List of Real Madrid CF records and statistics
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Real Madrid Club de Fútbol is a Spanish professional association football club based in Madrid. The club was formed in 1902 as Madrid Football Club, and played its first competitive match on 13 May 1902, in the Copa de la Coronación semi-final.[1] Real Madrid currently plays in the Spanish top-tier La Liga, having become one of the founding members of that league in 1929, and is one of three clubs, the others being Barcelona and Athletic Bilbao, to have never been relegated from the league. They have also been involved in European football ever since they became the first Spanish club to enter the European Cup in 1955, except for the 1977–78 and 1996–97 seasons.

This list encompasses the major honours won by Real Madrid and records set by the club, their managers and their players. The player records section includes details of the club's leading goalscorers and those who have made most appearances in first team competitions. It also records notable achievements by Real Madrid players on the international stage, and the highest transfer fees paid and received by the club.
The club currently holds the record for the most European Cup / UEFA Champions League triumphs, with 15, and the most La Liga titles, with 36. Additionally, Real has won the Copa del Rey 20 times, the Supercopa de España 13 times, the Copa de la Liga once, the Copa Eva Duarte once, the UEFA Cup twice, the European/UEFA Super Cup six times, the Intercontinental Cup three times, the FIFA Intercontinental Cup one time, the FIFA Club World Cup five times, the Latin Cup twice and Copa Iberoamericana once. Powered by its fifteen European Cups, Real Madrid have a distinction of being the most successful club in terms of international titles, having amassed 35 pieces of silverware, more than any other team in the world. On the domestic front, its 71 titles rank second to Barcelona.[2] The club's record appearance maker is Raúl, who made 741 appearances from 1994 to 2010; the club's record goalscorer is Portuguese forward Cristiano Ronaldo, who scored 450 goals in 438 appearances through all competitions from 2009 to 2018.
Players
Appearances

Most appearances
Competitive, professional matches only. Including substitutes. Players in italics are still active outside the club. As of 9 July 2025.
| Rank | Player | Years | League | Cup | Europe[note 1] | Other[note 2] | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1994–2010 | 550 | 37 | 132 | 22 | 741 | |
| 2 | 1999–2015 | 510 | 40 | 152 | 23 | 725 | |
| 3 | 1983–2001 | 523 | 67 | 99 | 21 | 710 | |
| 4 | 2005–2021 | 469 | 48 | 129 | 25 | 671 | |
| 5 | 2009–2023 | 439 | 49 | 133 | 27 | 648 | |
| 6 | 1971–1988 | 461 | 84 | 87 | 13 | 645 | |
| 7 | 1989–2003 | 439 | 43 | 101 | 19 | 602 | |
| 8 | 1953–1971 | 427 | 73 | 94 | 6 | 600 | |
| 9 | 2012–2025 | 394 | 34 | 134 | 35 | 597 | |
| 10 | 1973–1989 | 414 | 61 | 90 | 12 | 577 |
By competition
- Most appearances in La Liga: 550 –
Raúl - Most appearances in Copa del Rey: 84 –
Santillana - Most appearances in Copa de la Liga: 13 –
Isidoro San José - Most appearances in Supercopa de España: 15 –
Sergio Ramos - Most appearances in international competitions: 162 –
Iker Casillas - Most appearances in UEFA club competitions: 157 –
Iker Casillas - Most appearances in European competitions: 155 –
Iker Casillas - Most appearances in UEFA Champions League: 152 –
Iker Casillas - Most appearances in European Cup Winners' Cup: 16 –
Goyo Benito - Most appearances in UEFA Cup: 44 –
Míchel - Most appearances in UEFA Super Cup: 6
- Most appearances in Intercontinental Cup: 3
- Most appearances in FIFA Club World Cup: 14 –
Luka Modrić - Most appearances in FIFA Intercontinental Cup: 1 – 16 players
Oldest and youngest
- Youngest player: 16 years, 157 days –
Martin Ødegaard v Getafe, 2014–15 La Liga, 23 May 2015[3] - Youngest player, including regional competitions: 15 years, 38 days –
René Petit v Sociedad Gimnástica, Campeonato Regional Centro, 15 November 1914[4] - Youngest player, including friendly matches: 12 years, 272 days –
José Gandarias v Deportivo Auténtico, Friendly match, 17 December 1916[5] - Oldest player: 39 years, 303 days –
Luka Modrić v Paris Saint-Germain, 2025 FIFA Club World Cup, 9 July 2025 - Oldest debutant: 34 years, 271 days –
Jerzy Dudek v Alicante, 2007–08 Copa del Rey, 19 December 2007 - Largest age difference between two players in the same match: 21 years, 200 days – Luka Modrić and Daniel Yáñez v Girona, 2024–25 La Liga, 7 December 2024
Relatives
Note: It is required that players have participated in at least one official match in order to be included in the following lists. Appearances in friendly or regional tournaments are not counted, nor are players who joined Real Madrid without making any appearance.
- Fathers and sons who played for Real Madrid:
Manuel Sanchís (1965–1971) and his son Manolo Sanchís (1983–2001)
Isidro Sánchez (1961–1965) and his son Quique Sánchez Flores (1994–1996)
Miguel Pérez (1967–1971) and his son Álex Pérez (2004–2005)
Paco Llorente (1987–1994) and his son Marcos Llorente (2015–2019)
Zinedine Zidane (2001–2006) and his sons Enzo Zidane (2016–2017) and Luca Zidane (2017–2019)
- Brothers who played for Real Madrid:
Mario Giralt (1900–1903), Armando Giralt (1900–1907) and José Giralt (1900–1907)
Joaquín Yarza (1904–1907) and Manuel Yarza (1904–1908)
Francisco Guzmán (1909–1911), Luis Guzmán (1909–1911) and José Guzmán (1909–1911)
Sotero Aranguren (1912–1917) and Eulogio Aranguren (1915–1918)
Santiago Bernabéu (1911–1926) and Marcelo Bernabéu (1910–1915)
René Petit (1914–1917) and Juan Petit (1914–1917)
Manuel Cominges (1917–1920) and Francisco Cominges (1925–1930)
Luis Regueiro (1931–1936) and Pedro Regueiro (1932–1936)
Antonio Alsúa (1940–1948) and Rafael Alsúa (1943–1944)
Joaquín Navarro (1949–1957) and Alfonso Navarro (1950–1951)
Juanito Alonso (1949–1960) and Gabriel Alonso (1950–1954)
Ángel Atienza (1954–1959) and Adolfo Atienza (1953–1955)
Paco Gento (1953–1971) and Antonio Gento (1961–1962)
Paco Llorente (1987–1994) and Julio Llorente (1988–1990)
Alfonso Pérez (1990–1995) and Iván Pérez (1995–1996)
Nacho Fernández (2010–2024) and Álex Fernández (2010–2013)
Enzo Zidane (2016–2017) and Luca Zidane (2017–2019)
- Grandfathers and grandsons played for Real Madrid:
Marquitos (1954–1962) and his grandson Marcos Alonso (2009–2010)
Ramón Grosso (1964–1976) and his grandson Marcos Llorente (2015–2019)
Others
- Most number of seasons: 18
Paco Gento, 1953–1971
Miguel Ángel, 1968–1986[note 3]
Manolo Sanchís, 1983–2001
- Most minutes in a season: 5,557 –
Federico Valverde, 2024–25 - Most appearances in a season: 65 –
Federico Valverde, 2024–25[6] - Most appearances as a starter in a season: 62 –
Federico Valverde, 2024–25 - Most appearances for foreign player: 648 –
Karim Benzema, 2009–2023 - Most appearances as a substitute: 207 –
Guti, 1995–2010 - Most consecutive appearances as a substitute: 17 –
Santiago Solari, 23 March 2003 – 27 September 2003 - Most appearances as substituted: 298 –
Karim Benzema, 2009–2023 - Most consecutive appearances: 105 –
Paco Buyo, 31 August 1986 – 10 April 1988 - Most consecutive appearances in La Liga: 171 –


Alfredo Di Stéfano, 27 September 1953 – 22 February 1959 - Longest time between consecutive games by a player: 11 years, 235 days –
Joselu, 20 December 2011 – 12 August 2023
Goalscorers
Most goals
Competitive, professional matches only. Total appearances are shown in parentheses. Players in italics are still active outside the club. As of 4 June 2023.
| Rank | Player | Years | League[7] | Cup | Europe[note 1] | Other[note 2] | Total | Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2009–2018 | 311 (292) | 22 (30) | 105 (101) | 12 (15) | 450 (438) | 1.03 | |
| 2 | 2009–2023 | 238 (439) | 25 (49) | 78 (133) | 13 (27) | 354 (648) | 0.55 | |
| 3 | 1994–2010 | 228 (550) | 18 (37) | 66 (132) | 11 (22) | 323 (741) | 0.44 | |
| 4 | 1953–1964 | 216 (282) | 40 (50) | 49 (58) | 3 (6) | 308 (396) | 0.78 | |
| 5 | 1971–1988 | 186 (461) | 49 (84) | 47 (87) | 8 (13) | 290 (645) | 0.45 | |
| 6 | 1958–1966 | 156 (180) | 49 (41) | 35 (39) | 2 (2) | 242 (262) | 0.92 | |
| 7 | 1985–1992 | 164 (207) | 19 (32) | 23 (39) | 2 (4) | 208 (282) | 0.74 | |
| 8 | 1952–1971 | 127 (427) | 21 (73) | 31 (94) | 4 (6) | 183 (600) | 0.31 | |
| 9 | 1964–1980 | 123 (417) | 25 (67) | 23 (75) | 0 (2) | 171 (561) | 0.3 | |
| 10 | 1983–1995 | 123 (341) | 15 (39) | 27 (75) | 5 (8) | 170 (463) | 0.37 |
By competition

- Most goals scored in all competitions: 450 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most goals scored in La Liga: 311 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most goals scored in Copa del Rey: 49

Ferenc Puskás, 1958–1966
Santillana, 1971–1988
- Most goals scored in Copa de la Liga: 8 –
Santillana, 1971–1988 - Most goals scored in Supercopa de España: 7
Raúl, 1994–2010
Karim Benzema, 2009–2023
- Most goals scored in international competitions: 113 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most goals scored in European competitions: 107 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most goals scored in European Cup / UEFA Champions League: 105 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most goals scored in European Cup Winners' Cup: 11 –
Santillana, 1971–1988 - Most goals scored in UEFA Cup: 15 –
Santillana, 1971–1988 - Most goals scored in UEFA Super Cup: 2
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018
Sergio Ramos, 2005–2021
Karim Benzema, 2009–2023
- Most goals scored in Intercontinental Cup: 2 –

Ferenc Puskás, 1958–1966 - Most goals scored in FIFA Club World Cup: 6
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018
Gareth Bale, 2013–2022
- Most goals scored in FIFA Intercontinental Cup: 1
Kylian Mbappé, 2024–
Rodrygo, 2019–
Vinícius Júnior, 2018–
In a single season
This table lists players who have scored more than 40 goals in a single season. Ordered by goals scored and by season.
| Rank | Player | Goals | Season | League | Domestic Cups | (Inter)continental |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 61 | 2014–15 | 48 | 1 | 12 | |
| 2 | 60 | 2011–12 | 46 | 4 | 10 | |
| 3 | 55 | 2012–13 | 34 | 9 | 12 | |
| 4 | 53 | 2010–11 | 40 | 7 | 6 | |
| 5 | 51 | 2013–14 | 31 | 3 | 17 | |
| 2015–16 | 35 | 0 | 16 | |||
| 7 | 47 | 1959–60 | 25 | 10 | 12 | |
| 8 | 44 | 1960–61 | 28 | 14 | 2 | |
| 2017–18 | 26 | 1 | 17 | |||
| 2021–22 | 27 | 2 | 15 | |||
| 2024–25 | 31 | 3 | 10 | |||
| 12 | 43 | 1956–57 | 31 | 3 | 9 | |
| 1986–87 | 34 | 6 | 3 | |||
| 14 | 42 | 1989–90 | 38 | 3 | 1 | |
| 2016–17 | 25 | 1 | 16 | |||
| 2025–26 | 25 | 2 | 15 | |||
| 17 | 40 | 1961–62 | 20 | 13 | 7 |
- Best goal ratio in a single season: 1.305 –

Ferenc Puskás, 1959–60
In a single season by competition
- Most goals scored in a season in all competitions: 61 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2014–15 - Most goals scored in a single La Liga season: 48 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2014–15 - Most goals scored in a single Copa del Rey season: 14 –

Ferenc Puskás, 1960–61 - Most goals scored in a single Copa de la Liga season: 5 –
Santillana, 1983 - Most goals scored in a single European Cup / UEFA Champions League season: 17 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2013–14[8] (Record)
- Most goals scored in a single UEFA Champions League group stage / League phase: 13 –
Kylian Mbappé, 2025–26 (Record) - Most goals scored in a single European Cup / UEFA Champions League knockout stage: 10
- Most goals scored in a single UEFA Champions League group stage / League phase: 13 –
- Most goals scored in a single UEFA Cup season: 7 –
Jorge Valdano, 1985–86 - Most goals scored in a single European Cup Winners' Cup season: 8 –
Santillana, 1982–83 - Most goals scored in a single FIFA Club World Cup season: 4
In a single match

- Most goals scored in a match in all competitions: 6 –

Ferenc Puskás v Real Betis, 1960–61 Copa del Generalísimo, 18 June 1961 - Most goals scored in La Liga match: 5
Manuel Alday v Espanyol, 28 February 1943
Miguel Muñoz v Lleida, 30 January 1951
Pepillo II v Elche, 7 February 1960
Fernando Morientes v Las Palmas, 9 February 2002
Cristiano Ronaldo v Granada, 5 April 2015[9]
Cristiano Ronaldo v Espanyol, 12 September 2015
- Most goals scored in a Copa del Rey match: 6 –

Ferenc Puskás v Real Betis, 18 June 1961 - Most goals scored in a Copa de la Liga match: 4 –
Santillana v Real Zaragoza, 22 June 1983 (Shared record) - Most goals scored in a Supercopa de España match: 3 (Shared record)
Raúl v Zaragoza, 2001 Supercopa de España, 22 August 2001
Vinícius Júnior v Barcelona, 2023–24 Supercopa de España, 14 January 2024
- Most goals scored in a European Cup / UEFA Champions League match: 4

Ferenc Puskás v Eintracht Frankfurt, final 1959–60, 18 May 1960 and v Feyenoord, preliminary round 1965–66, 22 September 1965

Alfredo Di Stéfano v Sevilla, quarter-final 1957–58, 23 January 1958, and v Wiener Sport-Club, quarter-final 1958–59, 18 March 1959
Hugo Sánchez v Swarovski Tirol, second round 1990–91, 24 October 1990
Cristiano Ronaldo v Malmö FF, group stage 2015–16, 8 December 2015
Kylian Mbappé v Olympiacos, league phase 2025–26, 26 November 2025
- Most goals scored in a UEFA Cup match: 3
Emilio Butragueño v Anderlecht, third round 1984–85 UEFA Cup, 12 December 1984
Fernando Hierro v Torpedo Moscow, second round 1992–93 UEFA Cup, 21 October 1992
- Most goals scored in a European Cup Winners' Cup match: 3 –
Juan Planelles v Hibernians, first round 1970–71 European Cup Winners' Cup, 30 September 1970 - Most goals scored in a UEFA Super Cup match: 2 –
Cristiano Ronaldo v Sevilla, 2014 UEFA Super Cup, 12 August 2014 - Most goals scored in an Intercontinental Cup match: 2 –

Ferenc Puskás v Peñarol, 1960 Intercontinental Cup, 4 September 1960 - Most goals scored in a FIFA Club World Cup match: 3 (Shared record)
Cristiano Ronaldo v Kashima Antlers, 2016 FIFA Club World Cup final, 18 December 2016
Gareth Bale v Kashima Antlers, 2018 FIFA Club World Cup semi-final, 19 December 2018
- Most goals scored in an FIFA Intercontinental Cup match: 1
Kylian Mbappé v Pachuca, 2024 FIFA Intercontinental Cup final, 18 December 2024
Rodrygo v Pachuca, 2024 FIFA Intercontinental Cup final, 18 December 2024
Vinícius Júnior v Pachuca, 2024 FIFA Intercontinental Cup final, 18 December 2024
- Most goals scored in away match: 5 –
Cristiano Ronaldo v Espanyol, 12 September 2015 - Most goals scored in final match: 4 –

Ferenc Puskás v Eintracht Frankfurt, 1960 European Cup final, 18 May 1960
Historical goals
| Goal | Name | Date | Match |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st ever | 13 May 1902 | Barcelona 3–1 Madrid | |
| 1st in Copa del Rey | 6 April 1903 | Madrid 4–1 Español | |
| 1st in La Liga | 10 February 1929 | Real Madrid 5–0 Europa | |
| 1000th in La Liga | 5 November 1950 | Athletic 2–5 Real Madrid | |
| 1st in European Cup | 8 September 1955 | Servette 0–2 Real Madrid | |
| 2000th in La Liga | 9 November 1963 | Real Madrid 3–1 Pontevedra | |
| 3000th in La Liga | 20 January 1982 | Salamanca 1–3 Real Madrid | |
| 1000th in Copa del Rey | 5 February 1986 | Recreativo 3–1 Real Madrid | |
| 4000th in La Liga | 22 December 1994 | Valladolid 0–5 Real Madrid | |
| 5000th in La Liga | 14 September 2008 | Real Madrid 4–3 Numancia | |
| 1000th in international competitions | 27 November 2013 | Real Madrid 4–1 Galatasaray | |
| 1000th in European competitions | 16 September 2014 | Real Madrid 5–1 Basel | |
| 6000th in La Liga | 18 February 2018 | Betis 3–5 Real Madrid | |
| 1000th in European Cup/Champions League | 3 November 2021 | Real Madrid 2–1 Shakhtar Donetsk | |
| 10000th ever | 2 April 2025 | Real Madrid 4–4 Real Sociedad |
Consecutive scoring

- Most consecutive matches with goals: 12 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 25 August 2014 – 1 November 2014 and 10 February 2018 – 18 April 2018[10] - Most consecutive matches with goals in La Liga: 11 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 25 August 2014 – 22 November 2014[11][note 4] - Most consecutive matches with goals in Copa del Rey: 7
Gaspar Rubio, 16 December 1928 – 27 January 1929
Ferenc Puskás, 19 June 1960 – 1 June 1961
- Most consecutive matches with goals in UEFA Champions League: 11 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 3 June 2017 – 11 April 2018[12] (Record)
Hat-tricks
- Most hat-tricks: 44 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most hat-tricks in La Liga: 34 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most hat-tricks in Copa del Rey: 6 –

Ferenc Puskás, 1958–1966 - Most hat-tricks in UEFA Champions League: 7 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most hat-tricks in a single season: 8 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2014–15[note 5] - Fastest hat-trick: 4 minutes
Gaspar Rubio v Atletico Madrid, 1929–30 La Liga, 16 February 1930
Pahiño v Gimnàstic Tarragona, 1949–50 La Liga, 16 April 1950
- Fastest hat-trick in Copa del Rey: 5 minutes –
Santillana v Las Palmas, 1974–75 Copa del Generalísimo, 14 June 1975 - Fastest hat-trick in European Cup / UEFA Champions League: 7 minutes[note 6]
Amancio v Sparta Praha, 1967–68 European Cup, 6 March 1968
Kylian Mbappé v Olympiacos, 2025–26 UEFA Champions League, 26 November 2025
- Fastest four goals: 18 minutes –
Pahiño v Gimnàstic Tarragona, 1949–50 La Liga, 16 April 1950 - Fastest five goals: 39 minutes –
Pepillo II v Elche, 1959–60 La Liga, 7 February 1960[13] - Fastest hat-trick from the start of the match: 15 minutes –
Pruden v Racing Ferrol, 1947 Copa del Generalísimo, 27 April 1947 - Longest hat-trick: 95 minutes –
Santiago Bernabéu v Barcelona, 1916 Copa del Rey, 13 April 1916[note 7] - Youngest player to score a hat-trick: 18 years, 113 days –
Raúl v Ferencváros, 1995–96 UEFA Champions League, 18 October 1995[14] - Youngest player to score a hat-trick in La Liga: 19 years, 215 days –
Pablo Olmedo v Celta Vigo, 1948–49 La Liga, 14 November 1948[note 8] - Youngest player to score a hat-trick in Copa del Rey: 18 years, 329 days –
Juan Monjardín v Arenas Club de Getxo, 1922 Copa del Rey, 19 March 1922 - Oldest player to score a hat-trick: 38 years, 173 days –

Ferenc Puskás v Feyenoord, 1965–66 European Cup, 22 September 1965[note 8] - Oldest player to score a hat-trick in La Liga: 37 years, 255 days –


Alfredo Di Stéfano v Real Murcia, 1962–63 La Liga, 15 March 1963 - Oldest player to score a hat-trick in Copa del Rey: 38 years, 44 days –

Ferenc Puskás v Mestalla, 1964–65 Copa del Generalísimo, 16 May 1965[note 8] - Most consecutive hat-tricks: 3 –

Ferenc Puskás, 8 May 1960 – 5 June 1960[note 9] - Longest gap between consecutive hat-tricks: 9 years, 154 days –
Fernando Hierro, 21 October 1992 – 24 March 2002 - Longest gap between first and last hat-tricks: 12 years, 132 days –
Karim Benzema, 18 December 2010 – 29 April 2023 - Players who scored a hat-trick in a final match:


