Football records and statistics in Italy#Oldest players

{{Short description|none}}

{{use dmy dates|date=February 2020}}

This page details football records and statistics in Italy.

Team records

=Most championships won=

==Overall==

  • 36, Juventus{{Cite web |url=http://www.legaseriea.it/en/serie-a-tim/roll-of-honour |title=Honours list |website=LegaSerieA.it |publisher=Lega Serie A |access-date=30 May 2017 |archive-date=30 April 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180430143537/http://www.legaseriea.it/en/serie-a-tim/roll-of-honour |url-status=dead }}

==Consecutive titles==

=Most seasons in Serie A=

=Most seasons in Serie B=

=Most points in a season=

;2 Teams in Final Round (2 points per win) 1928–29

;6 Teams in Final Round (2 points per win) 1926–27

;8 Teams in Final Round (2 points per win) 1927–28 - 1945–46

;16 Teams (2 points per win) 1934–35 to 1942–43 - 1967–68 to 1987–88

;18 Teams (2 points per win) 1929–30 to 1933–34 - 1952–53 to 1966–67 - 1988–89 to 1993–94

;18 Teams (3 points per win) 1994–95 to 2003–04

;20 Teams (2 points per win) 1946–47 - 1948–49 to 1951–52

;20 Teams (3 points per win) 2004–05 to present

;21 Teams (2 points per win) 1947–48

=Most consecutive wins=

=Most consecutive home wins=

=Most consecutive away wins=

=Longest win streak from the start of a Serie A season=

=Longest win streak without conceding from the start of a Serie A season=

=Longest win streak from the start of the second half of a Serie A season=

=Most wins in a single season=

=Most defeats in a single season=

=Most home wins in a season=

=Most away wins in a season=

=Most matches won=

{{cite web|url=https://www.rsssf.org/tablesi/italalltime.html|title=Italy - Serie A All-Time Table|website=RSSSF}}{{cite web|url=https://www.worldfootball.net/alltime_table/ita-serie-a/|title=Serie A - All-time league table|website=worldfootball.net}}

=Most goals scored=

=Most goals in a season=

;21 Teams

;20 Teams

;18 Teams

;16 Teams

=Longest unbeaten streak=

=Longest unbeaten streaks in a single Serie A season=

;16 Teams

;18 Teams

;20 Teams

Individual records

=Most championships won=

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

==10 championships==

==9 championships==

==8 championships==

==7 championships==

==6 championships==

==5 championships==

=Most consecutive championships won=

=Oldest player to win a championship=

=Appearances=

{{see also|List of Serie A players}}

Top 30 most appearances, all-time (only Serie A regular-season games)

Updated as of 19 September 2024

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.

class="wikitable sortable nowrap"

!Rank

!Nat.

!width="150px" | Player

!width="80px" | Years

!width="70px" | Apps

!width="70px" | Goals

align="center"

|1

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

| align="left" |{{sortname|Gianluigi|Buffon}}

|1995–2021

657
align="center"

|2

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Paolo|Maldini}}

|1984–2009

64729
align="center"

|3

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

| align="left" |{{sortname|Francesco|Totti}}

|1992–2017

619250
align="center"

|4

|{{flagicon|ARG}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Javier|Zanetti}}

|1995–2014

61512
align="center"

|5

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Gianluca|Pagliuca}}

|1987–2007

592
align="center"

|6

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Dino|Zoff}}

|1961–1983

570
align="center"

|7

|{{flagicon|SVN}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Samir|Handanović}}

|2005–2023

566
align="center"

|8

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Pietro|Vierchowod}}

|1980–2000

56238
align="center"

|9

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Fabio|Quagliarella}}

|1999–2023

556182
align="center"

|10

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Roberto|Mancini}}

|1981–2000

541156
align="center"

|11

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Silvio|Piola}}

|1929–1954

537274
align="center"

|12

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Enrico|Albertosi}}

|1958–1980

532
align="center"

|13

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Gianni|Rivera}}

|1958–1979

527128
align="center"

|14

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Giuseppe|Bergomi}}

|1980–1999

51923
align="center"

|15

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Alberto|Gilardino}}

|1999–2017

514188
align="center"

|16

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Andrea|Consigli}}

|2008–2024

510
align="center"

|17

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Antonio|Candreva}}

|2008–2024

50285
align="center"

|18

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Ciro|Ferrara}}

|1984–2005

50027
align="center"

|19

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Giovanni|Galli}}

|1977–1995

496
align="center"

|20

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Tarcisio|Burgnich}}

|1958–1976

4946
align="center

|rowspan="2"|21

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Andrea|Pirlo}}

|1994–2015

49358
align="center"

|{{flagicon|MKD}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Goran|Pandev}}

|2001–2022

493101
align="center"

|23

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Giuseppe|Favalli}}

|1989–2010

4867
align="center"

|24

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Angelo|Peruzzi}}

|1987–2007

479
align="center"

|rowspan="2"|25

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Giancarlo|De Sisti}}

|1960–1979

47850
align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Alessandro|Del Piero}}

|1993–2012

478188
align="center"

|27

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Giacinto|Facchetti}}

|1960–1978

47659
align="center"

|28

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Franco|Baresi}}

|1978–1997

47112
align="center"

|29

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Pietro|Ferraris}}

|1929–1950

469124
align="center"

|30

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Sergio|Cervato}}

|1948–1965

46645

Top four most appearances, still active in Serie A (only Serie A regular-season games)

Updated as of 28 April 2025

class=wikitable

!Rank

!All-time
rank

!width="50px" | Nat.

!width="160px" | Player

!width="70px" | Debut
year

!width="70px" | Current
club

!width="70px" | Apps

!width="70px" | Goals

align="center"

|1

|38

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

| align="left" |Lorenzo De Silvestri

|2006

Bologna44728
align="center"

|2

|71

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

| align="left" |Francesco Acerbi

|2011

Inter Milan40124
align="center"

|3

|85

|{{flagicon|COL}}

| align="left" |Juan Cuadrado

|2009

Atalanta39343
align="center"

|4

|100

|{{flagicon|POL}}

| align="left" |Piotr Zieliński

|2012

Inter Milan38644

==Oldest players==

List of the 20 oldest players at their last Serie A match.

Updated as of 15 December 2024.{{cite web |url=https://www.calcionews24.com/giocatori-piu-anziani-serie-a-classifica |title=Giocatori più anziani Serie A: la classifica di tutti i tempi |website=CalcioNews24 |language=it |last1=Camedda |first1=Paolo |date=8 October 2019 |access-date=9 October 2019 }}{{cite web |url=https://www.bdfutbol.com/en/c/rankingEFIta1.html |title=Ranking Oldest Serie A |website=BDFutbol |access-date=22 October 2023 }}

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.

  1. {{flagicon|ITA}} Marco Ballotta {{age in years and days|1964|4|3|2008|5|11}} (last game: 11 May 2008, Lazio)
  2. {{flagicon|ITA}} Gianluigi Buffon {{age in years and days|1978|1|28|2021|4|21}} (last game: 12 May 2021, Juventus)
  3. {{flagicon|ESP}} Pepe Reina {{age in years and days|1982|8|31|2025|05|10}} (last game: 10 May 2025, Como)
  4. {{flagicon|ITA}} Francesco Antonioli {{age in years and days|1969|9|14|2012|5|6}} (last game: 6 May 2012, Cesena)
  5. {{flagicon|ITA}} Gianluca Pegolo {{age in years and days|1981|3|25|2023|1|22}} (last game: 22 January 2023, Sassuolo)
  6. {{flagicon|ITA}} Alberto Fontana {{age in years and days|1967|01|23|2008|11|15}} (last game: 15 November 2008, Palermo)
  7. {{flagicon|ITA}} Roberto Colombo {{age in years and days|1975|8|24|2017|4|15}} (last game: 15 April 2017, Cagliari)
  8. {{flagicon|SWE}} Zlatan Ibrahimović {{age in years and days|1981|10|3|2023|3|18}} (last game: 18 March 2023, AC Milan)
  9. {{flagicon|ITA}} Dino Zoff {{age in years and days|1942|2|28|1983|5|15}} (last game: 15 May 1983, Juventus)
  10. {{flagicon|ITA}} Alessandro Costacurta {{age in years and days|1966|4|24|2007|5|19}} (last game: 19 May 2007, AC Milan)
  11. {{flagicon|ITA}} Pietro Vierchowod {{age in years and days|1959|4|6|2000|4|16}} (last game: 16 April 2000, Piacenza)
  12. {{flagicon|ITA}} Paolo Maldini {{age in years and days|1968|6|26|2009|5|31}} (last game: 31 May 2009, AC Milan)
  13. {{flagicon|ARG}} Javier Zanetti {{age in years and days|1973|8|10|2014|5|18}} (last game: 18 May 2014, Inter Milan)
  14. {{flagicon|ITA}} Francesco Totti {{age in years and days|1976|9|27|2017|5|28}} (last game: 28 May 2017, Roma)
  15. {{flagicon|ITA}} Daniele Balli {{age in years and days|1967|9|16|2008|5|4}} (last game: 4 May 2008, Empoli)
  16. {{flagicon|ARG}} Albano Bizzarri {{age in years and days|1977|11|9|2018|5|20}} (last game: 20 May 2018, Udinese)
  17. {{flagicon|ITA}} Silvio Piola {{age in years and days|1913|9|29|1954|3|7}} (last game: 7 March 1954, Novara)
  18. {{flagicon|ITA}} Alex Cordaz {{age in years and days|1983|1|1|2023|6|3}} (last game: 3 June 2023, Inter Milan)
  19. {{flagicon|ITA}} Fabio Quagliarella {{age in years and days|1983|1|31|2023|6|4}} (last game: 4 June 2023, Sampdoria)
  20. {{flagicon|ITA}} Antonio Mirante {{age in years and days|1983|7|8|2023|10|22}} (last game: 22 October 2023, AC Milan)

==Youngest players==

List of the 20 youngest players at their first Serie A match.{{cite web |url=https://www.bdfutbol.com/en/c/rankingEIIta1.html |title=Ranking Youngest Serie A |website=BDFutbol |access-date=22 October 2023 }}

  1. {{flagicon|ITA}} Francesco Camarda (AC Milan) {{age in years and days|2008|3|10|2023|11|25}} (25 November 2023{{cite news|url=https://football-italia.net/milan-striker-camarda-is-youngest-ever-serie-a-player-at-15/|title=Milan striker Camarda is youngest ever Serie A player at 15|website=Football Italia|date=25 November 2023|access-date=25 November 2023}}{{cite web |url=https://www.eurosport.it/calcio/serie-a/2023-2024/milan-fiorentina-francesco-camarda-diventa-il-piu-giovane-di-sempre-a-esordire-in-serie-a-la-top-10_sto9894505/story.shtml |publisher=Eurosport |language=it |title=MILAN-FIORENTINA, FRANCESCO CAMARDA DIVENTA IL PIÙ GIOVANE DI SEMPRE A ESORDIRE IN SERIE A: LA TOP 10 |date=25 November 2023 |accessdate=25 November 2023 }})
  2. {{flagicon|ITA}} Wisdom Amey (Bologna) {{age in years and days|2005|8|11|2021|5|12}} (12 May 2021{{cite news|url=https://www.football-italia.net/170543/miha-introduced-15-year-old-amey-against-genoa|title=Miha introduced 15-year-old Amey against Genoa|website=Football Italia|date=12 May 2021|access-date=12 May 2021}})
  3. {{flagicon|ITA}} Amedeo Amadei (Roma) {{age in years and days|1921|7|26|1937|5|2}} (2 May 1937{{cite web|url=http://www.espnfc.com/genoa/story/3025449/genoas-pietro-pellegri-makes-debut-aged-15-equals-serie-a-record|title=Genoa's Pietro Pellegri makes debut aged 15, equals Serie A record|publisher=ESPN FC|author1=Ben Gladwell|date=23 December 2016|access-date=23 December 2016}}{{cite news|url=http://www.gazzetta.it/Calcio/Serie-A/Genoa/22-12-2016/genoa-pellegri-esordio-record-a-amadei-rivera-kean-messi-180141699093.shtml|title=Genoa, Pellegri esordio record in Serie A: eguagliato il record di Amadei|newspaper=La Gazzetta dello Sport|language=it|author1=Francesco Oddi|date=22 December 2016|access-date=23 December 2016}}{{cite web|url=http://www.goal.com/it/news/2/serie-a/2016/12/22/30763952/-|title=Genoa, esordio record per il 2001 Pellegri: debutto in A a 15 anni|website=Goal.com|language=it-IT|date=22 December 2016}})
  4. {{flagicon|ITA}} Pietro Pellegri (Genoa) {{age in years and days|2001|3|17|2016|12|22}} (22 December 2016)
  5. {{flagicon|ITA}} Gianni Rivera (Alessandria) {{age in years and days|1943|8|18|1959|6|2}} (2 June 1959{{cite web|url=http://www.magliarossonera.it/protagonisti/Gioc-Rivera.html|title=Gianni Rivera: Golden Boy|publisher=Maglia Rossonera.it|language=it|access-date=6 November 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111123035345/http://www.magliarossonera.it/protagonisti/Gioc-Rivera.html|archive-date=23 November 2011|url-status=dead}}{{cite web|url=https://www.fifa.com/fifa-tournaments/players-coaches/people=44571/profile.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151009162757/http://www.fifa.com/fifa-tournaments/players-coaches/people=44571/profile.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=9 October 2015|title=Milan and Italy's golden boy: Gianni Rivera|publisher=FIFA|access-date=20 April 2015}})
  6. {{flagicon|ITA}} Aristide Rossi (Cremonese) {{age in years and days|1914|9|8|1930|6|29}} (29 June 1930{{cite web|url=http://www.uscremonese.it/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2098&Itemid=206|title=Dagli anni Venti al 1929|first=Daniela|last=Fioni|language=it|publisher=US Cremonese}})
  7. {{flagicon|ITA}} Giuseppe Campione (Bologna) {{age in years and days|1973|8|31|1989|6|25}} (25 June 1989{{cite web|url=http://ricerca.repubblica.it/repubblica/archivio/repubblica/2002/01/29/un-angelov-custode-il-segreto-di-bojinov.html|title=Un Angelov custode il segreto di Bojinov - la Repubblica.it|website=la Repubblica.it|language=it|date=29 January 2002|publisher=GEDI Gruppo Editoriale}})
  8. {{flagicon|ITA}} Eddie Salcedo (Genoa) {{age in years and days|2001|10|1|2017|8|20}} (20 August 2017{{cite news|url=https://www.footballscouting.it/hellas-verona/hellas-verona-primo-gol-in-serie-a-per-eddie-salcedo/|title=Hellas Verona, primo gol in Serie A per Eddie Salcedo

