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European Championship U17 Women

Standings

European Championship U17 Women · 2025

Current European Championship U17 Women 2025 standings with 24 teams. Spain U17 W leads the table with 5 points after 3 matches, followed by Denmark U17 W on 5 points. The table shows wins, losses, scoring, and win percentage — essential for pre-match betting analysis.

Playoffs
TeamPlayedWonLostGoals For:Goals AgainstGoal DiffForm
Group A
1Spain U17 W32094:73+21
WWD
2Denmark U17 W32088:70+18
WWD
3Sweden U17 W31280:82-2
LLW
4Turkey U17 W30361:98-37
LLL
Group B
1Slovakia U17 W32086:68+18
DWW
2Germany U17 W32079:64+15
DWW
3Portugal U17 W30280:87-7
DLL
4North Macedonia U17 W30268:94-26
DLL
Group C
1Switzerland U17 W33097:69+28
WWW
2Netherlands U17 W32186:71+15
WWL
3Iceland U17 W31280:79+1
LLW
4Faroe Islands U17 W30350:94-44
LLL
Group D
1Hungary U17 W330101:72+29
WWW
2Slovenia U17 W31277:79-2
LWL
3Serbia U17 W31288:106-18
WLL
4Norway U17 W31295:104-9
LLW
Group E
1France U17 W33096:73+23
WWW
2Montenegro U17 W32187:74+13
WLW
3Czech Republic U17 W31278:73+5
LWL
4Lithuania U17 W30368:109-41
LLL
Group F
1Croatia U17 W330105:77+28
WWW
2Poland U17 W31193:89+4
LWD
3Austria U17 W31284:102-18
WLL
4Romania U17 W30294:108-14
LLD

Results

European Championship U17 Women · 50
Final10/08/2025
Sun 10/08
Match Details
5th place10/08/2025
Sun 10/08
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3rd Place10/08/2025
Sun 10/08
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7th place10/08/2025
Sun 10/08
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11th place10/08/2025
Sun 10/08
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9th place10/08/2025
Sun 10/08
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15th place10/08/2025
Sun 10/08
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13th place10/08/2025
Sun 10/08
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17th place10/08/2025
Sun 10/08
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23rd place10/08/2025
Sun 10/08
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19th place10/08/2025
Sun 10/08
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21th place10/08/2025
Sun 10/08
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Semi-finals08/08/2025
Fri 08/08
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Fri 08/08
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Fri 08/08
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Fri 08/08
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Fri 08/08
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Fri 08/08
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Fri 08/08
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Fri 08/08
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Fri 08/08
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Fri 08/08
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Fri 08/08
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Fri 08/08
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Quarter-finals07/08/2025
Thu 07/08
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Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 24 teams in the European Championship U17 Women. Switzerland U17 W leads with 3 wins this season. The colour-coded heatmap highlights wins, losses, scoring, scoring difference, and win percentage — making it easy to spot the strongest and weakest teams at a glance for betting analysis.

Top Scoring Teams

Team#PlayedWonDrawnLostGoals ForGoals Against
Spain U17 W132109473
Denmark U17 W232108870
Sweden U17 W331028082
Turkey U17 W430036198
Slovakia U17 W532108668
Germany U17 W632107964
Portugal U17 W730128087
North Macedonia U17 W830126894
Switzerland U17 W933009769
Netherlands U17 W1032018671
Iceland U17 W1131028079
Faroe Islands U17 W1230035094
Hungary U17 W13330010172
Slovenia U17 W1431027779
Serbia U17 W15310288106
Norway U17 W16310295104
France U17 W1733009673
Montenegro U17 W1832018774
Czech Republic U17 W1931027873
Lithuania U17 W20300368109
Croatia U17 W21330010577
Poland U17 W2231119389
Austria U17 W23310284102
Romania U17 W24301294108

Past Seasons

European Championship U17 Women

Browse 4 archived seasons of the European Championship U17 Women, from 2017 to 2025. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.

