Fixtures

England Championship Women 09/21 13:00 3 Qiang Sun vs Crystal Palace (W) - View
England League Cup Women 09/24 18:30 1 Crystal Palace (W) vs London City Lionesses (W) - View
England Championship Women 09/28 11:00 4 Durham Women vs Crystal Palace Women - View
England Championship Women 10/05 13:00 5 Crystal Palace Women vs Newcastle (W) - View
England Championship Women 10/12 11:00 6 Crystal Palace Women vs Sunderland (W) - View
England League Cup Women 10/19 13:00 2 Crystal Palace Women vs Ipswich Town (W) - View

Results

England FA WSL 2 09/14 13:00 2 Crystal Palace (W) v Southampton (W) D 4-4
England FA WSL 2 09/07 13:00 1 Charlton (W) v Crystal Palace Women L 1-0
England Super League Women 05/10 11:30 22 [4] Man City Women v Crystal Palace Women [12] L 5-2
England Super League Women 05/04 13:00 21 [12] Crystal Palace Women v Leicester Women [11] D 2-2
England Super League Women 04/27 11:30 20 [12] Crystal Palace Women v West Ham Women [7] L 1-7
England Super League Women 04/23 18:15 19 [1] Chelsea Women v Crystal Palace Women [12] L 4-0
England Super League Women 03/30 13:00 18 [12] Crystal Palace Women v Arsenal Women [2] L 0-4
England Super League Women 03/22 14:00 17 [8] Everton Women v Crystal Palace Women [12] L 3-0
England Super League Women 03/16 14:00 16 [12] Crystal Palace Women v Aston Villa Women [11] W 3-1
England FA Cup Women 03/09 14:30 3 Chelsea Women v Crystal Palace Women L 1-0
England Super League Women 03/02 14:00 15 [12] Crystal Palace Women v Liverpool Women [7] L 0-1
England Super League Women 02/16 12:00 14 [2] Man Utd Women v Crystal Palace Women [12] L 3-1

Stats

 TotalHomeAway
Matches played 30 16 14
Wins 5 4 1
Draws 5 3 2
Losses 20 9 11
Goals for 34 23 11
Goals against 76 38 38
Clean sheets 3 2 1
Failed to score 14 7 7

Crystal Palace Football Club Women is a women's association football club based in South London, England, which competes in the Women's Super League 2, the second tier of English women's football. The team, known as the "Eagles", is affiliated to the men's equivalent.

The club play its home matches at the VBS Community Stadium in Sutton, South London, as well as select matches at Selhurst Park. They previously played at Hayes Lane, the home ground of Bromley F.C., between 2014 and 2023.

History

The club was formed in 1992 as Crystal Palace Ladies F.C.. Since 2003, the club has risen up England's football pyramid, winning the South East Combination Women's Football League in 2003–04, and they later achieved their first cup success defeating Chelsea in the Surrey FA County Cup final in 2011. Palace won the London and South East Women's Regional Football League title in 2013–14, gaining promotion to the FA Women's National League regional section. They won the South East Division One title in 2015–16, after going the whole season undefeated. The club also won the Surrey FA County Cup that same season against AFC Wimbledon in the final.

In 2018, Palace were given semi-professional status, and secured a Tier 2 license, allowing them to become a founding member of the FA Women's Championship, the second highest tier in women’s football. Then in 2019, it was announced by the club they would play under the name "Crystal Palace F.C." instead of "Crystal Palace Ladies F.C.", following the growing trend within the women's game at that time to move away from the term "Ladies".

Following mixed results in their first three years in the Women's Championship, Palace recorded back-to-back top-five finishes in the 2021–22 and 2022–23 seasons. It was around this time that the club officially became part of the CPFC Limited group in June 2022, and they received full professional status in 2023, followed by the securing of a Tier 1 license in April 2024, which would allow their eventual entry into the Women's Super League (WSL).

In the summer of 2023, the club appointed Grace Williams, as Head of Women’s Football, and Laura Kaminski, as Head Coach. This resulted in Palace gaining promotion to the Women's Super League as champions at the end of the 2023–24 Championship season. The club scored 55 goals – and conceded just 20 – in 22 matches. It also marked Palace’s inaugural promotion to the top-flight of women’s football. The promotion was sealed with a final-day draw against Sunderland at Selhurst Park, in front of a record crowd of 6,796.

But the following season was hugely disappointing for the club as they finished in bottom place and returned immediately to the Women's second tier. Following relegation to the WSL2, Jo Potter was appointed as manager on 24 June 2025.