The club experienced a remarkable line of three consecutive promotions from 1994 to 1997 under coach Giuseppe Pillon which brought Treviso to Serie B, over 40 years after its last appearance in the second-highest Italian league.
In 2005, Pillon returned to Treviso and the team gained a respectable fifth place and a spot in the promotion playoffs but lost out to Perugia.
The club had re-capitalized for over €7.5 million, but the net result was still €1.32 million in the 2007–08 season, with some notional selling profit for Dino Fava (who returned to Treviso for the same price, €900,000) and Massimo Coda (in a cash-plus player deal), as well as selling youth product Jacopo Fortunato and Riccardo Bocalon for €900,000 each in cash-plus-play deal (residual 50% rights of Alex Cordaz and Daniel Maa Boumsong (€1.05M in total).
Furthermore, rising star Leonardo Bonucci left Treviso in January 2009 and the club lacked funds to reinforce the team since the start of 2008–09.
Treviso 2009 was founded as a successor club, and was admitted to play in the Eccellenza Veneto which at the time was the 6th tier of Italian football, in the summer of 2009.
[3] After failing to secure promotion to the Serie D by losing the playoff against Montecchio Maggiore on penalties,[4] they won Group B of the Eccellenza Veneto in the 2022–23 season, returning to the fourth tier of Italian football after a 10-year absence in a national league.
They had a long-standing promotion battle with Calvi Noale, Portomansuè, and Godigese, with the decisive victory coming on the final day at Stadio Omobono Tenni in the derby against Giorgione, ending in a 2–0 win.