History 19 Mar 2026

Founded2005Preceded byEuropean Youth Handball Championship

The EHF European Women's U-17 Handball Championship evolved from earlier European youth competitions, with the current name and format officially established in 2005. The championship has grown from a regional qualifier into Europe's definitive youth women's handball competition, expanding to 24 teams by 2025. The tournament's structure has evolved significantly, moving from a single-round format to a sophisticated three-phase system incorporating preliminary group stages, main rounds, and playoff brackets. The championship has become a talent incubator, with numerous participants advancing to elite club and international careers. The competition's prestige has grown substantially, with broadcast coverage and sponsorship increasing alongside the competitive calibre of participating nations.

  • 2005 — EHF European Women's U-17 Handball Championship receives its current official name
  • 2015 — Denmark's Sarah Stougaard scores 41 goals, earning All-Star Left Wing honours
  • 2017 — Germany claim their first-ever Women's 17 EHF EURO title, defeating Norway 23–18 in the final
  • 2019 — Hungary defeat Sweden 28–24 to claim the title in Celje, Slovenia, recording a clean sweep
  • 2021 — Hungary overpower Germany in the final to claim the W17 EHF EURO 2021 title in Lithuania
  • 2023 — Spain win the championship in Azerbaijan, extending their dominance in youth handball
  • 2025 — Slovakia secure their first-ever gold medal, defeating Croatia 34–30 in Montenegro

Competition Format 19 Mar 2026

Teams24

The championship features 24 national teams divided into six preliminary round groups of four teams each, playing a round-robin format. The top two teams from each group advance to the main round, which forms three new groups of four teams. The top two teams from each main round group progress to the championship playoffs, featuring quarterfinals, semifinals, and finals. The playoff structure determines the ultimate champion and final rankings from 1st through 24th place. Teams compete in a home-and-away format within their groups, with the title decided through the playoff bracket culminating in a single-match final.

Records 19 Mar 2026

Most titlesSweden (5)

France has won 4 titles, Denmark 3 titles, Spain and Germany 2 titles each, and Russia 1 title in the championship's history.

Analysis 19 Mar 2026

Current Season Analysis (2025)

The 2025 Women's 17 EHF EURO, held in Montenegro, delivered a historic conclusion with Slovakia claiming their first-ever championship gold medal in any women's competition. The Slovak team demonstrated exceptional consistency throughout the tournament, winning all their group matches before navigating the playoff bracket to face Croatia in the final. In a thrilling encounter, Slovakia secured a 34–30 victory, with a dominant second-half performance proving decisive. This triumph marks a watershed moment for Slovak women's handball, elevating the nation's youth programme to the highest level of European competition.

The preliminary round revealed several standout performances. France topped Group E with a perfect 3–0 record, scoring 96 goals whilst conceding just 73, finishing with an impressive goal difference of +23. Hungary matched France's perfection in Group D, recording 101 goals for and 72 against, demonstrating their traditional offensive prowess with a +29 goal difference. Croatia dominated Group F with 105 goals scored across three matches, whilst Switzerland also maintained an unbeaten record in its group. These early performances established France, Hungary, and Croatia as pre-playoff favourites, though the tournament's ultimate outcome defied conventional expectations.

The main round intensified competition as the 12 advancing teams regrouped. France continued their dominance in the championship playoffs, ultimately finishing as runners-up to Slovakia. Montenegro emerged as a strong performer, accumulating 87 goals across the tournament and securing fourth place in the final standings. The competitive depth was evident, with teams such as Germany, Spain, and Denmark all demonstrating the technical quality characteristic of modern youth European handball. The playoff phase showcased tactical sophistication and physical intensity, with teams employing sophisticated defensive systems and rapid counter-attacking strategies.

Switzerland delivered one of the tournament's standout performances, maintaining an unbeaten record through the preliminary round with a 100% win rate (3 victories in 3 matches) and a +28 goal difference. Their 97 goals scored represented elite-level offensive output for a youth team. The Swiss team's consistency and efficiency throughout the group stage demonstrated why they remain contenders in European youth handball. However, they ultimately finished outside the medal positions, illustrating the tournament's competitive balance.