|website=Football Scouting|language=it|date=3 November 2019|access-date=3 November 2019}})

  1. {{flagicon|BGR}} Valeri Bojinov (Lecce) {{age in years and days|1986|2|15|2002|1|22}} (22 January 2002)
  2. {{flagicon|ITA}} Andrea Pirlo (Brescia) {{age in years and days|1979|5|19|1995|5|21}} (21 May 1995{{cite news|url=http://football-italia.net/20442/memories-16-year-old-star-pirlo|title=Memories of 16-year-old star Pirlo|date=26 June 2012|access-date=20 September 2012|publisher=football-italia.net|archive-date=18 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210518004143/https://www.football-italia.net/20442/memories-16-year-old-star-pirlo|url-status=dead}})
  3. {{flagicon|ITA}} Stephan El Shaarawy (Genoa) {{age in years and days|1992|10|27|2008|12|21}} (21 December 2008{{cite news |url=http://archiviostorico.gazzetta.it/2008/dicembre/22/Olivera_lancia_Genoa_Chievo_sprofonda_ga_10_081222035.shtml|title=Olivera lancia il Genoa Il Chievo sprofonda|newspaper=La Gazzetta dello Sport|language=it|date=22 December 2008|access-date=19 January 2009}})
  4. {{flagicon|ITA}} Simone Pafundi (Udinese) {{age in years and days|2006|3|14|2022|5|22}} (22 May 2022{{cite news|url=https://football-italia.net/serie-a-salernitana-0-4-udinese-granata-safe-despite-drubbing/|title=Serie A {{!}} Salernitana 0-4 Udinese: Granata safe despite drubbing|website=Football Italia|date=22 May 2022|access-date=22 May 2022}})
  5. {{flagicon|ITA}} Lorenzo Tassi (Brescia) {{age in years and days|1995|2|12|2011|5|22}} (22 May 2011{{cite web|url=https://int.soccerway.com/players/lorenzo-tassi/180573/|title=L. Tassi|website=Soccerway}}{{cite web|url=http://www.corriere.it/sport/cards/i-piu-giovani-esordire-serie-a/tassiesordio-supervalutazione.shtml|title=I più giovani a esordire in Serie A Pellegri come Amadei quando la carriera inizia a 15 anni|publisher=Il Corriere della Sera|language=it|author1=Fiorenzo Radogna|date=21 November 2016|access-date=23 December 2016}})
  6. {{flagicon|CIV}} Chaka Traorè (Parma) {{age in years and days|2004|12|23|2021|4|10}} (10 April 2021)
  7. {{flagicon|ITA}} Stefano Okaka (Roma) {{age in years and days|1989|8|9|2005|12|18}} (18 December 2005{{cite web|url=http://www.corriere.it/sport/cards/i-piu-giovani-esordire-serie-a/stefano-okaka.shtml|title=I più giovani a esordire in Serie A Pellegri come Amadei quando la carriera inizia a 15 anni|publisher=Il Corriere della Sera|language=it|author1=Fiorenzo Radogna|date=21 November 2016|access-date=23 December 2016}})
  8. {{flagicon|ITA}} Paolo Pupita (Cesena) {{age in years and days|1973|9|16|1990|1|28}} (28 January 1990{{cite web|url=http://www.tuttocesenaweb.it/rassegna-stampa/corriere-romagna-cesena-maglia-nera-di-serie-a-e-b-5208|title=Cesena maglia nera di Serie A|website=tuttocesenaweb.it|access-date=13 May 2014|archive-date=14 May 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140514225516/http://www.tuttocesenaweb.it/rassegna-stampa/corriere-romagna-cesena-maglia-nera-di-serie-a-e-b-5208|url-status=dead}})
  9. {{flagicon|GRE}} Lampros Choutos (Roma) {{age in years and days|1979|12|4|1996|4|21}} (21 April 1996)
  10. {{flagicon|ITA}} Silvio Piola (Cesena) {{age in years and days|1913|9|29|1930|2|16}} (16 February 1930)
  11. {{flagicon|ITA}} Tommaso Maestrelli (Bari) {{age in years and days|1922|10|7|1939|2|26}} (26 February 1939)
  12. {{flagicon|CIV}} Siriki Sanogo (Benevento) {{age in years and days|2001|12|21|2018|5|12}} (12 May 2018)

==Oldest player to debut in Serie A==

  1. {{flagicon|ITA}} Maurizio Pugliesi {{age in years and days|1976|12|27|2016|5|15}} (15 May 2016, Empoli){{cite web|url=http://www.tuttolegapro.com/altre-news/debutto-in-serie-a-a-quasi-40-anni-per-un-ex-lega-pro-124517|title=Debutto in Serie A a quasi 40 anni per un ex Lega Pro|website=Tuttolegapro|language=it|access-date=17 November 2016|archive-date=26 August 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170826030840/http://www.tuttolegapro.com/altre-news/debutto-in-serie-a-a-quasi-40-anni-per-un-ex-lega-pro-124517|url-status=dead}}

==Most consecutive appearances in Serie A==

Dino Zoff, 332{{cite web|url=http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/dino-zoff_(Enciclopedia-dello-Sport)/|title=Zoff, Dino|publisher=Treccani: Enciclopedia dello Sport|author1=Fabrizio Maffei|access-date=26 November 2016}}

==Most consecutive appearances in Serie A for a single club==

Dino Zoff, 330 (with Juventus){{cite web |url=https://www.goal.com/it/notizie/dino-zoff-un-portiere-leggendario-dal-flop-alludinese-ai/6mqnl8duoe6i18bhc5f2aov5w |title=Dino Zoff, un portiere leggendario: dal flop all'Udinese ai successi con Juventus e Nazionale |publisher=www.goal.com |language=Italian |last1=Camedda |first1=Paolo |date=28 February 2021 |access-date=17 December 2021 }}

==Most seasons in Serie A==

==Most consecutive seasons in Serie A==

==Most career club appearances by an Italian player==

Gianluigi Buffon, 975{{cite web |url=https://www.football-italia.net/SerieA/match/142400 |title=Juventus 2 - 1 Verona |publisher=Football Italia |date=21 September 2019 |access-date=22 September 2019 }}{{cite web |url=https://www.si.com/soccer/2019/09/28/cristiano-ronaldo-goal-gianluigi-buffon-makes-history-for-juventus |title=Cristiano Ronaldo, Miralem Pjanic Score as Juventus beats SPAL |publisher=Sports Illustrated |date=28 September 2019 |access-date=28 September 2019 }}

==Most appearances for a single Italian club==

Paolo Maldini, 902, with AC Milan{{cite web |url=https://www.football-stadiums.co.uk/articles/one-club-football-players/ |title=One Club Football Players |date=20 May 2016 |publisher=football-stadiums.co.uk |access-date=5 November 2019 }}

=Goalscoring=

{{see also|List of Serie A players with 100 or more goals}}

== Top 30 goalscorers, all-time (only Serie A regular-season games<!--REGULAR-SEASON ONLY. No play-off matches included.-->) ==

Updated as of 16 September 2024

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.

class="wikitable sortable nowrap"

!Rank

!Nat.

!width="150px" | Player

!width="80px" | Years

!width="70px" | Goals

!width="70px" | Apps

!width="60px" | Ratio

align="center"

|1

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Silvio|Piola}}{{#tag:ref|Tally does not include 16 goals that Piola also scored from 29 appearances during the 1945–46 Divisione Nazionale season|name="piola-DN"|group="nb"}}

|1929–1954

274537{{#expr: 274/537 round 2}}
align="center"

|2

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Francesco|Totti}}

|1992–2017

250619{{#expr: 250/619 round 2}}
align="center"

|3

|{{flagicon|SWE}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Gunnar|Nordahl}}

|1948–1958

225291{{#expr: 225/291 round 2}}
align="center"

|rowspan="2"|4

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Giuseppe|Meazza}}

|1929–1947

216367{{#expr: 216/367 round 2}}
align="center"

|{{flagicon|BRA}}{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|José|Altafini}}

|1958–1976

216459{{#expr: 216/459 round 2}}
align="center"

|6

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Antonio|Di Natale}}

|2002–2016

209445{{#expr: 209/445 round 2}}
align="center"

|7

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Roberto|Baggio}}

|1985–2004

205452{{#expr: 205/452 round 2}}
align="center"

|8

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Ciro|Immobile}}

|2009–2024

201350{{#expr: 201/350 round 2}}
align="center"

|9

|{{flagicon|SWE}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Kurt|Hamrin}}

|1956–1971

190400{{#expr: 190/400 round 2}}
align="center"

|rowspan="3"|10

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Giuseppe|Signori}}

|1991–2004

188344{{#expr: 188/344 round 2}}
align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Alessandro|Del Piero}}

|1993–2012

188478{{#expr: 188/478 round 2}}
align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Alberto|Gilardino}}

|1999–2017

188514{{#expr: 188/514 round 2}}
align="center"

|13

|{{flagicon|ARG}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Gabriel|Batistuta}}

|1991–2003

184318{{#expr: 184/318 round 2}}
align="center"

|14

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Fabio|Quagliarella}}

|1999–2023

182556{{#expr: 182/556 round 2}}
align="center"

|15

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Giampiero|Boniperti}}

|1946–1961

178443{{#expr: 178/443 round 2}}
align="center"

|16

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Amedeo|Amadei}}

|1936–1956

174423{{#expr: 174/423 round 2}}
align="center"

|17

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Giuseppe|Savoldi}}

|1965–1982

168405{{#expr: 168/405 round 2}}
align="center"

|18

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Guglielmo|Gabetto}}

|1934–1949

167322{{#expr: 167/322 round 2}}
align="center"

|19

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Roberto|Boninsegna}}

|1965–1979

163366{{#expr: 163/366 round 2}}
align="center"

|20

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Luca|Toni}}

|2000–2016

157344{{#expr: 157/344 round 2}}
align="center"

|rowspan="4"|21

|{{flagicon|SWE}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Zlatan|Ibrahimović}}

|2004–2023

156283{{#expr: 156/283 round 2}}
align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Gigi|Riva}}

|1964–1976

156289{{#expr: 156/289 round 2}}
align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Filippo|Inzaghi}}

|1995–2012

156370{{#expr: 156/370 round 2}}
align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Roberto|Mancini}}

|1981–2000

156541{{#expr: 156/541 round 2}}
align="center"

|rowspan="2"|25

|{{flagicon|BRA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Luís|Vinício}}

|1955–1968

155348{{#expr: 155/348 round 2}}
align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Carlo|Reguzzoni}}

|1929–1948

155401{{#expr: 155/401 round 2}}
align="center"

|rowspan="2"|27

|{{flagicon|HUN}}

|align=left|{{sortname|István|Nyers}}

|1948–1956

153236{{#expr: 153/236 round 2}}
align="center"

|{{flagicon|ARG}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Hernán|Crespo}}

|1996–2012

153340{{#expr: 153/340 round 2}}
align="center"

|29

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Adriano|Bassetto}}

|1946–1958

149329{{#expr: 149/329 round 2}}
align="center"

|30

|{{flagicon|ARG}}{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Omar|Sívori

Sivori, Omar}}

|1957–1969

147278{{#expr: 147/278 round 2}}

== Top five goal scorers, still active in Serie A (only Serie A regular-season games<!--REGULAR-SEASON ONLY. No play-off matches included.-->) ==

Updated as of 28 April 2025

class="wikitable sortable nowrap"

!Rank

!All-time
rank

!Nat.

!width="150px"| Player

!width="70px" | Debut
year

!width="100px"| Current
club

!width="70px" | Goals

!width="70px" | Apps

!width="60px" | Ratio

align="center"

|1

|44

|{{flagicon|ARG}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Paulo|Dybala}}

|2012

Roma129348{{#expr: 129/348 round 2}}
align="center"

|2

|49

|{{flagicon|COL}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Duván|Zapata}}

|2013

Torino124326{{#expr: 124/326 round 2}}
align="center"

|3

|61

|{{flagicon|ARG}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Lautaro|Martínez}}

|2018

|Inter Milan115237{{#expr: 115/237 round 2}}
align="center"

|4

|118

|{{flagicon|SRB}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Dusan|Vlahovic}}

|2018

|Juventus86189{{#expr: 86/189 round 2}}
align="center"

|5

|130

|{{flagicon|BEL}}

|align=left|{{sortname|Romelu|Lukaku}}

|2018

|Napoli82161{{#expr: 82/161 round 2}}

==Most goals from a penalty kick==

Top five penalty kick scorers, all-time (only Serie A regular-season games){{cite web|url=http://www.goal.com/it/news/2/serie-a/2016/04/22/22675912/totti-riscrive-la-storia-baggio-superato-sui-calci-di-rigore|title=Totti riscrive la storia: Baggio superato sui calci di rigore, Higuain per media-goal|trans-title=Totti rewrites history: Baggio overtaken on penalties, Higuain in terms of goalscoring average|publisher=Goal.com|language=it|date=22 April 2016|access-date=25 April 2016}}{{cite web|url=http://blog.guerinsportivo.it/blog/2011/07/15/i-migliori-rigoristi-della-storia-della-serie-a?cookieAccept|title=I migliori rigoristi della storia della serie A|trans-title=The best penalty takers in Serie A history|publisher=Il Guerin Sportivo|language=it|author1=Roberto Vinciguerra|access-date=16 May 2016}}{{cite web|url=https://www.bdfutbol.com/en/c/rankingGPenIta1.html|title=Ranking Goals Penalty Serie A|website=BDFutbol|access-date=30 October 2023}}

Updated 4 February 2024

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.

class=wikitable

!Rank

!width="50px" | Nat.

!width="150px" | Player

!width="70px" | Goals

align="center"

|1

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Francesco Totti

|71

align="center"

|2

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Roberto Baggio

|68

align="center"

|3

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Ciro Immobile

|52

align="center"

|4

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Alessandro Del Piero

|50

align="center"

|5

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Domenico Berardi

|47

==Most penalty kicks scored in a single Serie A season==

Ciro Immobile, 14 (2019–20){{cite web |url=https://www.mn24.it/calcio-ciro-immobile-da-record-e-il-giocatore-con-il-maggior-numero-di-rigori-realizzati-in-una-sola-stagione/ |title=Calcio - Ciro Immobile da record: è il giocatore con il maggior numero di rigori realizzati in una sola stagione |publisher=Media News 24 |language=it |date=27 July 2020 |access-date=6 September 2020 }}

==Most goals from a free kick==

Top ten free kick scorers, all-time (only Serie A regular-season games){{cite web|url=http://www.goal.com/it/news/2/serie-a/2014/03/18/4692299/sentenza-pirlo-su-punizione-solo-mihajlovic-ha-fatto-meglio|title='Sentenza' Pirlo su punizione, solo Mihajlovic ha fatto meglio in Serie A|trans-title=Pirlo's 'sentence' from a free-kick, only Mihajlovic has done better in Serie A|website=Goal.com|language=it|date=18 March 2014|access-date=16 May 2016}}{{cite web|url=https://sport.sky.it/calcio/serie-a/2017/12/17/bologna-juventus-risultato-gol.html|title=Bologna-Juventus 0-3: segnano Pjanic, Mandzukic e Matuidi: gol e highlights|publisher=Sky.it|language=it|date=17 December 2017|access-date=20 December 2017}}

Updated 17 December 2017

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.

class=wikitable

!Rank

!width="50px" | Nat.

!width="150px"| Player

!width="70px" | Goals

align="center"

|1

|{{flagicon|SRB}}

|align=left|Siniša Mihajlović

|28

align="center"

|2

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Andrea Pirlo

|26{{#tag:ref|According to several sources, Andrea Pirlo scored 28 goals from free kicks in Serie A, which would make him the all–time highest goalscorer from set–pieces in Serie A history, alongside Siniša Mihajlović; however, two of his claimed goals are disputed and have been recorded as own goals by two different goalkeepers according to other sources: the first by Sébastien Frey in Verona-Reggina 1–1 on 9 January 2000 (1999–2000 Serie A),{{cite news |url=https://ricerca.repubblica.it/repubblica/archivio/repubblica/2000/01/10/la-reggina-viene-ripresa-da-adailton.html |title=La Reggina viene ripresa da Adailton |work=La Repubblica |language=it |last1=Scemma |first1=Adalberto |date=10 January 2000 |access-date=8 July 2020 }}{{cite news |url=http://archiviostorico.gazzetta.it/2000/gennaio/11/Roma_capoccia_con_Totti_Delvecchio_ga_0_0001115512.shtml |title=Roma capoccia con Totti Delvecchio |work=La Gazzetta dello Sport |language=it |date=11 January 2000 |access-date=8 July 2020 }} and the second by Marco Silvestri in Juventus-Cagliari 3–0 on 16 May 2014 (2013–14 Serie A).{{cite news |url=https://www.repubblica.it/sport/calcio/serie-a/2014/05/18/news/juventus-cagliari_3-0_102_punti_la_festa_bianconera_e_completa-86489031/ |title=Juventus-Cagliari 3-0: 102 punti, la festa bianconera è completa |work=la Repubblica |language=it |date=18 May 2014 |access-date=8 July 2020 }}{{cite news |url=https://www.gazzetta.it/Calcio/Serie-A/Juventus/18-05-2014/juventus-cagliari-3-0-gol-pirlo-llorente-marchisio-punti-sono-102-80699388008.shtml |title=Juventus-Cagliari 3-0. Autorete Silvestri, gol di Llorente e Marchisio. I punti sono 102 |work=La Gazzetta dello Sport |language=it |date=16 May 2014 |access-date=8 July 2020 }}{{cite web |url=https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/27463440 |title=Juventus 3-0 Cagliari |publisher=BBC Sport |date=18 May 2014 |access-date=8 July 2020 }} According to the official regulations by Lega Serie A, a goal is considered to be an own goal when "a player deflects a shot, cross, or pass from an opponent, which was not directed on target, into their own goal."{{cite web|url=http://www.legaseriea.it/it/serie-a/linee-guida-pdf|title=Linee guida per l'assegnazione dei gol dubbi|publisher=Lega Nazionale Professionisti Serie A|language=it|access-date=7 July 2020}}{{Dead link|date=April 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} See also :it:Statistiche della Serie A#Calci piazzati.|name="PirloError"|group="nb"}}

align="center"

|3

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Alessandro Del Piero

|22

align="center"

|rowspan="2"|4

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Francesco Totti

|rowspan="2"|21

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Roberto Baggio

align="center"

|6

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Gianfranco Zola

|20

align="center"

|7

|{{flagicon|BIH}}

|align=left|Miralem Pjanić

|15

align="center"

|8

|{{flagicon|ARG}}

|align=left|Diego Maradona

|14

align="center"

|rowspan="3"|9

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Enrico Chiesa

|rowspan="3"|13

align="center"

|{{flagicon|FRA}}

|align=left|Michel Platini

align="center"

|{{flagicon|URU}}

|align=left|Álvaro Recoba

align="center"

==Most goals from a free kick in a single Serie A match==

Giuseppe Signori and Siniša Mihajlović, 3 (in Lazio 3–1 Atalanta, 10 April 1994; and Lazio 5–2 Sampdoria, 13 December 1998, respectively){{cite news|url=http://archiviostorico.gazzetta.it/1998/dicembre/14/Record_Mihajlovic_mai_gol_punizione_ga_0_9812144971.shtml|title=Record Mihajlovic: mai 3 gol su punizione diretta|trans-title=Mihajlovic record: never before 3 goals from direct free-kicks|newspaper=La Gazzetta dello Sport|language=it|author1=Lanfredo Birelli|date=14 December 1998|access-date=26 August 2015}}

==Most goals from a free kick in a single Serie A season==

Cristiano Lucarelli (2004–05), Alessandro Del Piero (2008–09), Francesco Lodi (2012–13), Andrea Pirlo (2012–13) (all 5){{#tag:ref|Note: statistical data only began to be collected from the 2004–05 Serie A season onwards|name="2004–05-stats"|group="nb"}}

==Most different teams scored against in Serie A==

Alberto Gilardino, 39https://www.facebook.com/optapaolo/photos/a.180347395352755.57790.180305525356942/974522505935236/?type=3&theater

==Fastest goal scored in Serie A==

Rafael Leão, 6.2 seconds (20 December 2020, in SassuoloAC Milan, 1–2){{Cite news|url=https://edition.cnn.com/2020/12/21/football/rafael-leao-serie-a-fastest-goal-ac-milan-spt-intl/index.html|title=Blink and you'll miss it -- Rafael Leao scores fastest goal in Serie A history|publisher=CNN|date=21 December 2020|access-date=22 December 2020}}

==Oldest goalscorer in Serie A==

Zlatan Ibrahimović, {{age in years and days|1981|10|3|2023|3|18}} (18 March 2023, in Udinese–AC Milan, 3–1){{cite news|url=https://football-italia.net/video-ibrahimovic-makes-history-as-oldest-ever-serie-a-scorer/|title=IBRAHIMOVIC MAKES HISTORY AS OLDEST EVER SERIE A SCORER|newspaper=football-italia.net|language=|date=18 March 2023}}

==Youngest goalscorer in Serie A==

Amedeo Amadei, 15 years, 287 days (9 May 1937, in LuccheseRoma, 5–1){{cite web|url=https://www.uefa.com/news/0253-0d7f68d4bd71-5197784f2719-1000--europe-s-youngest-top-flight-goalscorers/|title=Europe's youngest top-flight goalscorers|publisher=UEFA|date=26 November 2014|access-date=21 May 2017}}

==Youngest players to score 100 goals in Serie A==

{{updated|18 March 2018}}

class=wikitable

!Rank

!width="50px" | Nat.

!width="150px" | Player

!width="150px" | Age

align="center"

|1

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Giuseppe Meazza

|23 years and 32 days

align="center"

|2

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Silvio Piola

|23 years and 68 days

align="center"

|3

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Giampiero Boniperti

|23 years and 193 days

align="center"

|4

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Felice Borel

|23 years and 307 days

align="center"

|5

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|José Altafini

|24 years and 239 days

align="center"

|6

|{{flagicon|ARG}}

|align=left|Mauro Icardi

|25 years and 27 days

align="center"

|7

|{{flagicon|URU}}

|align=left|Edinson Cavani

|25 years and 340 days

align="center"

|8

|{{flagicon|ARG}}

|align=left|Omar Sívori

|26 years and 90 days

align="center"

|9

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Guglielmo Gabetto

|26 years and 104 days

align="center"

|10

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Alberto Gilardino

|26 years and 105 days

align="center"

Sources:{{cite magazine|url=https://www.fourfourtwo.com/news/icardi-100-inter-captains-serie-a-landmark-opta-numbers|title=Icardi 100: Inter captain's Serie A landmark in Opta numbers|magazine=FourFourTwo|date=18 March 2018|access-date=18 March 2018}}{{cite web|url=https://www.football-italia.net/118692/icardi-hits-serie-century|title=Icardi hits Serie A Century|publisher=Football Italia|date=18 March 2018|access-date=18 March 2018}}{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/dcunited/icardi-passes-2-century-marks-with-4-goal-performance/2018/03/18/308400f2-2ab2-11e8-8dc9-3b51e028b845_story.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180401075241/https://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/dcunited/icardi-passes-2-century-marks-with-4-goal-performance/2018/03/18/308400f2-2ab2-11e8-8dc9-3b51e028b845_story.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=1 April 2018|title=Icardi passes 2 century marks with 4-goal performance|newspaper=The Washington Post|author1=Andrew Dampf|date=18 March 2018|access-date=18 March 2018}}{{cite web|url=https://en.as.com/en/2018/03/18/football/1521379260_969326.html|title=Inter's Icardi reaches 100 Serie A goals at former club Sampdoria|publisher=as.com|date=18 March 2018|access-date=18 March 2018}}{{cite news|url=http://www.goal.com/en/news/inter-star-icardi-exceeds-100-serie-a-goals-with-four/17kykzf7q79z616exkqtqwgaqa|title=Inter star Icardi exceeds 100 Serie A goals with four against Sampdoria|publisher=Goal.com|author=Ryan Benson|date=18 March 2018|access-date=18 March 2018}}{{cite news|url=http://www.goal.com/it/Articolo.aspx?ContenutoId=876148|title=Solo Altafini come Gilardino: bomber a 26 anni|work=Goal.com|author=Redazione La Nazione|access-date=5 March 2016|archive-date=2 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171002215631/http://www.goal.com/it/Articolo.aspx?ContenutoId=876148|url-status=dead}}{{cite news|url=http://www.violanews.com/news.asp?idnew=25184|title=Gila, numeri da urlo. Più decisivo di Altafini: alla sua età Bati era indietro|publisher=La Nazione|author=Giansandro Mosti|access-date=5 March 2016}} {{dead link|date=October 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}

==Most goals in a single Serie A match==

Silvio Piola and Omar Sívori, 6{{cite web|url=http://storiedicalcio.altervista.org/blog/silvio_piola.html|title=PIOLA Silvio: il sesto senso del gol|publisher=Storie di Calcio|language=it|author1=Lorenzo Proverbio|date=February 2016|access-date=21 May 2017}}

==Most braces in Serie A==

Silvio Piola and Gunnar Nordahl, 49{{cite news|url=http://archiviostorico.gazzetta.it/2001/ottobre/20/chi_detiene_record_doppiette_serie_sw_0_0110201317.shtml|title=Chi detiene il record di doppiette in serie a?|newspaper=La Gazzetta dello Sport|language=it|author1=Federico Mambelli|date=20 October 2001|access-date=21 May 2017}}

==Most hat-tricks in Serie A==

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.

Gunnar Nordahl, 17{{cite web|url=http://www.90min.com/it/posts/4158930-top-10-i-dieci-giocatori-autori-di-piu-triplette-nella-storia-della-serie-a|title=TOP 10 - I dieci giocatori autori di più triplette nella storia della Serie A|publisher=90min.com|language=it|author1=Niccolò Mariotto|date=23 November 2016|access-date=21 May 2017|archive-date=27 July 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210727221917/https://www.90min.com/it/posts/4158930-top-10-i-dieci-giocatori-autori-di-piu-triplette-nella-storia-della-serie-a|url-status=dead}}{{cite web |url=https://sport.sky.it/calcio/serie-a/2019/09/02/tripletta-serie-a-classifica#27 |title=Serie A, quali giocatori hanno fatto tripletta più volte? La classifica |publisher=sport.sky.it |language=it |date=2 September 2019 |access-date=12 November 2019 }}

class=wikitable

!Rank

!width="50px" | Nat.

!width="150px" | Player

!width="70px" | Hat-tricks

align="center"

|rowspan="1"|1

|{{flagicon|SWE}}

|align=left|Gunnar Nordahl

|rowspan="1"|17

align="center"
align="center"

|rowspan="1"|2

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Giuseppe Meazza

|rowspan="1"|15

align="center"
align="center"

|rowspan="2"|3

|{{flagicon|SWE}}

|align=left|Kurt Hamrin

|rowspan="2"|12

align="center"

|{{flagicon|HUN}}

|align=left|István Nyers

align="center"

|rowspan="2"|5

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Filippo Inzaghi

|rowspan="2"|10

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Silvio Piola

align="center"

|rowspan="4"|7

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Adriano Bassetto

|rowspan="4"|9

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Giuseppe Signori

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ARG}}

|align=left|Pedro Manfredini

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Omar Sívori

align="center"

==Youngest player to score a brace in Serie A==

Pietro Pellegri, 16 years and 184 days (17 September 2017, in GenoaLazio, 2–3){{cite web|url=https://www.foxsports.it/2017/09/18/genoa-pellegri-doppietta-a-sedici-anni-184-giorni/|title=Genoa, enfant prodige Pellegri: doppietta in A a 16 anni e 184 giorni|publisher=foxsports.it|language=it|author1=Luca Guerra|date=18 September 2017|access-date=8 December 2017}}{{cite news|url=http://www.gazzetta.it/Calcio/Serie-A/Genoa/17-09-2017/immobile-pellegri-presente-futuro-calcio-italiano-220656349308.shtml|title=Pellegri, storia di un predestinato: "Non posso neanche fare il figo a scuola..."|newspaper=La Gazzetta dello Sport|language=it|author1=Giuseppe Di Giovanni|date=17 September 2017|access-date=28 January 2018}}

==Oldest player to score a brace in Serie A==

Zlatan Ibrahimović, 40 years and 48 days{{cite tweet|number=1462171794496966661|user=OptaPaolo|title=40 - Zlatan Ibrahimovic has become the oldest player ever to have scored 2+ goals in a Serie A game and the first 4…|date=20 November 2021}} (20 November 2021 Fiorentina 4–3 AC Milan)

==Most braces in a single Serie A season==

==Youngest player to score a hat-trick in Serie A==

Silvio Piola, 17 years and 132 days{{cite news|url=http://archiviostorico.gazzetta.it/2011/maggio/23/SILVIO_PIOLA_PIU_GIOVANE_TRIPLETTISTA_ga_3_110523002.shtml|title=È SILVIO PIOLA IL PIÙ GIOVANE TRIPLETTISTA DELLA SERIE A|trans-title=Silvio Piola is the youngest hat-trick scorer of Serie A|newspaper=La Gazzetta dello Sport|language=it|date=23 May 2011|access-date=7 December 2017}}

==Oldest player to score a hat-trick in Serie A==

Rodrigo Palacio, 39 years and 86 days{{cite web|url=https://www.football-italia.net/170045/palacio-has-oldest-serie-hat-trick|title=Palacio has oldest Serie A hat-trick|website=Football Italia|date=2 May 2021|access-date=2 May 2021}}

==Most hat-tricks in a single Serie A season==

Giuseppe Meazza (1929–30), Enrique Guaita (1934–35), Valentino Mazzola (1946–47), István Nyers (1950–51), Pedro Manfredini (1960–61), and Omar Sívori (1960–61) (all four){{cite news |title=Gol, assist e non solo: i record stagionali in A |url=https://sport.sky.it/calcio/serie-a/2019/07/27/serie-a-giocatori-record-campionato |access-date=20 February 2024 |work=Sky Sport Italia |date=27 July 2019 |language=it}}

==Youngest player to score more than three goals in a single Serie A match==

Silvio Piola, 18 years and 54 days{{cite web|url=http://www.modenanoi.it/non--domenico-berardi-ma-silvio-piola-il-pokerista-pi-giovane-della-serie-a/|title=Non è Domenico Berardi ma Silvio Piola il pokerista più giovane della Serie A|trans-title=Domenico Berardi is not the youngest poker scorer of Serie A but Silvio Piola is|publisher=modenanoi.it|language=it|author=Andrea Rughetti|date=13 January 2014|access-date=21 May 2017|archive-date=5 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171005050642/http://www.modenanoi.it/non--domenico-berardi-ma-silvio-piola-il-pokerista-pi-giovane-della-serie-a/|url-status=dead}}

==Oldest player to score five goals in a single Serie A match==

Miroslav Klose, 34 years and 330 days{{cite news|url=http://www.repubblica.it/sport/calcio/serie-a/lazio/2013/05/05/news/lazio_bologna-58113010/|title=Lazio-Bologna 6-0: cinquina storica di Klose, i biancocelesti ritrovano gol e vittoria|newspaper=La Repubblica|language=it|author1=Giulio Cardone|date=5 May 2013|access-date=8 December 2017}}

==Oldest player to score their first goal in Serie A==

Angelo Mattea, 38 years and 7 days, for Casale, in a 5–1 away loss to Ambrosiana on 28 October 1930{{cite web |url=https://www.calciomercato.com/news/fiorentina-ribery-da-record-45263 |title=Fiorentina, Ribery da record |publisher=calciomercato.com |language=it |date=22 September 2019 |access-date=23 September 2019 }}{{cite web |url=http://calcio-seriea.net/tabellini/1930/309/ |title=Risultati Serie A 30-31 |publisher=calcio-seriea.net |language=it |access-date=23 September 2019 }}

==Most consecutive Serie A seasons with at least one goal==

Francesco Totti, 23 (1994–95 to 2016–17){{cite news|url=http://www.gazzetta.it/Calcio/Serie-A/Roma/11-09-2016/roma-sampdoria-muriel-fa-gol-pazzesco-applaude-perfino-totti-17016402630.shtml|title=Roma-Sampdoria, Totti in gol da 23 anni: è il suo 25° anno in A come Maldini|newspaper=La Gazzetta dello Sport|language=it|date=11 September 2016|access-date=8 December 2017}}{{cite web|url=https://calcio.fanpage.it/totti-sempre-in-gol-da-23-anni-perche-dovrei-smettere/|title=Totti sempre in gol da 23 anni: "Perché dovrei smettere?"|publisher=calcio.fanpage.it|language=it|author1=Marco Beltrami|date=11 September 2016|access-date=8 December 2017}}

==Oldest player to win the Serie A top scorer award==

Luca Toni (38 years, 2014–15){{cite web|url=http://www.beinsports.tv/soccer/article/n12rkjb40q7n1ae3dy8hk8l2a/title/verona-level-late-against-juventus-as-luca-toni-ends-season-as-serie-as-top-marksman|title=Verona Level Late Against Juventus As Luca Toni Ends Season As Serie A's Top Marksman|publisher=Bein Sports|date=30 May 2015|access-date=30 May 2015}}

==Most Serie A top scorer awards==

==Most goals in a single Serie A season==

36, Gonzalo Higuaín (2015–16){{cite web|url=http://www.football-italia.net/84347/higuain-i-am-so-happy|title=Higuain: 'I am so happy!'|publisher=Football Italia|date=14 May 2016|access-date=14 May 2016}}{{cite web|url=http://www.goal.com/en/news/723/serie-a/2016/05/14/23529832/higuain-makes-serie-a-history-by-breaking-66-year-old|title=Higuain makes Serie A history by breaking 66-year-old goalscoring record|publisher=goal.com|first=Chris|last= Davie|date=14 May 2016|access-date=14 May 2016}}{{cite web|url=http://www.espnfc.us/italian-serie-a/12/statistics/scorers?season=2015|title=Serie A Statistics 2015-16|publisher=ESPN FC|date=14 May 2016|access-date=14 May 2016}} and Ciro Immobile (2019–20){{cite web|url=http://www.legaseriea.it/en/serie-a/statistics|title=Serie A Statistics 2019-20|publisher=Serie A|date=1 August 2020|access-date=1 August 2020}}{{#tag:ref|Gino Rossetti's Italian league record of 36 goals was set during the 1928–29 Divisione Nazionale season, prior to the establishment of the Serie A in the 1929–30 season.|name="rosetti-record"|group="nb"}}

==Most headed goals in Serie A==

Christian Vieri{{cite web|url=http://www.espnfc.com/story/257739/inter-milan-squad-profiles|title=Inter Milan - Squad Profiles|publisher=ESPN FC|date=11 February 2003|access-date=2 February 2017}}{{cite web|url=http://archiviostorico.corriere.it/2001/novembre/02/Vieri_gol_per_rinascere_Visto_co_0_0111021666.shtml|title=Vieri, un gol per rinascere "Visto che colpo di testa? Adesso sono affari vostri"|publisher=Il Corriere della Sera|language=it|date=2 November 2001|access-date=22 September 2014}}{{cite web |url=https://bleacherreport.com/articles/446613-serie-a-special-7-stars-to-have-played-for-milaninter-amp-juventus |title=Serie A Special: Seven Stars Who Played For Milan, Inter and Juventus |publisher=bleacherreport.com |last1=Soldo |first1=Ivan |date=31 August 2010 |access-date=13 September 2019 }}

==Most headed goals in a single Serie A season==

Oliver Bierhoff (15 out of 19, 1998–99){{cite news |url=https://www.ilsole24ore.com/art/serie-a-pavoletti-record-nessuno-come-lui-gol-testa-AE7IJqfF |title=Serie A: Pavoletti da record, nessuno come lui nei gol di testa |work=ilsole24ore.com |language=it |date=27 August 2018 |access-date=13 September 2019 }}

==Most consecutive Serie A appearances with at least one goal scored==

Gabriel Batistuta (13 consecutive Serie A games, 2 in 1992–93 and 11 in 1994–95 with Fiorentina){{cite web |url=http://www.violanews.com/statistiche/quagliarella-e-a-quota-11-e-allora-batistuta-e-a-13-le-statistiche-premiano-ancora-batigol/?refresh_ce-cp |title=Quagliarella è a quota 11? E allora Batistuta è a... 13! Le statistiche premiano ancora Batigol |publisher=Viola News |date=28 January 2019 |access-date=29 January 2019 }}

==Most consecutive Serie A appearances with at least one goal scored in a single season==

Gabriel Batistuta (in 1994–95, with Fiorentina), Fabio Quagliarella (in 2018–19, with Sampdoria),{{cite web |url=https://www.football-italia.net/SerieA/match/125273 |title=Sampdoria 4 - 0 Udinese |publisher=Football Italia |date=26 January 2019 |access-date=28 January 2019 }} Cristiano Ronaldo (in 2019-20, with Juventus){{cite web|url=:https://m.allfootballapp.com/news/Serie-A/Ronaldo-scores-for-the-11th-consecutive-Serie-A-game-equalling-league-record/2244956 |access-date=23 February 2020 }}

==Most consecutive Serie A appearances with at least one goal scored since the start of a single season==

Gabriel Batistuta (in 1994–95, with Fiorentina) (11 consecutive Serie A games){{cite news |title=8 of the greatest ever scoring streaks – starring Batistuta, Ronaldo, Messi and Muller |url=https://www.fourfourtwo.com/us/features/8-greatest-ever-scoring-streaks-starring-batistuta-ronaldo-messi-and-muller |access-date=17 August 2018 |work=Four Four Two}}{{Cite web|url=https://www.uefa.com/memberassociations/news/newsid=2062223.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140228122909/http://www.uefa.com/memberassociations/news/newsid=2062223.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=28 February 2014|title=Longest goalscoring runs in Europe's top leagues|last=UEFA.com|date=2015-11-28|access-date=2019-01-27}}

==Most consecutive Serie A away appearances with at least one goal scored==

Giuseppe Signori (from 17 May 1992 to 28 February 1993; 1 in 1991–92 with Foggia, and 9 in 1992–93 with Lazio) (10 consecutive Serie A away games with a goal){{cite news |url=https://www.gazzetta.it/calcio/fantanews/11-02-2019/cr7-record-juve-9-trasferte-fila-gol-serie-a-mirino-c-messi-3201193050934.shtml |title=Juve, CR7 da record: 9 trasferte di fila con gol in Serie A. E nel mirino c'è Messi |newspaper=La Gazzetta dello Sport |language=it |date=11 February 2019 |access-date=11 February 2019 }}{{cite web |url=https://www.marca.com/futbol/futbol-internacional/2019/02/10/5c60740b468aeb377c8b45a9.html |title=Así está la Bota de Oro: Cristiano Ronaldo empata con Mbappé y se sitúa a tres goles de Messi |publisher=marca.com |language=es |date=10 February 2019 |access-date=11 February 2019 }}

==Most consecutive Serie A away appearances with at least one goal scored in a single season==

Giuseppe Signori (in 1992–93, with Lazio) (9 consecutive Serie A away games with a goal) and Cristiano Ronaldo (in 2018–19 and 2019–20, with Juventus)

==Most seasons with at least 10 goals scored in all competitions by an Italian player==

Alessandro Del Piero (17 seasons){{cite web|url=http://www.gazzetta.it/Calcio/SerieA/Juventus/24-04-2011/record-fedelissimo-80959586614.shtml|title=Record da fedelissimo, Ma Del Piero è amaro|website=gazzetta.it|publisher=La Gazzetta dello Sport|language=it|date=24 April 2011}}

==Highest-scoring Italian players in all competitions==

The following table shows the ten Italian players that have scored the most professional goals in total throughout their career, at both club and international level (excluding youth competitions).{{cite web|url=http://tribunasportiva.blogspot.it/2014/08/di-natale-punta-i-300-gol-in-carriera-e.html|title=Di Natale punta i 300 gol in carriera: è a 293 dopo la quaterna in Coppa Italia|website=tribunasportiva.blogspot.it|language=it|date=26 August 2014|access-date=28 April 2015}}

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

Players in italics are still active outside of Serie A.

class=wikitable

!Rank

!width="50px" | Nat.

!width="150px" | Player

!width="70px" | Goals

align="center"

|1

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Silvio Piola

|364{{#tag:ref|391 if his goals in the Divisione Nazionale (16) and goals for the Italy B team (11) are also included{{cite web|url=http://www.tuttosport.com/calcio/serie_a/juventus/2010/03/15-60075/Del+Piero+a+quota+301+gol+in+carriera%3A+nel+mirino+c%27%C3%A8+Inzaghi|title=Del Piero a quota 301 gol in carriera: nel mirino c'è Inzaghi|publisher=Tutto Sport|language=it|date=15 March 2010|access-date=22 January 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141006100558/http://www.tuttosport.com/calcio/serie_a/juventus/2010/03/15-60075/Del+Piero+a+quota+301+gol+in+carriera%3A+nel+mirino+c%27%C3%A8+Inzaghi|archive-date=6 October 2014|url-status=dead}}|name="piola-record"|group="nb"}}{{#tag:ref|Although some sources claim that Giorgio Chinaglia is in fact the highest-scoring Italian player in all competitions with 398 career goals, this claim is also disputed, as the NASL did not abide to certain FIFA regulations at the time in which Chinaglia was playing there{{cite web|url=http://www.askanews.it/sport/calcio-66-anni-fa-nasceva---long-john---giorgio-chinaglia_711113713.htm|title=Calcio: 66 anni fa nasceva Long John, Giorgio Chinaglia|language=it|date=24 January 2013|access-date=10 November 2015|archive-date=13 February 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160213103601/http://www.askanews.it/sport/calcio-66-anni-fa-nasceva---long-john---giorgio-chinaglia_711113713.htm|url-status=dead}}|name="chinaglia-record"|group="nb"}}

align="center"

|2

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Alessandro Del Piero

|346{{#tag:ref|362 if his goals for the Italy U-17 (1), U-18 (12), and U-21 teams (3) are included|name="alex-record"|group="nb"}}

align="center"

|3

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Giuseppe Meazza

|338{{#tag:ref|349 if his goals in the Divisione Nazionale are included|name="meazza-record"|group="nb"}}

align="center"

|4

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Luca Toni

|322

align="center"

|5

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Roberto Baggio

|318{{#tag:ref|321 if his goals for the Italy U-16 team (3) are included|name="baggio-record"|group="nb"}}

align="center"

|6

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Francesco Totti

|316{{#tag:ref|334 if his goals for the Italy U-15 (3), Italy U-16 (2), U-18 (7), U-21 (4), and U-23 teams (2) are included|name="totti-record"|group="nb"}}

align="center"

|7

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Filippo Inzaghi

|313{{#tag:ref|316 if his goals for the Italy U-21 team (3) are included|name="inzaghi-record"|group="nb"}}

align="center"

|8

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Antonio Di Natale

|311

align="center"

|9

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Ciro Immobile

|304{{#tag:ref|313 if his goals for the Italy U-21 team (9) are included|name="immobile-record"|group="nb"}}

align="center"

|10

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Alessandro Altobelli

|293{{#tag:ref|298 if his goals for the Italy U-21 (2), and U-23 tams (3) are included|name="altobelli-record"|group="nb"}}

==Most own goals scored in Serie A history==

Franco Baresi and Riccardo Ferri (8 each){{cite news |url=http://archiviostorico.gazzetta.it/2004/gennaio/10/chi_detiene_record_autoreti_nella_sw_0_040110585.shtml |title=chi detiene il record di autoreti nella storia della serie a ? |work=La Gazzetta dello Sport |language=it |date=10 January 2004 |access-date=2 September 2019 }}

=Assists=

==Most assists in Serie A==

Francesco Totti (188){{cite news |url=https://www.corrieredellosport.it/news/calcio/serie-a/2023/10/30-115838922/campionato_di_calcio_serie_a_record_primati_numeri_e_statistiche |title=Campionato di Calcio Serie A: record, primati, numeri e statistiche |work=Il Corriere dello Sport |language=it |date=30 October 2023 |access-date=12 February 2024 }}

The following table shows the ten players that have provided the most assists in Serie A history.

Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Players in italics are still active, but outside Serie A.

class="wikitable sortable nowrap" style="text-align: center"

!Rank

!width="50px" | Nat.

!width="150px" | Player

!width="70px" | Assists

!width="150px" | Appearances

!width="40px"| {{Abbr|Ratio|Assists per game}}

align="center"

|1

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Francesco Totti

|188

|619

|0.26

align="center"

|2

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Roberto Baggio

|119

|452

|0.26

align="center"

|3

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Alessandro Del Piero

|111

|478

|0.23

align="center"

|4

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Gianni Rivera

|105

|527

|0.20

align="center"

|5

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Andrea Pirlo

|100

|493

|0.20

align="center"

|6

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Antonio Candreva

|100

|494

|0.20

align="center"

|7

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Antonio Cassano

|99

|400

|0.25

align="center"

|8

|{{flagicon|SVK}}

|align=left|Marek Hamšík

|82

|409

|0.20

align="center"

|9

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Lorenzo Insigne

|74

|337

|0.22

align="center"

|10

|{{flagicon|BIH}}

|align=left|Miralem Pjanić

|73

|281

|0.26

==Most assists in a single Serie A season==

Alejandro Gómez (2019–20) (16){{#tag:ref|Note: statistical data only began to be collected from the 2004–05 Serie A season onwards|name="2004–05-stats"|group="nb"}}

==Oldest assist provider in Serie A==

Zlatan Ibrahimović, 40 years, 6 months and 21 days (24 April 2022, in Lazio–AC Milan, 1–2){{cite web |title=Ibra, quello contro la Lazio è l'assist più anziano della storia della Serie A |url=https://www.milannews.it/news/ibra-quello-contro-la-lazio-e-l-assist-piu-anziano-della-storia-della-serie-a-449540 |publisher=Milan News |access-date=29 February 2024 |language=it |date=25 April 2022}}

=Goalkeeping=

==Longest consecutive runs without conceding a goal in Serie A==

The following table shows the goalkeepers that have longest consecutive run without conceding a goal in Serie A. Length column is in minutes.

Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Minutes in bold indicate an active run.

class=wikitable

!Rank

!width="50px" | Nat.

!width="150px" | Player

!width="70px" | Club

!width="70px" | Season

!width="70px" | Length

align="center"

|1

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Gianluigi Buffon

|Juventus

2015–16974{{cite web|url=http://www.legaseriea.it/it/sala-stampa/notizie/info/record-di-imbattibilita-per-buffon-974|title=RECORD DI IMBATTIBILITA' PER BUFFON: 974'|trans-title=Record unbeaten streak for Buffon: 974 minutes|publisher=LegaSerieA.it|language=it|date=20 March 2016|access-date=22 March 2016|archive-date=2 August 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170802205651/http://www.legaseriea.it/it/sala-stampa/notizie/info/record-di-imbattibilita-per-buffon-974|url-status=dead}}
align="center"

|2

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Sebastiano Rossi{{#tag:ref|Gianpiero Combi's Italian league record unbeaten streak of 934 consecutive minutes without conceding a goal was set during the 1925–26 Prima Divisione season, prior to the establishment of the Serie A in the 1929–30 season.{{cite news|url=http://torino.repubblica.it/cronaca/2014/12/20/news/20_dicembre_1902_nasce_combi_il_nonno_di_zoff_e_buffon-103364637/|title=20 dicembre 1902: nasce Combi, il "nonno" di Zoff e Buffon|newspaper=La Repubblica|language=it|date=20 December 2014|access-date=11 March 2017}}From the third match (Juventus 6–0 Milan on 25 October 1925) to thirteenth match (Parma 0–3 Juventus on 28 February 1926) of the 1925–26 FIGC Football Championship according to {{in lang|it}} [http://www.juworld.net/partite-della-juventus.asp?Pagina=14&c=Campionato%20a%20gironi All Juventus FC matches: Italian Federal Championship (pages 14 and 15)] - www.juworld.net.{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/2016/mar/20/torino-juventus-serie-a-match-report-gianluigi-buffon-record|title=Gianluigi Buffon sets goalkeeping record as Juventus sweep aside Torino|newspaper=The Guardian|date=20 March 2016|access-date=20 March 2016}}|name="combi-record"|group="nb"}}

|AC Milan

1993–94929
align="center"

|3

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Dino Zoff

|Juventus

1972–73903
align="center"

|4

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Mario Da Pozzo

|Genoa

1963–64792
align="center"

|5

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Gianluigi Buffon

|Juventus

2017–18791
align="center"

|6

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Ivan Pelizzoli

|Roma

2003–04774
align="center"

|7

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Davide Pinato

|Atalanta

1997–98758
align="center"

|rowspan="2"|8

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Gianluigi Buffon

|Juventus

2013–14745
align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Luca Marchegiani

|Lazio

1997–98745
align="center"

|10

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Morgan De Sanctis

|Roma

2013–14744

==Most clean sheets==

Updated 22 February 2021

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

Gianluigi Buffon, 299{{cite web|url=https://www.fotmob.com/embed/news/6742743/every-record-gianluigi-buffon-holds-and-could-break-in-the-future|title=Every record Gianluigi Buffon holds - and could break in the future|website=FotMob|date=23 February 2021|access-date=30 April 2021}}

==Most consecutive clean sheets==

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

Gianluigi Buffon, 10 (17 January 2016 to 11 March 2016){{cite web|url=http://www.football-italia.net/81148/buffon-eyes-all-time-record|title=Buffon eyes all-time record|publisher=Football Italia|date=11 March 2016|access-date=11 March 2016}}

==Most clean sheets in a single season==

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

21,{{cite web|url=https://www.cittaceleste.it/news/lazio-provedel-record-clean-sheet/|title=Lazio, Provedel nella storia: raggiunta quota 21 clean sheet|date=15 April 2023 |language=it|access-date=4 June 2023}}{{cite web|url=https://www.cittaceleste.it/news/lazio-provedel-record-clean-sheet/|title=Lazio, Provedel da record: 18 clean sheet in A. E il primato assoluto…|date=15 April 2023 |language=it|access-date=4 June 2023}} Fabio Cudicini (in 1968–69 with AC Milan), Sebastiano Rossi (in 1993–94 with AC Milan), Gianluigi Buffon (in 2011–12 and 2015–16 with Juventus), Morgan De Sanctis (in 2013–14 with Roma), Ivan Provedel (in 2022–23 with Lazio)

==Most goals conceded in a single season==

Alex Cordaz (2020–21) (91){{#tag:ref|Note: statistical data only began to be collected from the 1994–95 Serie A season onwards|name="1994–95-stats"|group="nb"}}{{cite news |url=https://sport.sky.it/calcio/serie-a/record-serie-a |title=I record del campionato che (forse) non conosci |work=Sky Sport Italia |language=it |date=24 June 2022 |access-date=22 February 2024 }}

==Most penalties saved==

Samir Handanović, 26{{cite web|url=https://sport.sky.it/calcio/serie-a/2020/01/12/handanovic-rigori-parati-serie-a-classifica|title=Handanovic come Pagliuca, la classifica dei migliori pararigori della storia della Serie A|publisher=sport.sky.it|language=it|date=12 January 2020}}

Players in bold are still active in Serie A. Players in italics are still active, but outside Serie A.

Updated as of 3 March 2024

class="wikitable sortable nowrap"

!Rank

!width="50px" | Nat.

!width="150px" | Player

!width="80px" | Penalties saved

!width="100px" | Appearances

!width="80px" | Years

align="center"

|1

|{{flagicon|SVN}}

|align=left|Samir Handanović

|26

|566

|2005–2023

align="center"

|2

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Gianluca Pagliuca

|24

|592

|1988–2007

align="center"

|3

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Andrea Consigli

|20

|510

|2009–2024

align="center"

|4

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Luca Marchegiani

|17

|422

|1988–2005

align="center"

|rowspan=2|5

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Giuseppe Moro

|rowspan=2|16

|270

|1947–1955

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Gianluigi Buffon

|657

|1995–2021

align="center"

|rowspan="2"|7

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Francesco Antonioli

|rowspan="2"|14

|416

|1992–2012

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Stefano Sorrentino

|363

|2001–2019

align="center"

|9

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Gianluigi Donnarumma

|13

|215

|2015–2021

align="center"

|rowspan="4"|10

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Emiliano Viviano

|rowspan="4"|12

|251

|2009–2018

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Luigi Turci

|270

|1993–2004

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Massimo Taibi

|292

|1993–2007

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Giuseppe Taglialatela

|173

|1991–2002

==Most consecutive penalties saved==

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

Samir Handanović, 6{{cite news|url=http://www.gazzetta.it/calcio/fantanews/27-11-2014/inter-handanovic-para-sesto-rigore-fila-ma-volte-faccio-c-ate-10071855527.shtml|title=Inter, Handanovic para il sesto rigore di fila|trans-title=Inter, Handanovic saves the sixth penalty in a row|newspaper=La Gazzetta dello Sport|language=it|date=27 November 2014|access-date=22 December 2015}}{{cite web|url=http://www.corriere.it/foto-gallery/sport/14_novembre_28/inter-super-handanovic-para-sei-rigori-fila-818c74a2-76f6-11e4-90d4-0eff89180b47.shtml?refresh_ce-cp|title=Inter: super Handanovic para sei rigori di fila|date=28 November 2014 |trans-title=Inter: super Handanovic saves six penalties in a row|publisher=Il Corriere della Sera|language=it|access-date=22 December 2015}}

==Oldest goalkeeper to save a penalty==

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

Gianluigi Buffon, 43 years and 104 days (12 May 2021, in Sassuolo–Juventus, 1–3){{cite news |url=https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/57095142 |title=Buffon saves penalty as Juventus win |work=BBC Sport |last1=Emons |first1=Michael |date=12 May 2021 |access-date=19 May 2021 }}

=Discipline=

==Most red cards==

Updated 29 January 2017{{cite web|url=http://romanews.eu/it,a112023/Totti-11-Espulsioni-Nessuno-Rosso-Come-Lui-Giocatori-In-Attivita-Serie-Br,m82|title=Totti, 11 espulsioni. Nessuno 'rosso' come lui tra i giocatori in attività della Serie A|publisher=RomaNews.eu|language=it|access-date=11 September 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140808122414/http://romanews.eu/it,a112023/Totti-11-Espulsioni-Nessuno-Rosso-Come-Lui-Giocatori-In-Attivita-Serie-Br,m82|archive-date=8 August 2014|url-status=dead}}{{cite web|url=http://www.legaseriea.it/it/serie-a-tim/calciatore?p_p_id=BDC_dettaglio_calciatore_WAR_LegaCalcioBDC&p_p_lifecycle=0&p_p_state=normal&p_p_mode=view&p_p_col_id=column-1&p_p_col_count=1&_BDC_dettaglio_calciatore_WAR_LegaCalcioBDC_idPersona=10422|title=Montero Iglesias Paolo|publisher=Lega Serie A|language=it|access-date=11 September 2014|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150227191437/http://www.legaseriea.it/it/serie-a-tim/calciatore?p_p_id=BDC_dettaglio_calciatore_WAR_LegaCalcioBDC&p_p_lifecycle=0&p_p_state=normal&p_p_mode=view&p_p_col_id=column-1&p_p_col_count=1&_BDC_dettaglio_calciatore_WAR_LegaCalcioBDC_idPersona=10422|archive-date=27 February 2015}}{{cite web|url=http://www.contra-ataque.it/2016/02/16/calciatori-espulsi-serie-a-montero.html|title=I calciatori più espulsi nella storia della Serie A: Montero irraggiungibile|publisher=contra-ataque.it|language=it|author1=Claudio Agave|date=16 February 2016|access-date=2 May 2017}}{{cite news|url=http://www.gazzetta.it/speciali/statistiche/2006/record/record_assoluti.shtml|title=Record Individuali Assoluti|newspaper=La Gazzetta dello Sport|language=it|access-date=2 May 2017|archive-date=24 September 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924170209/http://www.gazzetta.it/speciali/statistiche/2006/record/record_assoluti.shtml|url-status=dead}}{{cite news|url=http://archiviostorico.gazzetta.it/2001/settembre/28/Montero_espulsioni_nessuno_mai_cattivo_ga_0_0109285173.shtml|title=Montero 14 espulsioni: nessuno mai cattivo come lui|newspaper=La Gazzetta dello Sport|language=it|author1=Sebastiano Vernazza|date=28 September 2001|access-date=2 May 2017}}

Players in bold are still active in Serie A.

class=wikitable

!Rank

!width="50px" | Nat.

!width="150px" | Player

!width="70px" | Red cards

align="center"

|1

|{{flagicon|URU}}

|align=left|Paolo Montero

|16

align="center"

|rowspan="4"|2

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Luigi Di Biagio

|rowspan="4"|12

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Giulio Falcone

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Cristian Ledesma

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Giampiero Pinzi

align="center"

|rowspan="8"|6

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Massimo Ambrosini

|rowspan="8"|11

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Giuseppe Bergomi

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Giuseppe Biava

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Daniele Conti

align="center"

|{{flagicon|POR}}

|align=left|Fernando Couto

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Giorgio Ferrini

align="center"

|{{flagicon|GHA}}

|align=left|Sulley Muntari

align="center"

|{{flagicon|ITA}}

|align=left|Francesco Totti

align="center"

==Most red cards in a single Serie A season==

Luigi Apolloni (2000–01) and Gabriel Paletta (2016–17) (both five){{#tag:ref|Note: statistical data only began to be collected from the 1994–95 Serie A season onwards|name="1994–95-stats"|group="nb"}}

==Most yellow cards in a single Serie A season==

Daniele Conti (2012–13), 16{{#tag:ref|Note: statistical data only began to be collected from the 1994–95 Serie A season onwards|name="1994–95-stats"|group="nb"}}

=Coaching=

==Most appearances in Serie A==

Carlo Mazzone, 792 (excluding 5 appearances in play-off matches){{cite web |url=https://sport.sky.it/calcio/serie-a/2019/08/16/serie-a-allenatori-record-curiosita-statistiche |title=Serie A: record, curiosità e statistiche dei 20 allenatori |publisher=sport.sky.it |language=it |date=16 August 2019 |access-date=7 February 2020 }}

==Most Serie A titles==

==Most consecutive Serie A titles==

Massimiliano Allegri, 5 (all with Juventus)

==Most Serie A titles with a single club==

Giovanni Trapattoni, 6 (with Juventus)

==Most Serie A titles with different clubs==

  • Giovanni Trapattoni, 7 with 2 clubs (6 with Juventus, 1 with Inter)
  • Massimiliano Allegri, 6 with 2 clubs (1 with AC Milan, 5 with Juventus)
  • Fabio Capello, 5 with 2 clubs (4 with AC Milan, 1 with Roma)
  • Antonio Conte, 4 with 2 clubs (3 with Juventus, 1 with Inter)
  • Árpád Weisz, 3 with 2 clubs (1 with Ambrosiana, 2 with Bologna)
  • Fulvio Bernardini, 2 with 2 clubs (1 with Fiorentina, 1 with Bologna)
  • Nils Liedholm, 2 with 2 clubs (1 with AC Milan, 1 with Roma)

==Youngest manager to win a Serie A title==

Armando Castellazzi, 33 years and 199 days, (with Ambrosiana–Inter, 1937–38)

==Oldest manager to win a Serie A title==

Luciano Spalletti, {{age in years and days|1959|3|7|2023|6|4}} (with Napoli, 2022–23){{cite web|url=https://football-italia.net/spalletti-in-tears-as-napoli-win-serie-a-title-this-is-for-you/|title=Spalletti in tears as Napoli win Serie A title: 'This is for you'|website=Football Italia|date=4 May 2023|access-date=4 May 2023}}

==Most consecutive appearances in Serie A==

Nereo Rocco, 605 (between 1955 and 1974, with Padova, AC Milan, and Torino)

==Most appearances in Serie A with a single club==

Giovanni Trapattoni, 402 (with Juventus)

==Most victories in Serie A==

Giovanni Trapattoni, 352 (16 with AC Milan, 213 with Juventus, 87 with Inter, 7 with Cagliari, and 29 with Fiorentina)

==Most consecutive victories in Serie A==

==Most victories in Serie A with a single team==

Giovanni Trapattoni, 213 (with Juventus)

Top scorers (''capocannonieri'') by season

{{main|Capocannoniere}}

All-time highest bolded.

valign="top" width=35%|

{| class="wikitable sortable collapsible"

width=5%|Season

!width=5%|Tally

!width=30%|Player(s) (club(s))

1923–2422 goals{{flagicon|AUT}} Heinrich Schönfeld (Torino)
1924–2519 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Mario Magnozzi (Livorno)
1925–2635 goals{{flagicon|HUN}} Ferenc Hirzer (Juventus)
1926–2722 goals{{flagicon|AUT}} Anton Powolny (Inter Milan)
1927–2835 goals{{flagicon|ARG}} Julio Libonatti (Torino)
1928–2936 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Gino Rossetti (Torino)
1929–3031 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Giuseppe Meazza (Inter Milan)
1930–3129 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Rodolfo Volk (Roma)
1931–3225 goals{{flagicon|URY}} Pedro Petrone (Fiorentina)
{{flagicon|ITA}} Angelo Schiavio (Bologna)
1932–3329 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Felice Borel (Juventus)
1933–3431 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Felice Borel (Juventus)
1934–3528 goals{{flagicon|ARG}} Enrico Guaita (Roma)
1935–3625 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Giuseppe Meazza (Inter Milan)
1936–3721 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Silvio Piola (Lazio)
1937–3820 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Giuseppe Meazza (Inter Milan)
1938–3919 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Aldo Boffi (AC Milan)
{{flagicon|URY}} Ettore Puricelli (Bologna)
1939–4024 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Aldo Boffi (AC Milan)
1940–4122 goals{{flagicon|URY}} Ettore Puricelli (Bologna)
1941–4222 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Aldo Boffi (AC Milan)
1942–4321 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Silvio Piola (Lazio)
1945–4613 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Eusebio Castigliano (Torino)
1946–4729 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Valentino Mazzola (Torino)
1947–4827 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Giampiero Boniperti (Juventus)
1948–4926 goals{{flagicon|HUN}} Stefano Nyers (Inter Milan)
1949–5035 goals{{flagicon|SWE}} Gunnar Nordahl (AC Milan)
1950–5134 goals{{flagicon|SWE}} Gunnar Nordahl (AC Milan)
1951–5230 goals{{flagicon|DEN}} John Hansen (Juventus)
1952–5326 goals{{flagicon|SWE}} Gunnar Nordahl (AC Milan)
1953–5423 goals{{flagicon|SWE}} Gunnar Nordahl (AC Milan)
1954–5526 goals{{flagicon|SWE}} Gunnar Nordahl (AC Milan)
1955–5629 goals{{flagicon|Italy}} Gino Pivatelli (Bologna)
1956–5722 goals{{flagicon|BRA}} Dino Da Costa (Roma)
1957–5828 goals{{flagicon|Wales|1953}} John Charles (Juventus)
1958–5933 goals{{flagicon|ARG}} Antonio Angelillo (Inter Milan)
1959–6028 goals{{flagicon|ARG}} Omar Sívori (Juventus)
1960–6127 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Sergio Brighenti (Sampdoria)
1961–6222 goals{{flagicon|BRA}}{{flagicon|ITA}} José Altafini (AC Milan)
{{flagicon|ITA}} Aurelio Milani (Fiorentina)
1962–6319 goals{{flagicon|DEN}} Harald Nielsen (Bologna)
{{flagicon|ARG}} Pedro Manfredini (Roma)
1963–6421 goals{{flagicon|DEN}} Harald Nielsen (Bologna)
1964–6517 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Alberto Orlando (Fiorentina)
{{flagicon|Italy}} Sandro Mazzola (Inter Milan)
1965–6625 goals{{flagicon|BRA}} Luís Vinício (Vicenza)
1966–6718 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Gigi Riva (Cagliari)
1967–6815 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Pierino Prati (AC Milan)
1968–6921 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Gigi Riva (Cagliari)
1969–7021 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Gigi Riva (Cagliari)
1970–7124 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Roberto Boninsegna (Inter Milan)
1971–7222 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Roberto Boninsegna (Inter Milan)
1972–7317 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Paolo Pulici (Torino)
{{flagicon|ITA}} Gianni Rivera (AC Milan)
{{flagicon|ITA}} Giuseppe Savoldi (Bologna)

|valign="top" width=35%|

class="wikitable"
width=5%|Season

!width=5%|Tally

!width=30%|Player(s) (club(s))

1973–7424 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Giorgio Chinaglia (Lazio)
1974–7518 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Paolo Pulici (Torino)
1975–7621 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Paolo Pulici (Torino)
1976–7721 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Francesco Graziani (Torino)
1977–7824 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Paolo Rossi (Vicenza)
1978–7919 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Bruno Giordano (Lazio)
1979–8016 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Roberto Bettega (Juventus)
1980–8118 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Roberto Pruzzo (Roma)
1981–8215 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Roberto Pruzzo (Roma)
1982–8316 goals{{flagicon|FRA}} Michel Platini (Juventus)
1983–8420 goals{{flagicon|FRA}} Michel Platini (Juventus)
1984–8518 goals{{flagicon|FRA}} Michel Platini (Juventus)
1985–8619 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Roberto Pruzzo (Roma)
1986–8717 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Pietro Paolo Virdis (AC Milan)
1987–8815 goals{{flagicon|ARG}} Diego Maradona (Napoli)
1988–8922 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Aldo Serena (Inter Milan)
1989–9019 goals{{flagicon|NED}} Marco van Basten (AC Milan)
1990–9119 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Gianluca Vialli (Sampdoria)
1991–9225 goals{{flagicon|NED}} Marco van Basten (AC Milan)
1992–9326 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Giuseppe Signori (Lazio)
1993–9423 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Giuseppe Signori (Lazio)
1994–9526 goals{{flagicon|ARG}} Gabriel Batistuta (Fiorentina)
1995–9624 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Giuseppe Signori (Lazio)
{{flagicon|ITA}} Igor Protti (Bari)
1996–9724 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Filippo Inzaghi (Atalanta)
1997–9827 goals{{flagicon|GER}} Oliver Bierhoff (Udinese)
1998–9922 goals{{flagicon|BRA}} Márcio Amoroso (Udinese)
1999–200024 goals{{flagicon|UKR}} Andriy Shevchenko (AC Milan)
2000–0126 goals{{flagicon|ARG}} Hernán Crespo (Lazio)
2001–0224 goals{{flagicon|FRA}} David Trezeguet (Juventus)
{{flagicon|ITA}} Dario Hübner (Piacenza)
2002–0324 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Christian Vieri (Inter Milan)
2003–0424 goals{{flagicon|UKR}} Andriy Shevchenko (AC Milan)
2004–0524 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Cristiano Lucarelli (Livorno)
2005–0631 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Luca Toni (Fiorentina)
2006–0726 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Francesco Totti (Roma)
2007–0821 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Alessandro Del Piero (Juventus)
2008–0925 goals{{flagicon|SWE}} Zlatan Ibrahimović (Inter Milan)
2009–1029 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Antonio Di Natale (Udinese)
2010–1128 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Antonio Di Natale (Udinese)
2011–1228 goals{{flagicon|SWE}} Zlatan Ibrahimović (AC Milan)
2012–1329 goals{{flagicon|URU}} Edinson Cavani (Napoli)
2013–1422 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Ciro Immobile (Torino)
2014–1522 goals{{flagicon|ARG}} Mauro Icardi (Inter Milan)
{{flagicon|ITA}} Luca Toni (Hellas Verona)
2015–1636 goals{{flagicon|ARG}} Gonzalo Higuaín (Napoli)
2016–1729 goals{{flagicon|BIH}} Edin Džeko (Roma)
2017–1829 goals{{flagicon|ARG}} Mauro Icardi (Inter Milan)
{{flagicon|ITA}} Ciro Immobile (Lazio)
2018–1926 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Fabio Quagliarella (Sampdoria)
2019–2036 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Ciro Immobile (Lazio)
2020–2129 goals{{flagicon|POR}} Cristiano Ronaldo (Juventus)
2021–2227 goals{{flagicon|ITA}} Ciro Immobile (Lazio)
2022–2326 goals{{flagicon|NGA}} Victor Osimhen (Napoli)
2023–2424 goals{{flagicon|ARG}} Lautaro Martínez (Inter Milan)

|}

  • Source for figures before 1997 from RSSSF.com:{{cite web|url=https://www.rsssf.org/tablesi/italtops.html|title=Italy - Serie A Top Scorers|author1=Roberto Di Maggio|author2=Igor Kramarsic|author3=Alberto Novello|date=8 June 2017|website=RSSSF|access-date=28 January 2018}}
  • Source for figures after 1997 from lega-calcio.it:{{cite web|url=http://www.lega-calcio.it/ita/atim_archivio_classifica.shtml|title=Archivio Classifica|publisher=Lega Calcio|language=it|access-date=28 January 2018|archive-url=https://archive.today/20031018045524/http://www.lega-calcio.it/ita/atim_archivio_classifica.shtml|archive-date=18 October 2003|url-status=dead}}

Retired numbers

{{main|List of retired numbers in association football}}

Up to the present day, nineteen different top clubs in Italy have retired numbers for different reasons, mostly in recognition of their former players.

File:Maldini2008.JPG had his #3 retired by AC Milan after spending 25 years (his entire professional career) with the club]]

class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:center"
width=40px|No.

! width=180px|Player

! width=40px|Pos.

! width=100px|Club

! width=180px|Tenure

! width=80px|Ref.

14align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Federico Pisani {{refn|Posthumous honour.|group=note|name=posth}}FWAtalanta{{nowrap|1991–1997}}{{cite web|url=https://www.goal.com/en/news/retired-shirt-numbers-players-clubs-give-receive-honour/dskkpaaj6a891rzoqd117olrz|title=Retired shirt numbers: Clubs and players to give & receive honour|author=Ryan Kelly|website=goal.com|date=23 November 2018}}
2align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Giovanni LosetoDFBari1982–1993
27align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Niccolò Galli {{refn|group=note|name=posth}}DFBologna2000–2001
10align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Roberto BaggioFWBrescia2000–2004{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/the-gentleman-ultra/2018/nov/15/football-club-retire-players-shirt-number-maradona-baggio-maldini-moore|title=When should a football club retire a player's shirt number?|author=Ricchi Potts|work=The Guardian|date=15 November 2018}}
13align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Vittorio Mero {{refn|group=note|name=posth}}DFBrescia1998–2001
2002
11align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Gigi RivaFWCagliari1963–1978
13align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Davide Astori {{refn|group=note|name=posth}}DFCagliari2008–2014
30align=left| {{flagicon|COD}} Jason Mayélé {{refn|group=note|name=posth}}FWChievo2001–2002
4align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Antonio GalardoMFCrotone1995–1998
2002–2016
13align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Davide Astori {{refn|group=note|name=posth}}DFFiorentina2015–2018
6align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Gianluca Signorini {{refn|group=note|name=posth}}DFGenoa1995–1998{{cite web|url=http://www.corriere.it/Primo_Piano/Sport/2002/11_Novembre/06/signorini.shtml|title=Calcio, morto Signorini, bandiera del Genoa|publisher=Il Corriere della Sera|language=it|date=6 November 2002|access-date=31 March 2016}}{{cite news|url=http://www.gazzetta.it/Calcio/SerieA/Squadre/Genoa/Primo_Piano/2007/11_Novembre/06/signorini.shtml|title=Genoa e Signorini Una serata speciale|newspaper=La Gazzetta dello Sport|language=it|author1=Filippo Grimaldi|date=6 November 2007|access-date=31 March 2016}}
7align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Marco RossiMFGenoa2003–2004
2005–2013
12align=left| Gradinata Nord (the 12th man)Genoa{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/the-gentleman-ultra/2014/apr/10/genoa-serie-a-alternative-club-guide|title=Genoa: Serie A alternative club guide|work=The Guardian|date=10 April 2014}}{{cite web|url=http://www.calciomio.fr/archive/cote-tribune-genova-rive-rossoblu_32438.html|title=Côté Tribune : Genova rive rossoblù|website=calciomio.fr|publisher=Calciomio|language=fr|date=11 April 2010}}
3align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Giacinto Facchetti {{refn|group=note|name=posth}}DFInter Milan1961–1978
4align=left| {{flagicon|ARG}} Javier ZanettiDFInter Milan1995–2014{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/football/2014/jun/30/internazionale-retire-no4-shirt-honour-javier-zanetti |title=Internazionale retire No4 shirt in honour of Javier Zanetti|work=The Guardian|date=30 June 2014}}{{cite web|url=http://www.goal.com/en/news/10/italian-football/2014/06/30/4925488/inter-make-zanetti-vice-president-retire-no4-jersey|title=Inter make Zanetti vice-president and retire No.4 jersey - Thohir|first=Peter|last=McVitie|website=Goal.com|date=30 June 2014}}
12align=left| (the 12th man)US Lecce{{cite web | url=https://www.nssmag.com/it/sports/28170/i-numeri-ritirati-della-serie-a#:~:text=Lo%20strano%20caso%20del%2012,per%20omaggiare%20i%20loro%20tifosi. | title=I numeri ritirati della Serie A }}
25align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Piermario Morosini {{refn|group=note|name=posth}}MFLivorno2012{{cite web|url=http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/livorno--retires--morosinis-number-25-18602|title=Livorno retires Morosini's number 25 - Turkish News|website=Hürriyet Daily News|date=16 April 2012 }}
41align=left|{{flagicon|ITA}} Salvatore SulloMFMessina2001–2007
3align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Paolo MaldiniDFAC Milan1984–2009
6align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Franco BaresiDFAC Milan1977–1997
10align=left| {{flagicon|ARG}} Diego MaradonaMFNapoli1984–1991{{cite web|url=http://caracol.com.co/radio/2000/08/24/deportes/0967096800_058566.html|title=El Napoli retira la camiseta 10 de Diego Maradona|website=caracol.com|publisher=Caracol|language=it|date=24 August 2000}}{{cite web|url=https://fanatic.futbol/reyesdeeuropa/napoles-camiseta-10/|title=En el Nápoles nadie juega con el 10|website=fanatic.futbol|language=it|author=Fran Yarza|date=13 December 2016|access-date=11 February 2019|archive-date=12 February 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190212011810/https://fanatic.futbol/reyesdeeuropa/napoles-camiseta-10/|url-status=dead}}
6align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Alessandro LucarelliDFParma2008–2018
4align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Vincenzo ZucchiniMFPescara1973–1979
10align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Francesco TottiFWRoma1992–2017
4align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Roberto BredaMFSalernitana1993–1999
2003–2005
4align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Michele MignaniDFSalernitana1993–1997
1998–2006
4align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Francesco MagnanelliMFSassuolo2005–2022{{cite news|url=https://www.sassuolocalcio.it/en/first-team/sassuolo-retire-legendary-francesco-magnanelli-jersey-4/|title=Sassuolo retire legendary Francesco Magnanelli jersey #4|publisher=US Sassuolo Calcio|date=5 July 2022|access-date=5 July 2022}}
3align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Giulio Savoini {{refn|group=note|name=posth}}DFVicenza1953–1966
25align=left| {{flagicon|ITA}} Piermario Morosini {{refn|group=note|name=posth}}MFVicenza2007–2009
2011

;Notes

{{Reflist|group=note}}

Most successful clubs overall (1898–present)

The following table includes only Italian, European and worldwide competitions organised respectively by FIGC, UEFA and FIFA since 1898.For all other competitions not organized respectively by the above-mentioned bodies, please refer to the "Honours" section in each club's own article. The figures in bold represent the most times this competition has been won by an Italian team. Teams which have one at least one official title are included, ranked by number of overall titles at national and/or international level and listed in chronological order in case of a tie. In particular, note that the UEFA Cup unlike the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup was an official competition organized by UEFA. Original idea of the ICFC was a trade fairs promoting competition and was not organised by UEFA. It is not considered as an official tournament by UEFA due to the major idea of promoted trade fairs and the system of admission of the first editions. At the beginning it was only open to a certain few clubs from some European countries that were promoting trade and not an open football tournament. However, it is the official predecessor of UEFA Cup - Europa League (by UEFA) and recognized by FIFA (and FIGC) as a major trophy.