Alfredo Di Stéfano v Eintracht Frankfurt, 1960 European Cup final, 18 May 1960
Ferenc Puskás v Eintracht Frankfurt, 1960 European Cup final, 18 May 1960[note 8]
Ferenc Puskás v Benfica, 1962 European Cup final, 2 May 1960
Raúl v Real Zaragoza, 2001 Supercopa de España, 22 August 2001
Cristiano Ronaldo v Kashima Antlers, 2016 FIFA Club World Cup final, 18 December 2016
Vinícius Júnior v Barcelona, 2024 Supercopa de España final, 14 January 2024
Fastest goals
- Fastest goal: 13 seconds –
Iván Zamorano v Sevilla, 1994–95 La Liga, 3 September 1994[15] - Fastest goal in Copa del Rey: 15 seconds –
Paco Gento v Racing Santander, 1960–61 Copa del Rey, 28 May 1961[16] - Fastest goal in international competitions: 34 seconds –
Arda Güler v Bayern Munich, 2025–26 UEFA Champions League, 15 April 2026[17][note 10] - Fastest goal in final match: 1 minute –
Enrique Mateos v Stade Reims, 1959 European Cup final, 3 June 1959 - Fastest goal by a substitute: 14 seconds –
Vinícius Júnior v Shakhtar Donetsk, 2020–21 UEFA Champions League, 21 October 2020[19] - Fastest goal by a substitute in La Liga: 31 seconds –
Marco Asensio v Valencia, 2019–20 La Liga, 18 June 2020 - Fastest goal by a debutant: 62 seconds –
Ronaldo v Alavés, 2002–03 La Liga, 6 October 2002
List of fastest goals in Real Madrid's history
Note: Maximum of 30 seconds.
| Player | Time | Against | Result | Competition | Date | Notes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13 sec | Sevilla | 4–1 | 1994–95 La Liga | 3 September 1994 | [15] | ||
| 14 sec | Atlético Madrid | 2–0 | 2003–04 La Liga | 3 December 2003 | Fastest goal in Madrid Derby history. | [20] | |
| 15 sec | Racing Santander | 3–0 | 1960–61 Copa del Rey | 28 May 1961 | Fastest goal by a Spanish player. | [16] | |
| 21 sec | Barcelona | 1–3 | 2011–12 La Liga | 10 December 2011 | Fastest goal in El Clásico history. | [21][22] | |
| 23 sec | Espanyol | 1–2 | 2001–02 La Liga | 3 February 2002 | [23] | ||
| 23 sec | Cultural Leonesa | 6–1 | 2016–17 Copa del Rey | 30 November 2016 | [24] | ||
| 24 sec | Sporting Gijón | 4–0 | 1986–87 La Liga | 30 May 1987 | [25] | ||
| 30 sec | Granada | 6–2 | 1944–45 La Liga | 8 April 1945 | [26] | ||
| 30 sec | Deportivo La Coruña | 2–1 | 1950–51 La Liga | 25 February 1951 | [27] |
Latest goals
- Latest goal: 121:40 minutes –
Brahim Diaz v Atlético Madrid, 2024 Supercopa de España, 10 January 2024 - Latest goal in regulation time: 99:34 minutes –
Kylian Mbappé v Rayo Vallecano, 2025–26 La Liga, 1 February 2026 - Latest goal being the opener: 107 minutes –
Pau Vidal v Espanyol, 1947 Copa del Generalísimo final, 22 June 1947 - Latest goal in regulation time being the opener: 96:55 minutes –
Cristiano Ronaldo v Juventus, 2017–18 UEFA Champions League, 11 April 2018 - Latest goal under exceptional circumstances: 95 days –
Hugo Sánchez v Osasuna, 1988–89 La Liga, 3 May 1989[note 11]
Furthest goals
- Furthest goal scored: 68.6 meters –
Arda Güler v Elche, 2025–26 La Liga, 14 March 2026[29] - Furthest free kick goal scored: 40 meters –
Didi v Espanyol, 1959–60 La Liga, 27 September 1959[30] - Real Madrid players who scored from Real's own half in an official match:[note 12]
Mikel Lasa v Sevilla, 1994–95 La Liga, 5 February 1995[32][33][34]
Arda Güler v Elche, 2025–26 La Liga, 14 March 2026[29]
List of furthest goals in Real Madrid's history
| Real Madrid's own half |
Note: Minimum of 40 meters.[35]
| Player | Distance | Against | Result | Competition | Date | Notes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 68 meters | Elche | 4–1 | 2025–26 La Liga | 14 March 2026 | [29] | ||
| 58 meters | Sevilla | 2–0 | 1994–95 La Liga | 5 February 1995 | [34] | ||
| 45 meters | Osasuna | 5–2 | 1991–92 La Liga | 11 January 1992 | [36] | ||
| 45 meters | Atlético Madrid | 1–1 | 1997–98 La Liga | 30 August 1997 | [35] | ||
| 42 meters | Barcelona | 4–1 | 1990 Supercopa de España | 12 December 1990 | Furthest goal excluding La Liga. | [37] | |
| 40 meters | Espanyol | 4–0 | 1959–60 La Liga | 27 September 1959 | Free kick goal. | [30] |
Oldest and youngest
- Youngest goalscorer: 17 years, 114 days –
Alberto Rivera v Celta Vigo, 1994–95 La Liga, 10 June 1995 - Youngest goalscorer, including regional competitions: 15 years, 38 days –
René Petit v Sociedad Gimnástica, Campeonato Regional Centro, 15 November 1914[4] - Youngest goalscorer in Copa del Rey: 17 years, 219 days –
René Petit v Arenas Club de Getxo, 1917 Copa del Rey, 15 May 1917 - Youngest goalscorer in international competitions: 18 years, 58 days –
Endrick v Stuttgart, 2024–25 UEFA Champions League, 17 September 2024 - Oldest goalscorer: 39 years, 167 days –
Luka Modrić v Girona, 2024–25 La Liga, 23 February 2025 - Oldest goalscorer in Copa del Rey: 39 years, 149 days –
Luka Modrić v Leganés, 2024–25 Copa del Rey, 5 February 2025 - Oldest goalscorer in international competitions: 38 years, 174 days –

Ferenc Puskás v Feyenoord, 1965–66 European Cup, 22 September 1965
Penalties
- Most penalty kick goals: 79 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most penalty kick goals in a match: 3 –


Alfredo Di Stéfano v Celta Vigo, 1957–58 La Liga, 20 April 1958 - Most penalty kick goals in a season: 14
- Most penalties missed: 13 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most penalties missed in a match: 2 –
Karim Benzema v Osasuna, 2021–22 La Liga, 20 April 2022 - Most penalties missed in a season: 4
- Fastest penalty: 1 minute


Alfredo Di Stéfano v Atlético Madrid, 1953–54 La Liga, 1 November 1953
Hugo Sánchez v Castellón, 1990–91 La Liga, 27 January 1991
- Most penalties, all scored: 12 –
Davor Šuker, 1996–1999 - Most goals, all penalties: 9 –
Pepe Corona, 1943–1948 - Most goals, without penalties: 101 –
Iván Zamorano, 1992–1996[note 13]
Free kicks
- Most free kick goals: 32 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most free kick goals in a match: 2
Hugo Sánchez v Cádiz, 1986–87 La Liga, 22 February 1987
Hugo Sánchez v Sporting Gijón, 1988–89 Copa del Rey, 22 February 1989
Santiago Solari v Tenerife, 2004–05 Copa del Rey, 10 November 2004
Cristiano Ronaldo v Zürich, 2009–10 UEFA Champions League, 15 September 2009
Cristiano Ronaldo v Villarreal, 2010–11 La Liga, 15 May 2011
- Most free kick goals in a match by a team: 3 – Real Madrid v Sporting Gijón, 1988–89 Copa del Rey, 22 February 1989[note 14]
- Most free kick goals in a season: 8 –
Roberto Carlos, 2000–01 - Most free kick goals in a calendar year: 9 –
Hugo Sánchez, 1989
Own goals
- Most own goals: 4
José Antonio Salguero, 1982–1987
Sergio Ramos, 2005–2021
Raphaël Varane, 2011–2021
- Most own goals in a match: 1[note 15]
- Most own goals in a season: 3 –
José Antonio Salguero, 1985–86 - Fastest own goal: 4 minutes –
Pedro Casado v Atlético Madrid, 1962–63 La Liga, 17 March 1963 - Fastest own goal by a debutant: 24 minutes –
Jonathan Woodgate v Athletic Bilbao, 2005–06 La Liga, 22 September 2005 - Latest own goal: 104 minutes –
José Antonio Salguero v Real Sociedad, 1982 Supercopa de España, 28 December 1982 - Latest own goal in regulation time: 93 minutes –
Nacho v Arandina, 2023–24 Copa del Rey, 6 January 2024
Headers
- Most headed goals: 112 –
Santillana, 1971–1988 - Most headed goals in a match: 4 –
Fernando Morientes v Las Palmas, 2001–02 La Liga, 10 February 2002[38] - Other players to score three headed goals in a match:
Fernando Sañudo v Arenas, 1934–35 La Liga, 28 April 1935[note 16]
Santillana v Real Betis, 1973–74 Copa del Generalísimo, 1 June 1974
Jorge Valdano v Elche, 1984–85 La Liga, 20 February 1985
- Most headed goals in a season: 17 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2014–15
Other methods
- Most bicycle kick goals: 12 –
Hugo Sánchez, 1985–1992[39] - Most direct corner-kick goals: 1[note 17]

Ferenc Puskás v Atlético Madrid, 1960 Copa del Generalísimo final, 26 June 1960
Davor Šuker v Mérida, 1997–98 La Liga, 14 December 1997
Toni Kroos v Valencia, 2019–20 Supercopa de España, 8 January 2020
By position
- Most goals scored by a goalkeeper: 0[note 18]
- Most goals scored by a defender: 128 –
Fernando Hierro, 1989–2003[note 19] - Most goals scored by a midfielder: 171 –
Pirri, 1964–1980
Finals

- Most goals scored in finals: 15 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most finals scored in: 10 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most goals scored in European Cup Finals: 7


Alfredo Di Stéfano, one in 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959 and three in 1960
Ferenc Puskás, four in 1960 and three in 1962
- Most goals scored in UEFA Champions League Finals: 3
Cristiano Ronaldo, one in 2014, and two in 2017
Gareth Bale, one in 2014, and two in 2018
- Most goals scored in UEFA Cup Finals: 3
Jorge Valdano, one in 1985, and two in 1986
- Most goals scored in club world championships Finals: 4
Cristiano Ronaldo, three in 2016, and one in 2017
- Most goals scored in Supercopa de España Finals: 7
- Most goals scored in Copa del Rey Finals: 4
Manuel Prast, one in 1905, 1907, and two in 1906
Jaime Lazcano, one in 1929, 1930, 1933 and 1934
Ferenc Puskás, one in 1960, 1961 and two in 1962
- Most goals scored in Copa de la Liga Finals: 2
Santillana, one in 1983 and 1985
Others
- Most seasons scored in: 17 –
Santillana, 1971–1988 - Most competitions scored in: 8 –
Fernando Hierro (La Liga, Copa del Rey, Supercopa de España, UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup, European Cup Winners' Cup, Copa Iberoamericana and FIFA Club World Championship) - Most competitions scored in during a single season: 7 –
Kylian Mbappé in 2024–25 (La Liga, Copa del Rey, Supercopa de España, UEFA Champions League, UEFA Super Cup, FIFA Intercontinental Cup and FIFA Club World Cup) - Most goals in calendar year: 59
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2013
Kylian Mbappé, 2025
- Most goals as a substitute: 24 –
Karim Benzema, 2009–2023 - Most goals in debut season: 44 –
Kylian Mbappé, 2024–25[43] - Most goals in La Liga debut season: 31 –
Kylian Mbappé, 2024–25 - Most games scoring: 274 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018 - Most games scoring in a season: 37 –
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2011–12 - Longest time between consecutive goals by a player: 11 years, 256 days –
Joselu, 20 December 2011 – 2 September 2023 - Longest time between first and last goal by a player: 16 years, 253 days –
Santillana, 12 September 1971 – 22 May 1988[note 20] - Most consecutive matches for a forward without scoring goals: 32 matches –
Rodrygo, 9 March 2025 – 7 December 2025[note 21] - Most consecutive minutes for a forward without scoring goals: 1,416 minutes –
Rafael Marañón, 25 June 1972 – 27 January 1974 - Most times scoring 100% of the team's goals: 69 –
Raúl, 1994–2010 - Players scoring more goals than appearances for Real Madrid:
Cristiano Ronaldo, 450/438
Fernando Sañudo, 50/48
Marcial Arbiza, 29/27
José María Benguria, 7/6
Luis Belaunde, 3/2
Ramon Masagué, 3/2
Assists
Most assists

Notes: The criteria for an assist to be awarded may vary according to the source, the following stats is based on the assists criteria according to Opta, where assists are not counted for balls that are deflected or rebounded off opposing players and have clearly affected the trajectory of the ball and its arrival to the recipient (the goal scorer). Assists are also not counted for penalty kicks, direct goals from corners or free kicks, or own goals. These statistics include assists in all official matches from 1902 to the present day. This information is gathered according to official sources, reports, and reliable records in club, association, and press archives. At least 100 assists.
| Rank | Player | Assists | Period |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 201 | 1982–1996 | |
| 2 | 165 | 1953–1971 | |
| 3 | 148 | 2009–2023 | |
| 4 | 137 | 1953–1964 | |
| 5 | 133 | 1958–1966 | |
| 6 | 123 | 1977–1987 | |
| 7 | 120 | 1962–1976 | |
| 8 | 119 | 2009–2018 | |
| 9 | 115 | 1994–2010 | |
| 10 | 109 | 1984–1995 | |
| 11 | 102 | 1996–2007 |
By competition
- Most assists in all competitions: 201 –
Míchel, 1982–1996 - Most assists in La Liga: 147 –
Míchel, 1982–1996 - Most assists in Copa del Rey: 28 –
Paco Gento, 1953–1971 - Most assists in Supercopa de España: 3
Míchel, 1982–1996
Pepe, 2007–2017
Karim Benzema, 2009–2023
Rodrygo, 2019–
- Most assists in European Cup / UEFA Champions League: 28
Paco Gento, 1953–1971
Cristiano Ronaldo, 2009–2018
- Most assists in UEFA Cup: 11 –
Míchel, 1982–1996 - Most assists in European Cup Winners' Cup / UEFA Cup Winners' Cup: 5 –
Juanito, 1977–1987 - Most assists in UEFA Super Cup: 3 –
Gareth Bale, 2013–2022 - Most assists in FIFA Club World Cup: 4 –
Toni Kroos, 2014–2024 - Most assists in FIFA Intercontinental Cup: 1
Vinícius Júnior, 2018–
Kylian Mbappé, 2024–
In a single season
This table lists players who have assisted at least 20 assists in a single season. The following table shows the number of assists according to Opta's criteria.
| Rank | Player | Assists | Season |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 27 | 1992–93 | |
| 2 | 26 | 1955–56 | |
| 1987–88 | |||
| 2000–01 | |||
| 2010–11 | |||
| 6 | 25 | 1960–61 | |
| 7 | 24 | 1959–60 | |
| 2011–12 | |||
| 2013–14 | |||
| 10 | 23 | 1980–81 | |
| 1986–87 | |||
| 2012–13 | |||
| 13 | 21 | 1957–58 | |
| 2014–15 | |||
| 15 | 20 | 1989–90 | |
| 2005–06 |
In a single season by competition
- Most assists in a La Liga season: 21 –
Míchel, 1987–88 - Most assists in a Copa del Rey season: 8 –
Eugenio Hilario, 1935–36 - Most assists in a European Cup / UEFA Champions League season: 7
In a single match
- Most assists in a single match: 5
Amancio v Real Betis, 1973–74 Copa del Generalísimo, 1 June 1974
Juanito v Athletic Bilbao, 1980–81 La Liga, 14 September 1980[44]
- Most assists in a La Liga match: 5 –
Juanito v Athletic Bilbao, 1980–81 La Liga, 14 September 1980 - Most assists in a Copa del Rey match: 5 –
Amancio v Real Betis, 1973–74 Copa del Generalísimo, 1 June 1974 - Most assists in a Supercopa de España match: 2
Míchel v Barcelona, 1993 Supercopa de España, 2 December 1993
Dani Carvajal v Atlético Madrid, 2024 Supercopa de España, 10 January 2024
- Most assists in a Copa de la Liga match: 2 –
Juanito v Barcelona, 1986 Copa de la Liga, 11 May 1986 - Most assists in a European Cup / UEFA Champions League match: 4 –
Míchel v Swarovski Tirol, 1990–91 European Cup, 24 October 1990 - Most assists in a UEFA Cup match: 2
Emilio Butragueño v Anderlecht, 1984–85 UEFA Cup, 12 December 1984
Míchel v Videoton, 1984–85 UEFA Cup, 8 May 1985
Emilio Butragueño v AEK Athens, 1985–86 UEFA Cup, 2 October 1985
Rafael Gordillo v AEK Athens, 1985–86 UEFA Cup, 2 October 1985
Juanito v Borussia Mönchengladbach, 1985–86 UEFA Cup, 11 December 1985
Hugo Sánchez v Inter Milan, 1985–86 UEFA Cup, 16 April 1986
Adolfo Aldana v Neuchâtel Xamax, 1991–92 UEFA Cup, 11 December 1991
Míchel v Politehnica Timișoara, 1992–93 UEFA Cup, 29 September 1992
- Most assists in a European Cup Winners' Cup / UEFA Cup Winners' Cup match: 2
Paul Breitner v Fram, 1974–75 European Cup Winners' Cup, 1 October 1974
Juanito v Baia Mare, 1982–83 European Cup Winners' Cup, 29 September 1982
- Most assists in a FIFA Club World Cup match: 2
Cristiano Ronaldo v Cruz Azul, 2014 FIFA Club World Cup, 16 December 2014
Marcelo v Kashima Antlers, 2018 FIFA Club World Cup, 19 December 2018
Arda Güler v Borussia Dortmund, 2025 FIFA Club World Cup, 5 July 2025
Youngest and oldest
- Youngest assist provider: 16 years, 190 days –
René Petit v Barcelona, 1916 Copa del Rey, 15 April 1916 - Youngest assist provider in La Liga: 17 years, 124 days –
Raúl v Real Zaragoza, 1994–95 La Liga, 29 October 1994 - Youngest assist provider in international competitions: 18 years, 113 days –
Raúl v Ferencváros, 1995–96 UEFA Champions League, 18 October 1995 - Oldest assist provider: 39 years, 251 days –
Luka Modrić v Sevilla, 2024–25 La Liga, 18 May 2025 - Oldest assist provider in Copa del Rey: 39 years, 15 days –

Ferenc Puskás v Sporting Gijón, 1965–66 Copa del Generalísimo, 17 April 1966 - Oldest assist provider in international competitions: 39 years, 135 days –
Luka Modrić v RB Salzburg, 2024–25 UEFA Champions League, 22 January 2025
Other assist records
- Most assists in a season: 27 –
Míchel, 1992–93 - Most assists in calendar year: 30 –
Míchel, 1987 - Most assists in finals: 10 –
Míchel, 1982–1996[note 22] - Most consecutive matches assisting: 6
Macala, 8 November 1948 – 23 January 1949
Vinícius Júnior, 12 April 2023 – 6 May 2023
- Most assists by a goalkeeper: 2 –
Thibaut Courtois, 2018–[note 23] - Other goalkeepers who have provided assists:
Manuel Pazos v Barcelona, 1953–54 La Liga, 25 October 1953
Juan Alonso v Espanyol, 1956–57 La Liga, 6 January 1957
Rogelio Domínguez v Athletic Bilbao, 1959–60 Copa del Generalísimo, 19 June 1960
Paco Buyo v Athletic Bilbao, 1993–94 La Liga, 5 December 1993
Santiago Cañizares v Olympiacos, 1997–98 UEFA Champions League, 22 October 1997
Kiko Casilla v Sevilla, 2016–17 Copa del Rey, 12 January 2017
Andriy Lunin v Osasuna, 2024–25 La Liga, 9 November 2024
Goalkeeping
Clean sheets
- Most clean sheets: 264 –
Iker Casillas, 1999–2015 - Most clean sheets in La Liga: 177 –
Iker Casillas, 1999–2015 - Most clean sheets in Copa del Rey: 28 –
Iker Casillas, 1999–2015 - Most clean sheets in European Cup / UEFA Champions League: 53 –
Iker Casillas, 1999–2015 - Longest period without conceding a goal: 952 minutes –
Iker Casillas, 2013–14[45] - Longest period without conceding a goal in La Liga: 709 minutes
- Longest period without conceding a goal in Copa del Rey: 1,029 minutes –
Iker Casillas, 2012–2014 - Longest period without conceding a goal in European Cup / UEFA Champions League: 738 minutes –
Keylor Navas, 2014–2016
In a single season
- Most clean sheets in a single season: 26 –
Iker Casillas, 2010–11 - Most clean sheets in a single season in La Liga: 19 –
Francisco Buyo, 1986–87 - Most clean sheets in a single season in Copa del Rey: 8 –
Iker Casillas, 2013–14 - Most clean sheets in a single season in European Cup / UEFA Champions League: 9 –
Keylor Navas, 2015–16
Oldest and youngest
- Youngest goalkeeper to keep a clean sheet: 17 years, 159 days –
Manuel Alcalde v Athletic Bilbao, 1905 Copa del Rey final, 18 April 1905 - Oldest goalkeeper to keep a clean sheet: 38 years, 63 days –
Paco Buyo v Albacete, 1995–96 La Liga, 16 March 1996
From start of the season
- Best clean sheets start by an individual goalkeeper: 5
- Best clean sheets start by an individual goalkeeper in La Liga: 5 –
Rogelio Domínguez, 1957–58 - Best clean sheets start by an individual goalkeeper in Copa del Rey: 8 –
Iker Casillas, 2013–14 - Best clean sheets start by an individual goalkeeper in European Cup / UEFA Champions League: 6 –
Keylor Navas, 2015–16
Penalties saves
Note: Not including penalty shoot-outs.
- Most saved penalty kicks: 15 –
Iker Casillas, 1999–2015 - Most saved penalty kicks in a season: 4 –
Miguel Ángel, 1978–79 - Most saved penalty kicks in a match: 2
García Remón v Sporting Gijón, 1975–76 La Liga, 30 November 1975
Miguel Ángel v Atlético Madrid, 1978–79 La Liga, 26 November 1978
- Most saved penalty kicks in La Liga: 11 –
Iker Casillas, 1999–2015 - Most saved penalty kicks in Copa del Rey: 2 –
José Cabo, 1928–1929 - Most saved penalty kicks in Supercopa de España: 1 –
Thibaut Courtois, 2018– - Most saved penalty kicks in European Cup / UEFA Champions League: 3
Iker Casillas, 1999–2015
Thibaut Courtois, 2018–
- Most saved penalty kicks in FIFA Club World Cup: 1 –
Iker Casillas, 1999–2015 - Goalkeepers that saved penalty kicks in finals:
José Cabo v Espanyol, 1929 Copa del Rey final, 3 February 1929
José Araquistáin v Sevilla, 1962 Copa del Generalísimo final, 8 July 1962
Thibaut Courtois v Athletic Bilbao, 2022 Supercopa de España final, 16 January 2022
Other goalkeeping records
- Goalkeepers that scored against Real Madrid:
Manuel Balbuena for Huelva Recreation Club, 1907 Copa del Rey, 29 March 1907[46][note 24]
Ognjen Petrović for Red Star Belgrade, 1974–75 European Cup Winners' Cup, 19 March 1975[note 25]
Carlos Fenoy for Celta Vigo, 1976–77 La Liga, 7 November 1977[note 26]
Toni Prats for Real Betis, 1999–2000 La Liga, 25 January 2000[note 27]
Anatoliy Trubin for Benfica, 2025–26 UEFA Champions League, 28 January 2026[note 28]
- Outfield players who acted as goalkeeper:[note 29]
Jacinto Quincoces v Barcelona, 1940–41 La Liga, 1 December 1940[note 30]
Sabino Barinaga v Atlético Aviación, 1945–46 La Liga, 16 December 1945[note 31]
Macala v Celta Vigo, 1948–49 La Liga, 6 March 1949[note 32]
Sabino Barinaga v Celta Vigo, 1948–49 La Liga, 6 March 1949[note 32][note 33]
Ignacio Zoco v Anderlecht, 1962–63 European Cup, 26 September 1962[note 34]
Míchel v Tenerife, 1991–92 La Liga, 26 January 1992[note 35]
- Goalkeepers who played as outfield players:
José Bañón v Celta Vigo, 1948–49 La Liga, 6 March 1949[note 32]
Wins
Most matches won
Competitive, professional matches only. Including substitutes. Players in italics are still active outside the club. As of 5 July 2025.
| Rank | Player | Years | League | Cup | Europe[note 1] | Other[note 2] | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1999–2015 | 334 | 28 | 90 | 11 | 463 | |
| 2 | 2009–2023 | 309 | 28 | 85 | 18 | 440 | |
| 3 | 2005–2021 | 315 | 29 | 79 | 14 | 437 | |
| 4 | 1994–2010 | 327 | 19 | 74 | 9 | 429 | |
| 5 | 1983–2001 | 312 | 35 | 56 | 9 | 412 | |
| 6 | 2012–2025 | 266 | 19 | 84 | 25 | 394 | |
| 7 | 1953–1971 | 283 | 44 | 58 | 5 | 390 | |
| 8 | 2007–2022 | 265 | 24 | 67 | 16 | 372 | |
| 9 | 1971–1988 | 262 | 44 | 52 | 5 | 363 | |
| 10 | 1989–2003 | 251 | 25 | 62 | 11 | 349 |
By competition
- Most wins in La Liga: 334 –
Iker Casillas - Most wins in Copa del Rey: 44
- Most wins in Copa de la Liga: 4
- Most wins in Supercopa de España: 7
- Most wins in international competitions: 97 –
Iker Casillas - Most wins in UEFA club competitions: 93 –
Iker Casillas - Most wins in European competitions: 92 –
Iker Casillas - Most wins in UEFA Champions League: 90 –
Iker Casillas - Most wins in European Cup Winners' Cup: 9 –
Camacho - Most wins in UEFA Cup: 26 –
Míchel - Most wins in UEFA Super Cup: 5
- Most wins in Intercontinental Cup: 2
- Most wins in FIFA Club World Cup: 12 –
Luka Modrić - Most wins in FIFA Intercontinental Cup: 1 – 16 players
Consecutive
- Most consecutive matches won: 21 –
Marcelo, 16 September 2014 – 20 December 2014 - Most consecutive matches won in La Liga: 18

Ferenc Puskás, 23 October 1960 – 12 March 1961
Luis del Sol, 23 October 1960 – 12 March 1961
- Most consecutive unbeaten matches: 44 –
Lucas Vázquez, 27 September 2023 – 22 October 2024 - Most consecutive unbeaten matches in La Liga: 50 –
Emilio Butragueño, 21 February 1988 – 1 October 1989[53]
Titles
- Most major trophies at Real Madrid: 28 –
Luka Modrić, 2012–2025 - Most La Liga titles: 12 –
Paco Gento, 1953–1971 (Spanish record) - Most Copa del Rey titles: 5
Miguel Ángel, 1968–1986
Camacho, 1973–1989
- Most Supercopa de España titles: 5
Chendo, 1983–2001
Manolo Sanchís, 1983–2001
Marcelo, 2007–2022
Nacho, 2010–2024
Luka Modrić, 2012–2025
- Most European Cup / UEFA Champions League titles: 6 (European record)
Paco Gento, 1953–1971
Nacho, 2010–2024
Luka Modrić, 2012–2025
Dani Carvajal, 2013–
- Most UEFA Super Cup titles: 5 (European record)
Luka Modrić, 2012–2025
Dani Carvajal, 2013–
- Most FIFA Club World Cup titles: 5 (World record)
Nacho, 2010–2024
Luka Modrić, 2012–2025
Dani Carvajal, 2013–
Toni Kroos, 2014–2024
- Most Intercontinental Cup titles: 2 (Shared record)
Fernando Hierro, 1989–2003
Raúl, 1994–2010
Fernando Morientes, 1997–2005
Guti, 1995–2010
Roberto Carlos, 1996–2007
Disciplinary
- Most yellow cards: 252 –
Sergio Ramos, 2005–2021 - Most red cards: 26 –
Sergio Ramos, 2005–2021 - Most yellow cards in a season: 22 –
Sergio Ramos, 2014–15 - Most red cards in a season: 4
- Fastest yellow card: 25 seconds –
Robert Jarni v Dynamo Kyiv, 1998–99 UEFA Champions League, 17 March 1999 - Fastest red card: 1 minute and 27 seconds –
Iker Casillas v Espanyol, 2010–11 La Liga, 13 February 2011 - Fastest red card for a substitute: 1 minute –
García Hernández v Hercules, 1979–80 La Liga, 30 March 1980[54] - Most yellow cards in a match: 8 – Real Madrid 1–0
Sevilla, 2010–11 La Liga, 19 December 2010; Casillas, Ramos, Carvalho, Pepe, Özil, Di María, Lass Diarra and Pedro León - Most red cards in a match: 3
- Real Madrid 0–5
1. FC Kaiserslautern, 1981–82 UEFA Cup, 17 March 1982; San José, Cunningham and Pineda - Real Madrid 0–2
Sevilla, 1992–93 La Liga, 19 December 1992; Rocha, Míchel and Prosinečki - Real Madrid 0–3
Tenerife, 1993–94 Copa del Rey, 1 February 1994; Milla, Zamorano and Sanchís - Real Madrid 3–2
Raja Casablanca, 2000 FIFA Club World Championship, 10 January 2000; Roberto Carlos, Guti and Karembeu
- Real Madrid 0–5
- Shortest time between two consecutive yellow cards for the same player (sent off after second yellow card): 10 seconds –
Ángel Di María v Deportivo La Coruña, 2012–13 La Liga, 23 February 2013
Captaincy

- Total number of club captains – 39 players[note 36]
- Most matches started as captain: 307 –
Raúl, 1999–2010 - Most titles as captain: 12 –
Sergio Ramos, 2015–2021 - Longest serving captains: 9 seasons –
Paco Gento, 1962–1971 - Shortest serving captains: 1 season – 13 players
- First club captain –
Julián Palacios[note 37] - First official club captain –
Arthur Johnson v Barcelona, 1902 Copa de la Coronación, 13 May 1902 - Youngest starting captain: 19 years, 239 days –
José Giralt v Espanyol, 1903 Copa del Rey, 6 April 1903 - Oldest starting captain: 39 years, 257 days –
Luka Modrić v Real Sociedad, 2024–25 La Liga, 24 May 2025
Other records
- Player with most finals at Real Madrid: 28 –
Luka Modrić, 2012–2025 - Most matches drawn: 150 –
Manolo Sanchís, 1983–2001 - Most matches lost: 168 –
Raúl, 1994–2010 - Most outfield player appearances, never score: 170 –
Pedro de Felipe, 1964–1972 - Most appearances, never won a trophy: 143 –
Pahiño, 1948–1953 - Most appearances, never won a match: 6 –
Juan Manzanedo, 1916–1926 - Most appearances, never lost a match: 17 –
Carlos Secretário, 1996–1997 - Most appearances, always won a match: 10 –
Nuri Şahin, 2011–2012 - Most appearances, always lost a match: 3
Luis Méndez-Vigo, 1935–1940
Antonio Gento, 1961–1962
Internationals
- First international appearance by a Real Madrid player: Juan Monjardín, Spain
v Portugal
, 17 December 1922 - First international goal by a Real Madrid player: Juan Monjardín, Spain
v Portugal
, 17 December 1922 - First international appearance by a Real Madrid non-Spanish player: Raymond Kopa, France
v Paraguay
, 8 June 1958 - First international appearance by a non-Spanish player to have played for Real Madrid: Fernando Giudicelli, Brazil
v Yugoslavia
, 14 July 1930 (he later joined Real Madrid in 1935) - Most international caps as a Real Madrid player: 176 – Sergio Ramos, Spain

- Most capped player to play for Real Madrid: 226 – Cristiano Ronaldo, Portugal
(89 caps whilst at Real Madrid) - Most international goals as a Real Madrid player: 63 – Cristiano Ronaldo, Portugal

- Most international goals by a player who played for Real Madrid: 143 – Cristiano Ronaldo, Portugal
(63 goals whilst at Real Madrid)
FIFA World Cup
- First Real Madrid player to appear at a World Cup: Ciriaco Errasti, Hilario, Jacinto Quincoces, Luis Regueiro and Ricardo Zamora for Spain, at 1934 FIFA World Cup
- First non-Spanish player to appear at a World Cup: Raymond Kopa for France, at 1958 FIFA World Cup
- Most World Cup appearances while a Real Madrid player: Roberto Carlos and Iker Casillas, with 17 each
- Most World Cup goals while a Real Madrid player: Cristiano Ronaldo, 6 for Portugal in 2010, 2014 and 2018
- Below is the list of players who have won the FIFA World Cup as Real Madrid players:[56]
Günter Netzer (West Germany 1974)
Jorge Valdano (Mexico 1986)
Christian Karembeu (France 1998)
Roberto Carlos (South Korea/Japan 2002)
Iker Casillas (South Africa 2010)
Raúl Albiol (South Africa 2010)
Xabi Alonso (South Africa 2010)
Sergio Ramos (South Africa 2010)
Alvaro Arbeloa (South Africa 2010)
Sami Khedira (Brazil 2014)
Raphaël Varane (Russia 2018)
UEFA European Championship
- First Real Madrid player to appear at a European Championship: Ignacio Zoco and Amancio for Spain, at 1964 European Nations' Cup
- First non-Spanish player to appear at a European Championship: Uli Stielike for West Germany, at 1980 European Nations' Cup
- Most European Championship appearances while a Real Madrid player: Iker Casillas, 14 for Spain in 2004, 2008 and 2012
- Most European Championship goals while a Real Madrid player: Cristiano Ronaldo, 6 for Portugal in 2012 and 2016
- Below is the list of players who have won the UEFA European Championship as Real Madrid players:[57]
Ignacio Zoco (Spain 1964)
Amancio (Spain 1964)
Uli Stielike (Italy 1980)
Christian Karembeu (Belgium & Netherlands 2000)
Nicolas Anelka (Belgium & Netherlands 2000)
Rubén de la Red (Austria & Switzerland 2008)
Iker Casillas (Austria & Switzerland 2008 and Poland & Ukraine 2012)
Sergio Ramos (Austria & Switzerland 2008 and Poland & Ukraine 2012)
Raúl Albiol (Poland & Ukraine 2012)
Álvaro Arbeloa (Poland & Ukraine 2012)
Xabi Alonso (Poland & Ukraine 2012)
Pepe (France 2016)
Cristiano Ronaldo (France 2016)
Nacho (Germany 2024)
Dani Carvajal (Germany 2024)
Joselu (Germany 2024)
FIFA Confederations Cup
- Below is the list of players who have won the FIFA Confederations Cup as Real Madrid players.[58]
UEFA Nations League
- Below is the list of players who have won the UEFA Nations League as Real Madrid players:[59]
Copa América
- Below is the list of players who have won the Copa América as Real Madrid players.
Africa Cup of Nations
- Below is the list of players who have won the Africa Cup of Nations as Real Madrid players.
Transfers
Highest transfer fees paid

Real Madrid's record signing is Jude Bellingham. Bellingham signed for the club from Borussia Dortmund for a total of £88.5 million in June 2023, according to media reports.
| Rank | Player | From | Transfer fee (£ millions)[62][63] |
Transfer fee (€ millions) |
Date | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | £88.5 | €103[note 39] | 2023 | [64] | ||
| 2 | £89[note 40] | €100 | 2019 | [65][66] | ||
| 3 | £86 | €100 | 2013 | [67] | ||
| 4 | £80 | €94 | 2009 | [68] | ||
| 5 | £69.4 | €80[note 41] | 2022 | [69] | ||
| 6 | £46.6 | €76[note 42] | 2001 | [70] | ||
| 7 | £63 | €75 | 2014 | [71] | ||
| 8 | £56 | €67 | 2009 | [72] | ||
| 9 | £37 | €62 | 2000 | [73] | ||
| 10 | £52.4 | €60 | 2019 | [74] |
Highest transfer fees received
Cristiano Ronaldo's transfer to Juventus in 2018 remains the club's record sale. Ronaldo was also their record transfer at the time of his move to Madrid in 2009.
| Rank | Player | To | Transfer fee (£ millions)[62][63] |
Transfer fee (€ millions) |
Date | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | £100 | €117 | July 2018 | [75] | ||
| 2 | £59.7 | €75.6 | August 2014 | [76] | ||
| 3 | £60 | €70 | August 2022 | [77] | ||
| 4 | £58 | €65.5 | July 2017 | [78] | ||
| 5 | £42.5 | €50 | September 2013 | [79] | ||
| 6 | £40.3 | €45 | July 2019 | [80] | ||
| 7 | £32.5 | €42 | September 2008 | [81] | ||
| 8 | £36.3 | €41 | July 2020 | [82] | ||
| 9 | £34.5 | €40 | July 2013 | [83] | ||
| £34 | €40 | August 2021 | [84] |
Managers
Appearances

Competitive, professional matches only. Bold indicates manager is still active at club level. As of 24 May 2025.[85]
| Rank | Manager | Years | League | Cup | Europe[A] | Other[B] | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1959, 1960–1974 | 424 | 90 | 87 | 4 | 605 | |
| 2 | 2013–2015 2021–2025 | 228 | 30 | 77 | 18 | 353 | |
| 3 | 2016–2018 2019–2021 | 183 | 16 | 53 | 11 | 263 | |
| 4 | 1994, 1996 1999–2003 | 153 | 22 | 61 | 10 | 246 | |
| 5 | 1986–1989, 1992 | 139 | 28 | 28 | 2 | 197 | |
| 6 | 1974, 1977–1979 1982, 1985–1986 | 122 | 34 | 19 | 8 | 183 | |
| 7 | 2010–2013 | 114 | 24 | 36 | 4 | 178 | |
| 8 | 1979–1982 | 98 | 16 | 25 | 0 | 139 | |
| 9 | 1974–1977 | 103 | 13 | 18 | 0 | 134 | |
| 10 | 1982–1984 1990–1991 | 83 | 21 | 13 | 12 | 129 |
Most wins
Competitive, professional matches only. Bold indicates manager is still active at club level. As of 24 May 2025.
| Rank | Manager | Years | League | Cup | Europe[A] | Other[B] | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1959, 1960–1974 | 257 | 51 | 48 | 1 | 357 | |
| 2 | 2013–2015 2021–2025 | 162 | 22 | 53 | 13 | 250 | |
| 3 | 2016–2018 2019–2021 | 124 | 8 | 31 | 9 | 172 | |
| 4 | 1994, 1996 1999–2003 | 84 | 10 | 34 | 5 | 133 | |
| 5 | 2010–2013 | 87 | 16 | 24 | 1 | 128 |
Oldest and youngest
- Youngest manager: 25 years, 124 days –
Lippo Hertzka v Arenas de Getxo, 1929–30 La Liga, 23 March 1930 - Oldest manager: 65 years, 348 days –
Carlo Ancelotti v Real Sociedad, 2024–25 La Liga, 24 May 2025 - Youngest manager to win a title: 27 years, 136 days –
Lippo Hertzka, 1931–32 La Liga, 3 April 1932 - Oldest manager to win a title: 65 years, 191 days –
Carlo Ancelotti, 2024 FIFA Intercontinental Cup, 18 December 2024
Others
- First full-time manager:
Arthur Johnson - Most years as manager: 15 years –
Miguel Muñoz (1959, 1960–1974) - Most consecutive seasons managed: 14 seasons –
Miguel Muñoz (1960–1974) - Most titles won as manager: 15 –
Carlo Ancelotti (2013–2015, 2021–2025) - Most titles in a season: 4 –
Zinedine Zidane (2016–17 and 2017–18) - Most winning percentage: 75% –
Manuel Pellegrini (2009–2010)[note 43] - Most goals scored under manager: 1,225 –
Miguel Muñoz
Team records
Matches
Firsts
- First competitive match: 1–3 v Barcelona, 1902 Copa de la Coronación (semi-finals), 13 May 1902
- First Copa del Rey match: 4–1 v Espanyol, 1903 Copa del Rey (semi-finals), 6 April 1903
- First La Liga match: 5–0 v CE Europa, 1929 La Liga, 10 February 1929
- First match at Santiago Bernabéu: 3–1 v Belenenses, 14 December 1947
- First competitive match at Santiago Bernabéu: 3–1 v Espanyol, 1947–48 La Liga, 18 December 1947
- First Copa Eva Duarte (and only) match: 3–1 v Valencia, 1947 Copa Eva Duarte, 8 June 1948
- First Small Club World Cup match: 3–2 v La Salle, 1952 Small Club World Cup (group stage), 13 July 1952
- First Latin Cup match: 2–0 v Belenenses, 1955 Latin Cup (semi-finals), 22 May 1955
- First European Cup match: 2–0 v Servette, 1955–56 European Cup (round 1 – first leg), 8 September 1955
- First Intercontinental Cup match: 0–0 v Peñarol, 1960 Intercontinental Cup (first leg), 3 July 1960
- First European Cup Winners' Cup match: 0–0 v Hibernian, 1970–71 European Cup Winners' Cup (round 1 – first leg), 17 September 1970
- First UEFA Cup match: 2–1 v Basel, 1971–72 UEFA Cup (round 1 – first leg), 15 September 1971
- First Supercopa de España match: 1–0 v Real Sociedad, 1982 Supercopa de España (first leg), 13 October 1982
- First Copa de la Liga match: 1–0 v Real Sociedad, 1983 Copa de la Liga (quarter-finals), 12 June 1983
- First Copa Iberoamericana match: 3–1 v Boca Juniors, 1994 Copa Iberoamericana (first leg), 19 May 1994
- First UEFA Champions League match: 0–1 v Ajax, 1995–96 UEFA Champions League (group stage), 13 September 1995
- First UEFA Super Cup match: 0–1 v Chelsea, 1998 UEFA Super Cup, 28 August 1998
- First FIFA Club World Cup match: 3–1 v Al-Nassr, 2000 FIFA Club World Championship (group stage), 5 January 2000
- First FIFA Intercontinental Cup match: 3–0 v Pachuca, 2024 FIFA Intercontinental Cup (final), 18 December 2024
In a season
- Most matches played in a season: 68 matches – 2024–25 (Spanish record)
- Fewest matches played in a season: 0 matches – 1911–12[note 44] (Shared record)
- Most matches won in a season: 46 matches – 2011–12 and 2013–14
- Most matches won in a season in La Liga: 32 matches – 2011–12 (Shared record)
- Fewest official matches won in a season in La Liga: 7 matches – 1929–30
- Most matches drawn in a season: 21 matches – 1999–2000 (Shared record)
- Most matches drawn in a season in La Liga: 15 matches – 1978–79
- Fewest matches drawn in a season in La Liga: 1
- Most matches lost in a season: 19 matches – 1984–85
- Most matches lost in a season in La Liga: 13 matches – 1973–74
- Fewest matches lost in a season: 1 match – 1931–32 (Spanish record)
- Fewest matches lost in a season in La Liga: 0 – 1931–32 (Shared record)
- Most unbeaten matches in a season: 54 matches – 2016–17
- Most unbeaten matches in a season in La Liga: 39 matches – 1986–87, out of 44 matches (Shared record)
Record wins
- Record win: 11–1 against Barcelona (in 1943 Copa del Generalísimo)
- Record league win: 11–2 against Elche (in 1959–60 La Liga)
- Record Spanish cup win: 11–1 against Barcelona (in 1943 Copa del Generalísimo)
- Record European win: 9–0 against B 1913 (in 1961–62 European Cup)
- Record home win: 11–1 against Barcelona (in 1943 Copa del Generalísimo)
- Record away win: 8–0 against Olympiakos Nicosia (in 1969–70 European Cup)
- This match was held at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium because Olympiakos Nicosia’s stadium did not meet UEFA requirements, and Real Madrid were considered the away team rather than the hosts, and with the exception of this rare case, the record away win:
- 7–0 against Valdepeñas (in 1977–78 Copa del Rey)
- 7–0 against Progrès Niederkorn (in 1978–79 European Cup)
- 8–1 against San Sebastián (in 2002–03 Copa del Rey)
- This match was held at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium because Olympiakos Nicosia’s stadium did not meet UEFA requirements, and Real Madrid were considered the away team rather than the hosts, and with the exception of this rare case, the record away win:
- Record home league win: 11–2 against Elche (in 1959–60 La Liga)
- Record away league win:
- 6–0 against Real Zaragoza (in 2011–12 La Liga)
- 7–1 against Real Zaragoza (in 1987–88 La Liga)
- 8–2 against Deportivo La Coruña (in 2014–15 La Liga)
Record defeats
- Record league defeat: 1–8 against Español (in 1929–30 La Liga)
- Record Spanish cup defeat: 0–6 against Valencia (in 1998–99 Copa del Rey)
- Record European defeat:
- 0–5 against 1. FC Kaiserslautern (in 1981–82 UEFA Cup)
- 0–5 against Milan (in 1988–89 European Cup)
- Record home defeat: 0–6 against Athletic Bilbao (in 1930–31 La Liga)
- Record away defeat: 1–8 against Español (in 1929–30 La Liga)
Matches time
- Shortest match: 6 minutes, against Real Sociedad, 2004–05 La Liga, 5 January 2005[note 45]
- Longest match: 149 minutes, against Real Betis, 1965–66 Copa del Rey, 15 May 1966[note 46]
Streaks
Winning runs
- Longest winning run in all competitions: 22, 16 September 2014 – 20 December 2014 (Spanish record)
- Longest league winning run: 16, 2 March 2016 – 18 September 2016 (Shared record)
- Longest winning run in Copa del Rey: 10, 18 December 2013 – 2 December 2014
- Most home wins in a row (all competitions): 28, 2 June 1985 – 30 April 1986
- Most away wins in a row (all competitions): 12
- From 2 October 2011 to 14 January 2012
- From 20 September 2014 to 12 December 2014[note 47]
- Most home league wins in a row: 24, 3 December 1988 – 28 January 1990
- Most away league wins in a row: 13, 26 February 2017 – 14 October 2017 (Spanish record)
- Longest league winning run from the first match of season: 9, 15 September 1968 – 16 November 1968 (Spanish record)
UEFA competitions
- Longest winning run in UEFA competitions: 11, 23 April 2014 – 18 February 2015
- Longest winning run in UEFA Champions League: 10, 23 April 2014 – 18 February 2015
- Most UEFA Champions League home wins in a row: 17
- From 12 October 1955 to 21 April 1960[note 48]
- From 13 September 1978 to 16 March 1988
- Most UEFA Champions League away wins in a row: 5, 29 April 2014 – 18 February 2015
Unbeaten runs
- Longest unbeaten run (all competitions): 40, 9 April 2016 – 12 January 2017 (Spanish record)
- Longest unbeaten home run (all competitions): 83, 8 May 1977 – 18 January 1981[note 49] (Spanish record)
- Longest unbeaten away run (all competitions): 21, 21 September 2011 – 11 April 2012 (Spanish record)
- Longest league unbeaten run: 42, 27 September 2023 – 19 October 2024
- Longest league unbeaten home run: 121, 17 February 1957 – 20 February 1965 (Spanish record)
- Longest league unbeaten away run: 21, 30 September 2023 – 24 November 2024
UEFA competitions
- Longest unbeaten run in UEFA Competitions: 16, 12 April 2016 – 2 May 2017
- Longest unbeaten run in the UEFA Champions League: 15, 12 April 2016 – 2 May 2017
- Longest unbeaten home run in the UEFA Champions League: 32, 17 September 1975 – 24 October 1990
- Longest unbeaten away run in the UEFA Champions League: 11, 28 September 2010 – 27 March 2012
Winless runs
- Longest winless run: 9
- From 23 December 1984 to 17 February 1985
- From 27 February 1991 to 7 April 1991
- Longest home winless run: 5, 13 November 1949 – 5 February 1950
- Longest away winless run: 17, 22 November 1997 – 9 May 1998
- Longest league winless run: 9, 23 December 1984 – 17 February 1985
- Longest winless run in the UEFA Champions League: 6, 2 October 2002 – 11 December 2002
- Longest winless run in the UEFA Champions League (home matches): 3
- From 29 February 2000 to 4 April 2000
- From 22 October 2002 to 11 December 2002
Draws
- Most draws in a row: 5
- From 29 March 1970 to 3 May 1970
- From 7 January 1979 to 24 January 1979
- Most home draws in a row: 5, 13 November 1949 – 5 February 1950
- Most away draws in a row: 5
- From 6 December 1953 to 7 February 1954
- From 8 March 2006 to 16 April 2006
- Most league draws in a row: 4
- From 21 September 1947 to 12 October 1947
- From 2 March 1969 to 23 March 1969
- From 29 March 1970 to 19 April 1970
- From 17 February 2007 to 10 March 2007
Matches without draw
- Most consecutive matches without draw: 33, 29 March 1922 – 26 February 1928 (Shared record)
- Most consecutive matches without draw in La Liga: 32, 26 October 1952 – 1 November 1953 (Shared record)
Losses
- Most defeats in a row: 5
- From 3 April 1985 to 21 April 1985
- From 25 April 2004 to 23 May 2004
- From 2 May 2009 to 31 May 2009
- Most home defeats in a row: 4
- From 18 June 1995 to 17 September 1995
- From 11 April 2004 to 23 May 2004
- From 17 February 2019 to 5 March 2019
- Most away defeats in a row: 7
- From 26 October 1947 to 25 January 1947
- From 3 December 1950 to 18 March 1951
- Most league defeats in a row: 5
- From 25 April 2004 to 23 May 2004
- From 2 May 2009 to 31 May 2009
Scoring
- Longest scoring run: 73, 30 April 2016 – 17 September 2017 (Spanish record)
- Longest league scoring run: 54, 2 March 2016 – 17 September 2017
- Longest home league scoring run: 81, 11 November 1951 – 20 January 1957
- Longest away league scoring run: 35, 3 January 2016 – 29 October 2017 (Spanish record)
Non-scoring
- Longest non-scoring run: 5, 3 April 1985 – 21 April 1985
- Longest league non-scoring run: 3
- From 7 April 1985 to 21 April 1985
- From 17 September 1993 to 2 October 1993
- From 27 April 2002 to 10 May 2002
- From 26 September 2018 to 6 October 2018
Goals
In a match
- Most goals by Real Madrid in a match: 11
- Real Madrid 11–1 Barcelona, 1943 Copa del Generalísimo, 13 June 1943
- Real Madrid 11–2 Elche, 1959–60 La Liga, 7 February 1960
- Most goals in a match (both teams): 13
- Real Madrid 9–4 Extremeño, 1927 Copa del Rey, 6 March 1927
- Real Madrid 11–2 Elche, 1959–60 La Liga, 7 February 1960
- Most goals scored by Real Madrid in a losing match: 4
- Real Madrid 4–5 Real Sociedad, 1929 La Liga, 19 May 1929
- Real Madrid 4–5 Espanyol, 1939–40 La Liga, 3 March 1940
- Real Madrid 4–5 Sevilla, 1940–41 La Liga, 9 February 1941
- Most goals scored by Real Madrid in a drawn match: 6 – Real Madrid 6–6 Barcelona, 1916 Copa del Rey, 13 April 1916
The following table shows the most goals scored in a single match in Real Madrid’s history:
| Goals | Result | Date | Competition |
|---|---|---|---|
| 13 | Real Madrid 9–4 Extremeño | 6 March 1927 | Copa del Rey |
| Real Madrid 11–2 Elche | 7 February 1960 | La Liga | |
| 12 | Real Madrid 6–6 Barcelona | 13 April 1916 | Copa del Rey |
| Real Madrid 11–1 Barcelona | 13 June 1943 | ||
| Real Madrid 10–2 Rayo Vallecano | 20 December 2015 | La Liga | |
| 11 | Real Madrid 7–4 Castellón | 2 February 1947 | |
| Real Madrid 8–3 Celta Vigo | 15 January 1956 | ||
| Real Madrid 10–1 Las Palmas | 4 January 1959 | ||
| 10 | Madrid-Moderno[note 50] 5–5 Español Madrid | 19 March 1904 | Copa del Rey |
| Real Madrid 8–2 Barcelona | 3 February 1935 | La Liga | |
| Real Madrid 9–1 CD Castellón | 16 November 1941 | ||
| Real Madrid 6–4 Real Sociedad | 4 January 1942 | ||
| Barcelona 5–5 Real Madrid | 10 January 1943 | ||
| Real Madrid 7–3 Eintracht Frankfurt | 18 May 1960 | European Cup | |
| Real Madrid 9–1 Real Sociedad | 16 September 1967 | La Liga | |
| Real Madrid 7–3 Granada | 12 June 1974 | Copa del Rey | |
| Sporting Gijón 5–5 Real Madrid | 16 February 1989 | ||
| Real Madrid 9–1 Tirol | 24 October 1990 | European Cup | |
| Real Madrid 7–3 Sevilla | 30 October 2013 | La Liga | |
| Deportivo La Coruña 2–8 Real Madrid | 20 September 2014 | ||
| Real Madrid 9–1 Granada | 5 April 2015 | ||
| Real Madrid 7–3 Getafe | 23 May 2015 |
In a season
- Most goals scored in a season: 174 – 2011–12
- Most goals scored in a season in La Liga: 121 – 2011–12 (Spanish record)
- Fewest goals scored in a season in La Liga: 24 – 1930–31
- Most goals conceded in a season: 84 – 1998–99 and 2024–25
- Most goals conceded in a season in La Liga: 71 – 1950–51
- Fewest goals conceded in a season in La Liga: 15 – 1931–32 (Spanish record)
- Best goal difference in a season in La Liga: +89 – 2011–12 (Spanish record)
- Most matches with goals in a season: 60 – 2016–17; with goals in all matches (Spanish record)
Goalscorers
Note: Does not include own goals.
- Most goalscorers in a season: 22 – 2019–20 (Shared record)
- Most goalscorers in a season in La Liga: 21 – 2019–20
- Most goalscorers in a season in Copa del Rey: 11 – 1977–78
- Most goalscorers in a season in European Cup / UEFA Champions League: 14 – 2001–02
- Most goalscorers in a match: 6
- Real Madrid 6–0
Zürich, 1963–64 European Cup, 7 May 1964; Zoco, Felo, Muller, Puskás, Di Stéfano and Amancio - Real Madrid 8–0
Olympiakos Nicosia, 1969–70 European Cup, 24 September 1969; Amancio, Gento, Grosso, Fleitas, Grande and Pirri - Real Madrid 7–0
Valdepeñas, 1977–78 Copa del Rey, 14 September 1977; Isidro, Aguilar, Santillana, Wolff, Macanás and Del Bosque - Real Madrid 7–0
Progrès Niederkorn, 1977–78 European Cup, 27 September 1977; Pirri, Jensen, Stielike, Santillana, Hernández and Juanito - Real Madrid 7–0
Rayo Vallecano, 1979–80 La Liga, 3 February 1980; Santillana, Juanito, Cunningham, Hernández, Martínez and Portugal - Real Madrid 7–0
Sevilla, 1990–91 La Liga, 3 February 1991; Miguel Tendillo, Butragueno, Míchel, Gordillo, Hierro and Aragón - Real Madrid 6–2
Málaga, 2012–13 La Liga, 8 May 2013; Albiol, Ronaldo, Özil, Benzema, Modrić and Di María
- Real Madrid 6–0
Clean sheets
- Most clean sheets in a season: 30 matches – 2010–11 season
- Most clean sheets in a season in La Liga: 21 matches – 2023–24
- Most clean sheets in a season in Copa del Rey: 8 matches – 2013–14 (Spanish record)
- Most clean sheets in a season in European Cup / UEFA Champions League: 10 matches – 2015–16 (Shared record)
- Most consecutive clean sheets: 8 matches, 6 January 2014 – 28 January 2014
- Most consecutive clean sheets in La Liga: 7 matches
- 11 December 1994 – 5 February 1995
- 7 September 1997 – 27 October 1997
- Longest run without a clean sheet: 24 matches, 26 January 1941 – 18 January 1942
- Longest run without a clean sheet in La Liga: 26 matches, 8 May 1999 – 17 January 2000
Points
- Most points in a season:
- Fewest points in a season:
Penalty shootouts
By club
| Clubs | Pld | W | L |
|---|---|---|---|
| Atlético Madrid | 6 | 6 | 0 |
| Real Sociedad | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Real Zaragoza | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Barcelona | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Valencia | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Manchester City | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Juventus | 1 | 1 | 0 |
| Red Star | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Athletic Bilbao | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Necaxa | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Bayern Munich | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Total | 16 | 12 | 4 |
By competition
| Competition | Pld | W | L |
|---|---|---|---|
| Copa del Rey | 5 | 4 | 1 |
| UEFA Champions League | 5 | 4 | 1 |
| Copa de la Liga | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| Supercopa de España | 2 | 2 | 0 |
| UEFA Cup Winners' Cup | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| FIFA Club World Championship | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Total | 16 | 12 | 4 |
Complete list
- Key
= scored penalty
= missed penalty- golden background = scored penalty which ended the shoot-out
- red background = missed penalty which ended the shoot-out
- grey background = the first penalty in the shoot-out
- horizontal line within a list of takers = beginning of the sudden death stage
Penalty shootouts records
- Most penalties taken: 6 –
Juanito, 1977–1987[91] - Most penalties scored: 6 –
Juanito, 1977–1987 - Most penalties missed: 2 –
Camacho, 1974–1989 - Most penalties saved: 6 –
Miguel Ángel, 1968–1986 - Most penalties taken against Real Madrid: 2
Rubio, both with Atlético Madrid
Saúl, both with Atlético Madrid
Julián Alvarez, one with Manchester City and one with Atlético Madrid
Season-by-season performance
| Season | Division | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | Pts | Pos | CdR[92] | Competition | Result | Competition | Result | Player(s) | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| League[93] | Europe[94] | Other[95][96][97] | La Liga top scorer[note 51] | |||||||||||||
| 2020–21 | La Liga | 38 | 25 | 9 | 4 | 67 | 28 | 84 | 2nd† | R32 | Champions League | SF | Supercopa de España | SF | Benzema | 23 |
| 2021–22 | La Liga | 38 | 26 | 8 | 4 | 80 | 31 | 86 | 1st* | QF | Champions League | W* | Supercopa de España | W* | Benzema | 27‡ |
| 2022–23 | La Liga | 38 | 24 | 6 | 8 | 75 | 36 | 78 | 2nd† | W* | Champions League | SF | UEFA Super Cup Supercopa de España FIFA Club World Cup |
W* RU† W* |
Benzema | 19 |
| 2023–24 | La Liga | 38 | 29 | 8 | 1 | 87 | 26 | 95 | 1st* | R16 | Champions League | W* | Supercopa de España | W* |
Jude Bellingham | 19 |
| 2024–25 | La Liga | 38 | 26 | 6 | 6 | 78 | 38 | 84 | 2nd† | RU† | Champions League | QF | UEFA Super Cup Supercopa de España FIFA Intercontinental Cup FIFA Club World Cup |
W* RU† W* SF |
Mbappé | 31‡[note 52] |
Honours
Official
Regional competitions
- Campeonato Regional Centro / Trofeo Mancomunado:[99][100]
- Winners (23, record): 1903,[note 53] 1905, 1906, 1906–07,[note 54] 1907–08, 1912–13, 1915–16, 1916–17, 1917–18, 1919–20, 1921–22, 1922–23, 1923–24, 1925–26, 1926–27, 1928–29, 1929–30, 1930–31, 1931–32, 1932–33, 1933–34, 1934–35, 1935–36
- Runners-up (7): 1908–09 (after tiebreakers), 1910–11, 1914–15, 1918–19, 1924–25, 1927–28, 1939–40
- Copa Federación Centro:
- Winners (4, record): 1922–23, 1927–28, 1943–44, 1944–45
- Runners-up (1): 1940–41
Domestic competitions
- La Liga:[99]
- Winners (36, record): 1931–32, 1932–33, 1953–54, 1954–55, 1956–57, 1957–58, 1960–61, 1961–62, 1962–63, 1963–64, 1964–65, 1966–67, 1967–68, 1968–69, 1971–72, 1974–75, 1975–76, 1977–78, 1978–79, 1979–80, 1985–86, 1986–87, 1987–88, 1988–89, 1989–90, 1994–95, 1996–97, 2000–01, 2002–03, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2011–12, 2016–17, 2019–20, 2021–22, 2023–24
- Runners-up (27): 1929, 1933–34, 1934–35, 1935–36, 1941–42, 1944–45, 1958–59, 1959–60, 1965–66, 1980–81, 1982–83, 1983–84, 1991–92, 1992–93, 1998–99, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2008–09, 2009–10, 2010–11, 2012–13, 2014–15, 2015–16, 2020–21, 2022–23, 2024–25, 2025–26
- Copa del Rey:[99]
- Winners (20): 1905, 1906, 1907, 1908, 1917, 1934, 1936, 1946, 1947, 1961–62, 1969–70, 1973–74, 1974–75, 1979–80, 1981–82, 1988–89, 1992–93, 2010–11, 2013–14, 2022–23
- Runners-up (21, record): 1903, 1916, 1918, 1924, 1928–29, 1930, 1933, 1940, 1943, 1958, 1959–60, 1960–61, 1967–68, 1978–79, 1982–83, 1989–90, 1991–92, 2001–02, 2003–04, 2012–13, 2024–25
- Copa de la Liga:[99]
- Supercopa de España:[99]
- Copa Eva Duarte:
- Winners (1): 1947[note 55]
European competitions
Worldwide competitions
- FIFA Club World Cup:[99]
- Intercontinental Cup:[99][101]
- FIFA Intercontinental Cup:
- Copa Iberoamericana:[102]
- Winners (1, record): 1994[note 55]
Unofficial
|
|
In 2017, Real Madrid received the Nine Values Cup, an award of the international children's social programme Football for Friendship.[114]
Achievements
Doubles
- Copa de la Liga and UEFA Cup: 1
Three or more successive titles
Four titles in a season
Awards
Players Awards
Ballon d'Or (1956–)
The following players have won the Ballon d'Or while playing for Real Madrid:[115]