The 2025 edition reinforced the emergence of Central European handball as a dominant force. Slovakia's triumph builds upon Hungary's recent success (2019 and 2021 titles), whilst Croatia's consistent performances in recent years have established them as regular finalists. This geographical concentration of titles reflects sustained investment in youth development programmes across the Balkans and Central Europe. Simultaneously, traditional powerhouses such as France and Sweden continue to develop elite talent, ensuring the championship remains genuinely competitive across multiple nations. The tournament demonstrated that whilst certain nations maintain structural advantages, breakthrough performances remain possible for ambitious programmes willing to invest in systematic youth development.

Historical Context and Competitive Evolution

The EHF European Women's U-17 Handball Championship has evolved into Europe's most prestigious youth women's handball competition over two decades of competition. The championship's expansion from smaller participant pools to the current 24-team format reflects the sport's growth across Europe and the increasing professionalization of youth development programmes. The competition has become a critical pathway for identifying and developing future international stars, with many current elite players having competed in this championship during their teenage years.

The historical record reveals distinct phases of dominance. Sweden established themselves as the early powerhouse, accumulating 5 titles across the championship's history. France emerged as a consistent performer with 4 titles, whilst Denmark secured 3 championships. The recent era has seen Hungary establish themselves as a force, with multiple titles within the past decade. Spain's 2023 victory and Slovakia's 2025 breakthrough indicate a democratization of success, with competitive depth spreading across more European nations. This trend suggests the youth development infrastructure across Europe has matured, enabling more nations to field genuinely competitive teams at the highest level.

Playing Styles and Tactical Development

The championship serves as a laboratory for tactical innovation in women's handball. The tournament has witnessed the evolution from traditional positional play towards more dynamic, ball-movement-oriented systems. Modern youth teams emphasize rapid transitions, sophisticated defensive pressing, and intelligent use of space. The 2025 tournament exemplified these trends, with Slovakia's victory built upon disciplined defensive organization and clinical counter-attacking efficiency. France's consistent strong performances reflect their systematic development of technical skills and tactical awareness from youth level upwards. The competitive intensity observed in recent championships suggests youth players are arriving at elite club and international level with significantly higher tactical sophistication than in previous generations.

Geographic Distribution and Development Pathways

The championship's evolution reflects broader patterns in European handball development. Scandinavian nations (Sweden, Denmark, Norway) built early success upon established club infrastructure and strong domestic leagues providing competitive environments for youth development. Central European nations (Hungary, Croatia, Slovakia, Poland) have invested heavily in systematic youth academies and state-sponsored development programmes. Western European nations (France, Germany, Spain) combine club-based development with national team infrastructure. The 2025 results suggest this diversified approach has created genuine competitive balance, with no single nation or region maintaining overwhelming dominance. This represents a maturation of European youth handball, where success increasingly depends upon systematic coaching, player identification, and long-term development commitment rather than geographic or demographic advantages.

Future Outlook and Emerging Trends

The 2025 championship suggests several emerging trends for youth women's handball in Europe. The continued strength of Central European nations indicates that systematic, state-supported development programmes remain highly effective in producing competitive teams. The rise of nations like Slovakia, combined with consistent performances from traditional powers, suggests the competitive landscape will remain balanced and unpredictable. Younger players competing in the 2025 championship will form the backbone of senior national teams throughout the 2030s, making this competition's results significant for predicting future international handball hierarchies. The technical quality and tactical sophistication observed in recent championships indicates that youth players are arriving at elite club level better prepared than ever before, potentially raising the overall standard of professional women's handball across Europe in coming years.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the European Championship U17 Women?

The championship features 24 national teams divided into six preliminary round groups of four teams each, competing for the title.

Which country has won the most titles?

Sweden has won the most titles with 5 championships, followed by France with 4 titles and Denmark with 3 titles.

How often is the championship held?

The EHF European Women's U-17 Handball Championship is held biennially (every two years), with the most recent edition taking place in 2025.

What is the tournament format?

The championship uses a three-phase format: 24 teams play in six preliminary groups, top teams advance to main round groups, and the winners progress to the championship playoffs.

When was the championship first held?

The championship has been contested in its current format since 2005, evolving from earlier European youth handball competitions.

Who won the 2025 championship?

Slovakia won their first-ever title at the 2025 Women's 17 EHF EURO, defeating Croatia 34–30 in the final held in Montenegro.

API data: 17 May 2026 · Content updated: 19 Mar 2026