Liga MX
| Organising body | Federación Mexicana de Fútbol (FMF) |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1943 (as Liga Mayor) |
| Country | Mexico |
| Confederation | CONCACAF |
| Number of clubs | 18 |
| Level on pyramid | 1 |
| Relegation to | Liga de Expansión MX (suspended) |
| Domestic cup(s) | Campeón de Campeones |
| International cup(s) | Continental: CONCACAF Champions Cup Regional: Leagues Cup Campeones Cup |
| Current champions | Toluca (11th title) |
| Most championships | América (16 titles) |
| Most appearances | Óscar Pérez (745) |
| Top goalscorer | Evanivaldo Castro (312) |
| Broadcaster(s) | Domestic Claro[1] ESPN[2] Fox[3] Televisa[4] TV Azteca[5] International OneFootball (Selected matches in selected markets outside of Mexico) |
| Website | www |
| Current: Apertura 2025 Liga MX season | |
Liga MX, also known as Liga BBVA MX for sponsorship reasons,[6] is a professional association football league in Mexico and the highest level of the Mexican football league system. Formerly known as Liga Mayor (1943–1949) and Primera División de México (1949–2012), it has 18 participating clubs, with each season divided into two short tournaments, Apertura from July to December and Clausura from January to May. The champions are decided by a final phase called "liguilla". Since 2020, promotion and relegation has been suspended, which is to last until 2026.
The league currently ranks first in CONCACAF's league ranking index.[7] According to the IFFHS, Liga MX was ranked as the 10th strongest league in the first decade of the 21st century.[8] According to CONCACAF, the league – with an average attendance of 25,557 during the 2014–15 season – draws the largest crowds on average of any football league in the Americas and the third largest crowds of any professional sports league in North America, behind only the NFL and MLB. It is also the fourth most attended football league in the world behind Germany's Bundesliga, England's Premier League and Spain's La Liga.[9] Liga MX ranks second in terms of television viewership in the United States, behind the English Premier League.[10]
América is the most successful club with 16 titles, followed by Guadalajara with 12 titles, Toluca with 11 titles, Cruz Azul with 9 titles, Tigres UANL and León with 8 titles each, Pachuca and Pumas UNAM with 7 titles each.[11] In all, twenty-four clubs have won the top professional division at least once.[11]
- ^ includes Claro Sports
- ^ includes ESPN 2, ESPN 3, ESPN+, and Star+.
- ^ Games are produced and streamed by Fox Deportes through Tubi
- ^ Includes Canal 5, Nueve, Las Estrellas, Sky Sports, Vix, TUDN and Izzi Telecom.
- ^ includes Azteca 7 and Azteca Uno
- ^ "Liga MX hace oficial su cambio de nombre y logo". MedioTiempo (in Spanish). 18 June 2019. Archived from the original on 21 June 2019. Retrieved 21 June 2019.
- ^ "CONCACAF League Ranking Index". CONCACAF. 4 May 2023.
- ^ "The strongest Leagues in the World in the first Decade of 21st Century". IFFHS. Archived from the original on 26 October 2017. Retrieved 29 June 2013.
- ^ "Best attended domestic sports leagues in the world". Sporting Intelligence. Archived from the original on 22 August 2021. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
- ^ Shea, Bill (9 February 2023). "What could top the Super Bowl on U.S. TV? Soccer, aliens and not much else". The Athletic. Archived from the original on 18 March 2023. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
Major League Soccer ranks third in U.S. soccer viewership after the Premier League and Mexico's top-flight Liga MX, leagues that have much longer histories.
- ^ a b "Tigres campeón: ¿Cuántos campeonatos tiene cada equipo de la Liga MX?". TUDN (in Spanish). Retrieved 28 August 2023.