Alfredo Di Stéfano – 1957, 1959
Raymond Kopa – 1958
Luís Figo – 2000
Ronaldo – 2002
Fabio Cannavaro – 2006
Cristiano Ronaldo – 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017
Luka Modrić – 2018
Karim Benzema – 2022
FIFA World Player of the Year (1991–2009)
The following players have won the FIFA World Player of the Year award while playing for Real Madrid:
The Best FIFA Men's Player (2016–)
The following players have won The Best FIFA Men's Player while playing for Real Madrid:
European Golden Boot
The following players have won the European Golden Shoe while playing for Real Madrid:
Hugo Sánchez – 1989–90 (38 goals)
Cristiano Ronaldo – 2010–11 (40 goals), 2013–14 (31 goals), 2014–15 (48 goals)
Kylian Mbappé – 2024–25 (31 goals)
UEFA Club Footballer of the Year (1998–2010)
The following players have won the UEFA Club Footballer of the Year award while playing for Real Madrid:
Fernando Redondo – 2000
Zinedine Zidane – 2002
UEFA Best Player in Europe Award (2011–)
The following players have won the UEFA Best Player in Europe Award while playing for Real Madrid:
Cristiano Ronaldo – 2014, 2016, 2017
Luka Modrić – 2018
Karim Benzema – 2022
UEFA Champions League Player of the Season (2022–)
Karim Benzema – 2021–22
Vinícius Júnior – 2023–24
UEFA Champions League Young Player of the Season (2022–)
Vinícius Júnior – 2021–22
Jude Bellingham – 2023–24
Pichichi winners

