In August 2022, restructuring meant that the women's team was brought under the complete ownership of Newcastle United, with plans to transition to full-time football.
Those five years have seen the club achieve major success on and off the field, winning the Northumberland FA Senior Cup on a record five consecutive occasions.
In May the club was recognised for its achievements and was given a civic reception to mark the occasion of being presented with the League Trophy and NFA Senior Cup.
During the 2006–07 season, the club preserved its Premier League status, finishing a creditable 8th, and reached the FA Women's Cup quarter finals for the first time ever, losing to Liverpool 9–8 on penalties following a 2–2 draw.
The club's development side went on to win the FA Women's Premier League Reserve Division Northern under the management team of Andrew Inness and Alex Curran.
Jill Stacey took over as development team manager, retaining Alex Curran and adding Ross Flintoft to the coaching set up.
From the 2019–20 season, a two-year strategic partnership was announced with Newcastle United Foundation and Northumbria University to provide Strength and Conditioning, Performance Analysis and Physiotherapy support for the team.
[6][7] On 14 April 2024, Newcastle United were promoted to the Women's Championship (WSL 2) as champions of the 2023–24 National League, after their 10–0 win against Huddersfield Town.
Updated 29 December 2024 Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply.