Norwegian First Division (women)

{{About|the women's division|the men's league|Norwegian First Division}}

{{Infobox football league

| logo =

| pixels =

| country = Norway

| confed = UEFA

| founded = 1984

| teams = 10

| promotion = Toppserien

| relegation = Norwegian Second Division

| levels = 2

| domest_cup = Norwegian Cup

| confed_cup =

| champions = Hønefoss

| season = 2024

| most successful club = Sandviken (5)

| tv = TV 2

| website = [https://toppserien.no/1.divisjon toppserien.no]

| current = 2025 Norwegian First Division (women)

}}

The Norwegian First Division, also called 1. divisjon ({{langx|no|1. divisjon}}), is the second highest division in women's football in Norway. It was founded in 1984. Between 1984 and 1995 it served as the first tier. 1. divisjon was replaced as a first tier by the Eliteserien which in turn was replaced by the Toppserien in 2000. It continued as a second tier from 1996 and onwards.

First tier

Between 1977 and 1983 women's league football in Norway was organized on a county and regional basis. In 1984, three of these leagues, those representing Østlandet, Vestlandet and Trøndelag, merged to form the first national league. However, during the earliest seasons teams continued to play in three regional groups, each with ten teams, and the national title was decided by a play-off between the three group winners. In 1986, a fourth group representing Nord-Norge was added, and the number of teams in the league increased to forty. The league system was subsequently reorganized for the 1987 season. At the end of the 1986 season, thirty of the teams were relegated and formed into a 2. divisjon. The remaining ten teams formed a single nationwide 1. divisjon. The new 1. divisjon remained the top tier of Norwegian women's football until 1995.

=List of champions (1984–1995)=

class="wikitable sortable"
Year

! Champions

! Runners-up

! Third place

1984

|Sprint-Jeløy

|Trondheims-Ørn

|Nymark

1985

|Nymark

|Asker

|Trondheims-Ørn

1986

|Sprint-Jeløy

|Troll

|Klepp
Grand

1987

|Klepp

|Sprint-Jeløy

|Asker

1988

|Asker

|Klepp

|Trondheims-Ørn

1989

|Asker

|Sprint-Jeløy

|Klepp

1990

|Sprint-Jeløy

|Asker

|Klepp

1991

|Asker

|Sprint-Jeløy

|Sandviken

1992

|Asker

|Setskog/Høland

|Sprint-Jeløy

1993

|Sprint-Jeløy

|Trondheims-Ørn

|Asker

1994

|Trondheims-Ørn

|Asker

|Sprint-Jeløy

1995

|Trondheims-Ørn

|Setskog/Høland

|Sandviken

==Second tier==

With the establishment of the Eliteserien in 1996 the 1. divisjon became a second tier division. At the same time the original 2. divisjon formed in 1987 became the third tier. The 1. divisjon now featured 58 teams in six regional groups. For the 2001 season the 1. divisjon was greatly reduced in size and it once again became single nationwide division. It initially featured nine teams, gradually adding a tenth before expanding to twelve for the 2009 season.[http://www.fotball.no/t2.aspx?p=58605&cat=51834&x=1&a=221135 12 teams in the 1. divisjon] All nineteen counties of Norway have been represented in the nationwide 1. divisjon since 2001; Østfold was the last county to be represented, when Sarpsborg 08 got promoted in 2010.

=Regional format=

class="wikitable"
Season

! colspan="2" | Promoted

QualificationSystem
valign="top"

| 1996

colspan="2" | Bjørnar
Verdal
Donn, Fløya
Raufoss/Vind, Bergen Nord
58 teams in 6 pools
Play-off: 2 groups á 3 teams
valign="top"

| 1997

colspan="2" | Byåsen
Fløya
Haugar, Jardar
Kaupanger, Larvik
55 teams in 6 pools
Play-off: 2 groups á 3 teams
valign="top"

| 1998

colspan="2" | Grand Bodø
Kaupanger
Liungen, Solid
Larvik, Verdal
55 teams in 6 pools
Play-off: 2 groups á 3 teams
valign="top"

| 1999

colspan="2" | Byåsen
Larvik
Medkila, Voss
Haugar, Liungen
55 teams in 6 pools
Play-off: 2 groups á 3 teams
valign="top"

| 2000

colspan="2" | Liungen
Røa
Fløya, Fortuna Ålesund
Follese, Haugar
57 teams in 6 pools
Play-off: 2 groups á 3 teams

=Single Division Format=

class="wikitable"
Season

! Winner

{{Abbr|Promoted|Other promoted teams}}Notes
valign="top"

| 2001

SandvikenLarvikGrand Bodø withdrew, only 9 teams finished the season.
valign="top"

| 2002

LiungenFløyaAthene Moss withdrew, only 9 teams finished the season.
valign="top"

| 2003

SandvikenMedkila
valign="top"

| 2004

KattemLiungen
valign="top"

| 2005

Arna-BjørnarAmazon Grimstad
valign="top"

| 2006

AskerKattemGrand BodøGrand Bodø promoted after qualification.Toppserien expanded to 12 teams, 3rd and 4th place in the 1. divisjon played promotion matches against the bottom two teams in Toppserien.
valign="top"

| 2007

FartLarvik
valign="top"

| 2008

SandvikenFortuna Ålesund1. divisjon expanded to 12 teams, the bottom two teams in the 1. divisjon played relegation matches against the winners of the 2. divisjon.
valign="top"

| 2009

Linderud-GreiDonn
valign="top"

| 2010

SandvikenMedkila
valign="top"

| 2011

VålerengaFart
valign="top"

| 2012

AvaldsnesMedkilaMedkila lost the promotion-playoff against Kattem, but were still promoted when Kattem withdrew their team.
valign="top"

| 2013

Grand Bodøalign=center| —
valign="top"

| 2014

Sandvikenalign=center| —
valign="top"

| 2015

Uræddalign=center| —
valign="top"

| 2016

Grand Bodøalign=center| —
valign="top"

| 2017

Lynalign=center| —
valign="top"

| 2018

Fartalign=center| —
valign="top"

| 2019

Fløyaalign=center| —No teams promoted due to number of Toppserien teams reduced from 12 to 10.
valign="top"

| 2020

Stabækalign=center| —Medkila lost the promotion-playoff against Kolbotn.
valign="top"

| 2021

Røaalign=center| —

References

{{reflist}}