The 2029 UEFA Women's Championship, commonly referred to as UEFA Women's Euro 2029 or simply Euro 2029, will be the 15th edition of the UEFA Women's Championship, the quadrennial international football championship organised by UEFA for the women's national teams of Europe. The tournament will be played in summer 2029. It will be the fourth edition since it was expanded to 16 teams.
Host selection
The bidding process is due to start in late 2024.[1][2] UEFA confirmed the bidding process on 23 July 2024.[3]
The winning bids will be announced in December 2025.[4]
Date
Notes
24 September 2024
Deadline for UEFA member associations to confirm their interest in bidding
1 October 2024
Bid requirements published to all interested bidders
12 March 2025
Submission of the Preliminary Bid Dossier
28 August 2025
Submission of the final Bid Dossier
December 2025
Appointment of host(s) of UEFA Women's Euro 2029
Confirmed bids
Five declarations of interest have been made by the deadline of 24 September 2024 to host the tournament:
Denmark and Sweden – After the two nations failed to receive the 2025 hosting rights with Finland and Norway, the president of the Swedish Football Association, Fredrik Reinfeldt said they would look into potentially bidding in the future.[5] On 8 February, before the 2024 UEFA Congress in Paris, Denmark and Sweden expressed an interest in hosting the event.[6][7] The four Nordic countries planned to bid again, but after the evaluation report for 2025 stated the likelihood of winning would increase with only two hosts, Denmark and Sweden decided to pair up.[8][9] Norway was reportedly disappointed with their decision and wants to negotiate with them about joining the bid.[10][11] On 24 April 2024, Denmark and Sweden decided against bringing Norway into the bid.[12] However, after UEFA's requirements came out, problems regarding Denmark's stadiums rose due to the lack of stadiums meeting capacity requirements.[13][14] To combat this issue, the Danish federation are negotiating with municipalities to construct a 20,000 capacity stadium.[15][16] Denmark previously hosted the UEFA Women's Euro 1991 while Sweden already hosted the men's 1958 FIFA World Cup, UEFA Euro 1992, 1995 FIFA Women's World Cup, UEFA Women's Euro 1997, co-hosted by Norway and UEFA Women's Euro 2013 as sole host.