This article lists English association football clubs whose men's sides have won competitive honours run by official governing bodies.
[4] The English equivalent of the super cup began in 1898 with the inauguration of the Sheriff of London Charity Shield, pitting the best professional and amateur sides of the year against each other.
[6] In 1985, the Full Members' Cup and Football League Super Cup were created as substitutes for UEFA competitions after UEFA banned English clubs for a number of years following the Heysel Stadium disaster.
[13] Liverpool hold the English record for the most wins in the UEFA Super Cup, with four.
The tournament commenced in 1961, but UEFA officially recognised it only in 1995, and discontinued it in 2008, with the Europa League expanded to accommodate Intertoto Cup clubs.
Manchester United are the only English club to have won the Intercontinental Cup, while United, Liverpool, Chelsea and Manchester City are the only English teams to have lifted the Club World Cup.
[16][17] Lower down in the hierarchy of English football are many other competitions, not included in the tables on this page.
These include tournaments run by the above national governing bodies, but organised for clubs ineligible for higher competitions.
Regional competitions are organised by County Football Associations; in the years when league football was unavailable or only available to northern and midlands clubs, county competitions coexisted with the FA Cup as the main tournaments for clubs.
Nowadays, county cups are contested by lower or regional division teams and those that still participate generally field youth or reserve sides.
Clubs in italics are Double winners: they have won two or more of these trophies in the same season (excluding super cups).
Last updated on 10 August 2024, following Manchester City's victory in the 2024 FA Community Shield.
One example is the Texaco Cup (or International League Board Competition), which was available for top division sides that had not qualified for Europe, and was one of the few attempts to create a cross-border competition between clubs from the various nations of the UK and Ireland.
Since 2016–17 season, sixteen Category One academies from Championship and Premier League have taken part in the competition.