[2] The club's most recent title success came in dramatic fashion at the conclusion of the 2022-23 season with Glasgow City, Rangers W.F.C.
[10] Between the seasons 2009 and 2018 inclusive, Glasgow City lost only three League matches,[11][12][13] and continued an unprecedented run of successive Scottish championships that began in 2007–08[14] It was reported Glasgow City had held talks with the FA WSL in February 2013 about a possible move to an extended top flight in England.
[19] After a superb 5–4 aggregate win against FC Zurich, City became the first Scottish team to reach the UEFA Women's Champions League quarter-finals in November 2014.
In July 2015, Eddie Wolecki stepped down as Glasgow City manager after four and a half years in charge,[25] with Scott Booth announced as his replacement.
[26] City reached the Champions League quarter-finals for the second time in 2019–20; they were the last independent women's football club to achieve this.
In December 2022, Gleeson stepped down and was replaced by the club's all-time leading appearance leader, goalscorer and former captain Leanne Ross.
The 2023-24 season saw City eliminated from the knock-out rounds of the Champions League by SK Brann (women) having successfully defeated FC Gintra and Shelbourne F.C.
[49] The Round of 16 ended in "humiliating" fashion for Glasgow City, where against German champions Turbine Potsdam, they lost the tie 17–0 on aggregate.
In 2014–15 they became the first Scottish team to advance to the quarterfinals,[51] being eliminated by Paris Saint-Germain, and achieved the feat again in 2019–20 but lost 9–1 to Wolfsburg (twice previous winners and runners-up twice more) in a single-game tie played in San Sebastián due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe.