Football records and statistics in Italy

Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A. Giuseppe Signori and Siniša Mihajlović, 3 (in Lazio 3–1 Atalanta, 10 April 1994; and Lazio 5–2 Sampdoria, 13 December 1998, respectively)[47] Cristiano Lucarelli (2004–05), Alessandro Del Piero (2008–09), Francesco Lodi (2012–13), Andrea Pirlo (2012–13) (all 5)[nb 3][48][49] Francesco Totti, Alberto Gilardino, and Roberto Baggio, 38[50] Rafael Leão, 6.2 seconds (20 December 2020, in Sassuolo–AC Milan, 1–2)[51] Zlatan Ibrahimović, 41 years, 166 days (18 March 2023, in Udinese–AC Milan, 3–1)[52] Amedeo Amadei, 15 years, 287 days (9 May 1937, in Lucchese–Roma, 5–1)[53] Sources:[54][55][56][57][58][59][60] Silvio Piola and Omar Sívori, 6[61] Silvio Piola and Gunnar Nordahl, 49[62] Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A. Gunnar Nordahl, 17[63][64] Pietro Pellegri, 16 years and 184 days (17 September 2017, in Genoa–Lazio, 2–3)[65][66] Zlatan Ibrahimović, 40 years and 48 days[67] (20 November 2021 Fiorentina 4–3 AC Milan) Oliver Bierhoff (10 in 1997–98)[48] Silvio Piola, 17 years and 132 days[68] Rodrigo Palacio, 39 years and 86 days[69] Giuseppe Meazza (1929–30), Enrique Guaita (1934–35), Valentino Mazzola (1946–47), István Nyers (1950–51), Pedro Manfredini (1960–61), and Omar Sívori (1960–61) (all four)[48] Silvio Piola, 18 years and 54 days[70] Miroslav Klose, 34 years and 330 days[71] Angelo Mattea, 38 years and 7 days, for Casale, in a 5–1 away loss to Ambrosiana on 28 October 1930[72][73] Francesco Totti, 23 (1994–95 to 2016–17)[31][74] Luca Toni (38 years, 2014–15)[75] Gunnar Nordahl, 5 (1949–50, 1950–51, 1952–53, 1953–54, 1954–55)[76] 36, Gonzalo Higuaín (2015–16)[77][78][79] and Ciro Immobile (2019–20)[80][nb 4] Christian Vieri[81][82][83] Oliver Bierhoff (15 out of 19, 1998–99)[84] Gabriel Batistuta (13 consecutive Serie A games, 2 in 1992–93 and 11 in 1994–95 with Fiorentina)[85] Gabriel Batistuta (in 1994–95, with Fiorentina), Fabio Quagliarella (in 2018–19, with Sampdoria)[86], Cristiano Ronaldo (in 2019-20, with Juventus)[87] Gabriel Batistuta (in 1994–95, with Fiorentina) (11 consecutive Serie A games)[88][89] Giuseppe Signori (from 17 May 1992 to 28 February 1993; 1 in 1991–92 with Foggia, and 9 in 1992–93 with Lazio) (10 consecutive Serie A away games with a goal)[90][91] Giuseppe Signori (in 1992–93, with Lazio) (9 consecutive Serie A away games with a goal) and Cristiano Ronaldo (in 2018–19 and 2019–20, with Juventus)[90] Alessandro Del Piero (17 seasons)[92] The following table shows the ten Italian players that have scored the most professional goals in total throughout their career, at both club and international level (excluding youth competitions).

21,[104][105] Fabio Cudicini (in 1968–69 with AC Milan), Sebastiano Rossi (in 1993–94 with AC Milan), Gianluigi Buffon (in 2011–12 and 2015–16 with Juventus), Morgan De Sanctis (in 2013–14 with Roma), Ivan Provedel (in 2022–23 with Lazio) Alex Cordaz (2020–21) (91)[nb 15][48][49] Samir Handanović, 26[106] Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

Updated as of 3 March 2024 Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Samir Handanović, 6[107][108] Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Gianluigi Buffon, 43 years and 104 days (12 May 2021, in Sassuolo–Juventus, 1–3)[109] Updated 29 January 2017[110][111][112][113][114] Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Luigi Apolloni (2000–01) and Gabriel Paletta (2016–17) (both five)[nb 15][48] Daniele Conti (2012–13), 16[nb 15][48] Carlo Mazzone, 792 (excluding 5 appearances in play-off matches)[115] Giovanni Trapattoni, 7 Massimiliano Allegri, 5 (all with Juventus) Giovanni Trapattoni, 6 (with Juventus) Armando Castellazzi, 33 years and 199 days, (with Ambrosiana–Inter, 1937–38) Luciano Spalletti, 64 years, 89 days (with Napoli, 2022–23)[116] Nereo Rocco, 605 (between 1955 and 1974, with Padova, AC Milan, and Torino) Giovanni Trapattoni, 402 (with Juventus) Giovanni Trapattoni, 352 (16 with AC Milan, 213 with Juventus, 87 with Inter, 7 with Cagliari, and 29 with Fiorentina) Roberto Mancini, 17 (with Inter, 2006–07 Serie A) Giovanni Trapattoni, 213 (with Juventus) All-time highest bolded.

Up to the present day, nineteen different top clubs in Italy have retired numbers for different reasons, mostly in recognition of their former players.

The following table includes only Italian, European and worldwide competitions organised respectively by FIGC, UEFA and FIFA since 1898.

It is not considered as an official tournament by UEFA due to the major idea of promoted trade fairs and the system of admission of the first editions.

Paolo Maldini had his #3 retired by AC Milan after spending 25 years (his entire professional career) with the club