=Key=

class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%;"

!colspan=2|Domestic competitions organized by FIGC

A

|Serie A, former Italian Football Championship

CI

|Coppa Italia

SI

|Supercoppa Italiana

colspan=2|European competitions organized by UEFA
UCL

|UEFA Champions League, former European Champion Clubs' Cup

CWC

|UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (Defunct)

UEL

|UEFA Europa League, former UEFA Cup

UECL

|UEFA Conference League

USC

|UEFA Super Cup

UIC

|UEFA Intertoto Cup (Defunct)

IC

|UEFA/CONMEBOL Intercontinental Cup (Defunct) (Predecessor to FCWC)

ICFC

|Inter-Cities Fairs Cup (Defunct) (Not organized by UEFA, but recognized as the predecessor to the UEL and acknowledged by FIFA as a major trophy){{Cite web|title = FC Barcelona|url = http://es.fifa.com/news/y=2009/m=3/news=-1040575.html|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150912041915/http://es.fifa.com/news/y=2009/m=3/news=-1040575.html|url-status = dead|archive-date = 12 September 2015|access-date = 15 September 2015|last = FIFA.com}}

colspan=2|Intercontinental competition organized by FIFA
FCWC

|FIFA Club World Cup

=By club=

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center; font-size:97%"
rowspan=2 width=9% |Club

! colspan=4 width=9% |FIGC

! colspan=8 width=9% |UEFA

! colspan=2 width=9% |FIFA

! rowspan=2 width=9% |Total

width=9% class="sortable"|A

! width=9% class="sortable"|CI

! width=9% class="sortable"|SI

! width=9% class="sortable"|Total

! width=9% class="sortable"|UCLPrior to 1992, the tournament was officially called the European Champion Clubs' Cup but was usually referred to as simply the European Cup.

! width=9% class="sortable"|CWCThe tournament was founded in 1960–61 independently to the UEFA administration. The governing body of the European football organised the Cup Winners' Cup for the first time in 1961–62 season. The competition was discontinued in 1999 when it was absorbed by the UEFA Cup, cf. {{cite journal|url=http://kassiesa.net/uefafiles/uefadirect/uefadirect-100-2010-08.pdf|title=50 years ago: UEFA Cup Winners' Cup makes its debut|journal=Uefadirect|volume=100|date=August 2010|publisher=Union des Associations Européennes de Football|page=15|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110812101315/http://kassiesa.net/uefafiles/uefadirect/uefadirect-100-2010-08.pdf|archive-date=12 August 2011|url-status=live}}

! width=9% class="sortable"|UELCreated by the Union of European Football Associations as UEFA Cup in the 1971–72 season. {{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/europe/7637600.stm |title=UEFA Cup gets new name in revamp |access-date=26 September 2008 |work=BBC Sport |date=26 September 2008 }}
{{cite web |url=http://www.uefa.com/uefa/news/kind=1/newsid=2571.html |title=UEFA Cup: All-time finals |work=Union des Associations Européennes de Football |access-date=13 July 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090412101922/http://www.uefa.com/uefa/news/kind%3D1/newsid%3D2571.html |archive-date=12 April 2009}}

!width=9% class="sortable"|UECL

! style="width:4%;" class="sortable"|ICFC#

! width=9% class="sortable"|USCCompetition established by UEFA in 1973. Despite the Scottish Rangers' 100º anniversary match is regarded the predecessor of the UEFA Super Cup, it is not counted as an official trophy for official record purposes due to the 1972 Rangers riots, cf. {{cite web|url=https://www.uefa.com/uefasupercup/history/|title=UEFA Super Cup: History|work=Union des Associations Européennes de Football|access-date=9 January 2012}}

! width=9% class="sortable"|UICThe tournament was founded in 1961–62 independently to the UEFA administration. The governing body of the European football organised the Intertoto Cup for the first time in 1995. The competition was discontinued in 2008 when it was absorbed by the UEFA Cup, cf. {{cite web|url=http://www.el-sports.org/uic-winners|title=UEFA Intertoto Cup winners 1995-2008|work=The European Lotteries|access-date=14 September 2011|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120402115900/http://www.el-sports.org/uic-winners|archive-date=2 April 2012}}

! width=9% class="sortable"|Total

! width=9% class="sortable"|IC*The Intercontinental Cup, organized by UEFA and CONMEBOL from 1960 to 2004 is considered by FIFA a worldwide competition and the unique predecessor of the FIFA Club World Cup, cf. {{cite news|url=https://www.fifa.com/aboutfifa/federation/releases/newsid=92577.html|title=FIFA Club World Championship to replace Toyota Cup from 2005|publisher=Fédération Internationale de Football Association|date=17 May 2004|access-date=24 December 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110430044230/http://www.fifa.com/aboutfifa/federation/releases/newsid%3D92577.html|archive-date=30 April 2011}}.{{cite web |url=http://es.fifa.com/mm/document/fifafacts/mencompcwc/01/15/71/66/documentation_centre-_172184-v1-statisticalkitfifaclubworldcupuae2010.tournamentversion..pdf |title=FIFA Club World Cup UAE 2010 Statistical Kit |work=Fédération Internationale de Football Association |pages=4; 20–22 |access-date=25 December 2010 |archive-date=2 June 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120602135643/http://es.fifa.com/mm/document/fifafacts/mencompcwc/01/15/71/66/documentation_centre-_172184-v1-statisticalkitfifaclubworldcupuae2010.tournamentversion..pdf |url-status=dead }}
{{cite news |url=https://www.fifa.com/tournaments/archive/tournament=107/edition=4735/news/newsid=95645.html |title=Goodbye Toyota Cup, hello FIFA Club World Championship |publisher=Fédération Internationale de Football Association |date=10 December 2004 |access-date=24 December 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110430044241/http://www.fifa.com/tournaments/archive/tournament%3D107/edition%3D4735/news/newsid%3D95645.html |archive-date=30 April 2011 }}
{{cite news |url=https://www.fifa.com/tournaments/archive/tournament=107/edition=4735/news/newsid=99531.html |title=Ten tips on the planet's top club tournament |publisher=Fédération Internationale de Football Association |date=28 July 2005 |access-date=28 October 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110430044223/http://www.fifa.com/tournaments/archive/tournament%3D107/edition%3D4735/news/newsid%3D99531.html |archive-date=30 April 2011 }}
{{cite news |url=https://www.fifa.com/tournaments/archive/tournament=107/edition=4735/news/newsid=101662.html |title=We are the champions |publisher=Fédération Internationale de Football Association |date=1 December 2005 |access-date=28 October 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110430044235/http://www.fifa.com/tournaments/archive/tournament%3D107/edition%3D4735/news/newsid%3D101662.html |archive-date=30 April 2011 }}

! width=9% class="softrtable"|FCWCCompetition established by FIFA in 2000.

Juventusalign=center|36

name=Calciopoli/>

align=center|15align=center|9bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|60align=center|2align=center|1align=center|3align=center
|align=center
|align=center|2align=center|1bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|9align=center|2align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 71
AC Milanalign=center|19align=center|5align=center|8bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|32align=center|7align=center|2align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center|5align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 14align=center|3align=center|1bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 50
Inter Milanalign=center|20align=center|9align=center|8bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|37align=center|3align=center
|align=center|3align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 6align=center|2align=center|1bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 46
Romaalign=center|3align=center|9align=center|2bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|14align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center|1align=center|1align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|2align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 16
Lazioalign=center|2align=center|7align=center|5bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|14align=center
|align=center|1align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center|1align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 2align=center
| align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 16
Torinoalign=center|7

The 1926–27 Divisione Nazionale title was revoked to Torino by the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) for an alleged corruption case. In 1948–49 season, FIGC assigned the league title to the Torinese side after the Superga air disaster due it was at the time in first place in the championship although no having won it yet in mathematics terms.

align=center|5align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|12align=center
| align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center
|align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 12
Napolialign=center|3align=center|6align=center|2bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|11align=center
|align=center
|align=center|1align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 12
Genoaalign=center|9align=center|1align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|10align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| -align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 10
Bolognaalign=center|7align=center|2align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|9align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center|1bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 10
Fiorentinaalign=center|2align=center|6align=center|1bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|9align=center
|align=center|1The first competition was organised by the Mitropa Cup committee and held in the 1960–61 season—but not recognised by the governing body of European football until two years later, cf. {{cite journal|url=http://kassiesa.net/uefafiles/uefadirect/uefadirect-100-2010-08.pdf|title=50 years ago: UEFA Cup Winners' Cup makes its debut|journal=Uefadirect|volume=100|date=August 2010|publisher=Union des Associations Européennes de Football|page=15|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110812101315/http://kassiesa.net/uefafiles/uefadirect/uefadirect-100-2010-08.pdf|archive-date=12 August 2011|url-status=live}}align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|1align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 10
Parmaalign=center
|align=center|3align=center|1bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|4align=center
|align=center|1align=center|2align=center
|align=center
|align=center|1align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 4align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 8
Pro Vercellialign=center|7align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|7align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center
|align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 7
Sampdoriaalign=center|1align=center|4align=center|1bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|6align=center
|align=center|1align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 7
Atalantaalign=center
|align=center|1align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|1align=center
|align=center
|align=center|1align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 2
Casalealign=center|1align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|1align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center
|align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1
Novesealign=center|1align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|1align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| -align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1
Cagliarialign=center|1align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|1align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| -align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1
Hellas Veronaalign=center|1align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|1align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| -align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1
Vadoalign=center
|align=center|1align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|1align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| -align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1
Veneziaalign=center
|align=center|1align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|1align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| -align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1
Vicenzaalign=center
|align=center|1align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center|1align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| -align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1
Perugiaalign=center
|align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center
| align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center|1bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1
Udinesealign=center
|align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center
| align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center
|align=center|1bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1align=center
|align=center
| bgcolor=#F0F0F0 align=center| 1

Additionally, the Alta Italia Championship, also known as Campionato di guerra (War Championship), won by the Vigili del Fuoco della Spezia in 1944 (the only edition ever held), was recognised by the FIGC in 2002 as the equivalent to the Serie A championship of that year.{{cite news|language=it|author=Gian Paolo Ormezzano|url=http://www.archiviolastampa.it/component/option,com_lastampa/task,search/action,viewer/Itemid,3/page,0040/articleid,0416_01_2000_0104_0044_3580968/|title=Voglia di scudetto|newspaper=La Stampa|page=40|date=17 April 2000|access-date=3 September 2011}}{{cite news |title=Top 10 Players with most matches played in Serie A history |publisher=Hap Sport |url=https://www.hapsport.com/top-10-players-with-most-matches-played-in-serie-a-history/5870/}}

# Although not organised by UEFA, the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup is included here under UEFA as it is the official predecessor to the UEL and acknowledged by FIFA as a major trophy.

* Although organized by UEFA (and CONMEBOL), the Intercontinental Cup is included here under FIFA for being the predecessor to the FCWC.

Notes

{{reflist|group=nb}}

References

{{reflist|30em}}