football Associations. 8 December 1985. Archived from the original on 8 December 2013. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
^"We are the champions". Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 12 January 2005. Archived from the original on 30 April 2011. Retrieved 22 April 2017.
^During the 1980s, Juventus won four Serie A titles, two Coppa Italia titles, one Intercontinental Cup, one European Champions Clubs' Cup, one UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, one UEFA Cup and one European Super Cup; meanwhile, in the following decade, the club won three Italian Championships, one Coppa Italia title, two Supercoppa Italiana titles, one Intercontinental Cup, one UEFA Champions League, one UEFA Cup, one UEFA Intertoto Cup and one UEFA Super Cup. Finally, in the 2010s the club won nine consecutive national championships, four consecutive national cups and five Supercoppa Italiana titles.
^The Inter-Cities Fairs Cup (1958–1971) was a football tournament organized by foreign trade fairs in European seven cities (London, Barcelona, Copenhagen, and others) played by professional and—in its first editions—amateur clubs. Along these lines, that is not recognised by the Union of European Football Associations as an UEFA club competition. See: "UEFA Europa League: History". Union of European Football Associations. Retrieved 22 April 2017.
^The Federal Championship of Prima Categoria (First Category/Division) has been a tournament organized by the Italian Football Federation (FIF) in 1908 equivalent to the Italian Championship of Prima Categoria (the national football championship in these two years).
^The Italian Championship of Prima Categoria (First Category/Division) has been a tournament organized by the Italian Football Federation (FIF) in 1909 equivalent to the Federal Championship of Prima Categoria (the national football championship in these two years).
^Juventus also has won the Italian-Spanish Friendship's Cup perpetually.
^"AIC – Albo d'oro". Associazione Italiana Calciatori (in Italian). Archived from the original on 15 May 2013. Retrieved 22 April 2017.
^Periods: 1991–2007 (Juventus rank second in the world), 1991–2008 (rank third in the world) and 1991–2009 (idem). All the results of All-Time Club World Ranking[broken anchor] are determined by IFFHS from 1 January 1991, when the Club World Ranking began taking all these details into consideration. See also: "All-Time Club World Ranking (since 1.1.1991)". International Federation of Football History & Statistics. Retrieved 22 April 2017.
^The Collare d'Oro al Merito Sportivo or Collare d'Oro per Meriti Sportivi (Golden Collar for Sport Excellence) is the highest prize that the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI) has been given since 1995 to Olympic athletes, world champions, winners of special international events and sport clubs with 100 years of activity to have honoured the Italian sport.
^Joint record of Italian football with Julio Libonatti (Torino F.C. 1906) in 1927–28 season and Gunnar Nordahl (A.C Milan) in 1949–50.
^Roberto Baggio scored 19 goals for Italy as Juventus player, while all 27 of Del Piero's goals for Italy were scored during his time with Juventus.
^Paolo Rossi (with 3 goals in 1978 and 6 in 1982) and Roberto Baggio (with 2 goals in 1990; 5 goals in 1994 and 2 goals in 1998) are Italy's all-time leading scorers in FIFA World Cups.
^Roberto Baggio scored 7 goals at the FIFA World Cup as Juventus player (2 goals in 1990 and 5 in 1994), while Paolo Rossi scored 6 (in 1982).
^Christian Vieri, who played for Juventus during the 1996–97 season, also scored 9 goals for Italy at the FIFA World Cup (5 goals in 1998 and 4 in 2002), making him Italy's joint-all-time goalscorer in FIFA World Cups alongside Baggio and Rossi; however he did not feature at the FIFA World Cup as a Juventus player.