The following Real Madrid players have won the Pichichi Trophy:
Manuel Olivares: (1) 1931–32
Pahiño: (1) 1951–52

Alfredo Di Stéfano: (5) 1953–54, 1955–56, 1956–57, 1957–58, 1958–59
Ferenc Puskás: (4) 1959–60, 1960–61, 1962–63, 1963–64
Amancio: (2) 1968–69, 1969–70
Juanito: (1) 1983–84
Hugo Sánchez: (4) 1985–86, 1986–87, 1987–88, 1989–90
Emilio Butragueño: (1) 1990–91
Iván Zamorano: (1) 1994–95
Raúl: (2) 1998–99, 2000–01
Ronaldo: (1) 2003–04
Ruud van Nistelrooy: (1) 2006–07
Cristiano Ronaldo: (3) 2010–11, 2013–14, 2014–15
Karim Benzema: (1) 2021–22
Kylian Mbappé: (2) 2024–25, 2025–26
Zamora winners

The following Real Madrid players have won the Ricardo Zamora Trophy:
Ricardo Zamora: (2) 1931–32, 1932–33
José Bañón: (1) 1945–46
Juan Alonso: (1) 1954–55
José Vicente Train: (3) 1960–61, 1962–63, 1963–64
José Araquistáin: (1) 1961–62
Antonio Betancort: (3) 1964–65, 1966–67, 1967–68
García Remón: (1) 1972–73
Miguel Ángel: (1) 1975–76
Agustín: (1) 1982–83
Francisco Buyo: (2) 1987–88, 1991–92
Iker Casillas: (1) 2007–08
Thibaut Courtois: (1) 2019–20
Managers awards
FIFA World Coach of the Year / The Best FIFA Football Coach
The following managers have won the FIFA World Coach of the Year / The Best FIFA Football Coach while managing Real Madrid:
José Mourinho – 2010
Zinedine Zidane – 2017
Carlo Ancelotti – 2024
IFFHS World's Best Club Coach winners
The following managers have won the IFFHS World's Best Club Coach while managing Real Madrid:
Vicente del Bosque – 2002
José Mourinho – 2012
Carlo Ancelotti – 2014, 2022, 2024
Zinedine Zidane – 2017, 2018
Johan Cruyff Trophy (2024–)
The following managers have won the Men's Johan Cruyff Trophy while managing Real Madrid:
Carlo Ancelotti – 2024
Club awards
- FIFA Club of the Century: 2000[116]
- FIFA Order of Merit: 2004
- IFFHS Best European Club of the 20th Century
- Kicker Sportmagazin Club of the 20th Century
- Globe Soccer Best Club of the 21st Century[117]
- Globe Soccer Best Club of the Year: 2014, 2016, 2017, 2022, 2024 (record)[118]
- IFFHS The World's Club Team of the Year: 2000, 2002, 2014, 2017, 2024 (joint record)
- Laureus World Sports Award for Team of the Year: 2025[119]
- World Soccer Men's World Team of the Year: 2017[120]
- Ballon d'Or Men's Club of the Year: 2024[121]
Rankings
- European Cup / UEFA Champions League all-time club rankings (since 1955): 1st place[122]
- UEFA coefficient most top-ranked club by 5-year period (since 1975–1979): 16 times (record)
- All-time La Liga table (since 1929): 1st place
Guinness World Records
- Most matches won in the UEFA Champions League era by a football team[123]
- Most consecutive UEFA Champions League matches scored in (jointly held)[124]
- Most title wins of the top division in Spanish football[125]
- Most title wins of the football European Cup / Champions League[126]
- Most consecutive home matches unbeaten in the top division of Spanish football[127]
- Most consecutive matches won in the top division of Spanish football (jointly held)[128]
- Most valuable football club[129]
- Most followers on Instagram for a sports team[130]
Other achievements
- Most appearances in the European Cup / UEFA Champions League: 56 seasons[122]
- First club to own the European Champion Clubs' Cup's official trophy.[131]
- World's most valuable sports team: 2013, 2014, 2015[132]
- First club to win consecutive UEFA Cups (1985 and 1986).
- Only team in UEFA club football history to defend both the European Cup and UEFA Champions League successfully.[133]
- Only team to win consecutive FIFA Club World Cup titles as well as three titles in a row (2016, 2017, 2018).
- First and only club to win three consecutive (or more) European Cup / UEFA Champions League titles twice (1956–1960 and 2016–2018).[134]
- First and only club to win consecutive UEFA Champions League titles as well as three consecutive titles (2016, 2017, 2018).[134]
- Most club world championships titles: 9
- World's most valuable football club: 2013–2016, 2019–2020, 2022–2025
- Highest-earning football club in the world: 2006–2016, 2019, 2024–2025
- Most European Cup / UEFA Champions League titles: 15[133]
- Most UEFA Super Cup titles: 6
- Most UEFA club competition titles: 26
- First club to defend the European Double successfully.
- Only club to win five consecutive European Cup / UEFA Champions League titles (1956–1960).
- Most European Cup / UEFA Champions League final appearances: 18
- Most European Cup / UEFA Champions League semi-final appearances: 33
- Most consecutive seasons in the European Cup: 15 (1955–56 to 1969–70)
- Most consecutive appearances in the UEFA Champions League group stage / league phase: 29 (1997–98 to 2025–26)[134]
- Most consecutive seasons in the UEFA Champions League knockout phase: 29 (1997–98 to 2025–26)
- Most consecutive UEFA Champions League semi-final appearances: 8 (2010–11 to 2017–18)
- Most consecutive European Cup final appearances: 5 (1956–1960)
- Most consecutive UEFA Champions League final appearances: 3 (2016–2018) (joint record)
- Most successful UEFA team to defend the European Cup / UEFA Champions League trophy: 6/15
- Most times to win all UEFA Champions League group stage matches: 3 (2011–12, 2014–15 and 2023–24) (joint record)
- Most consecutive knockout tie wins in European Cup: 20 (1955–1960)
- Most consecutive knockout tie wins in UEFA Champions League: 12 (2016–2018)
- Most consecutive European Cup / UEFA Champions League matches scoring: 34 (joint record)
Notes
- The "Europe" column includes goals and appearances in the European Cup / UEFA Champions League, European / UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, and UEFA Cup / Europa League.
- The "Other" column includes goals and appearances in the Supercopa de España, Copa de la Liga, European / UEFA Super Cup, Intercontinental Cup, Copa Iberoamericana, Latin Cup and FIFA Club World Championship / Club World Cup.
- He did not play any game in his first nor his last season in the club.
- On 7 May 2014, Cristiano Ronaldo played against Real Valladolid for only eight minutes before leaving due to injury without scoring a goal. This eight-minute appearance disrupted a streak between 2 March and 22 November 2014, spanning 19 matches. He had scored in eight consecutive matches before the game and in 11 consecutive matches after it. If he scored in this match, he would have scored in 20 consecutive matches.
- All in La Liga – once with four goals and once with five goals.
- Mbappé scored the hat-trick, between minutes 22 and 29, in 6 minutes and 42 seconds. Of Amancio's hat-trick, scored between minutes 61 and 68, there is no precise reference that shows the exact timing of the goals.
- Bernabéu scored his first goal in the 23rd minute and his third goal in the 118th minute of extra time. However, many sources attribute the first goal to Barcelona goalkeeper Luis Bru as an own goal. If this case is excluded, the longest hat-trick would be to Cristiano Ronaldo, lasting 86 minutes between the first and third goals (2', 54', 88') against Athletic Bilbao on 5 October 2014.
- Scored four goals in this match.
- Scored eleven goals in those matches.
- In La Liga against Osasuna, the match began on 28 January 1989, and continued until the 43th minute when the fans throwing fireworks at Paco Buyo caused the game's suspension with the score at 1–0 for Osasuna. Later, on 3 May 1989, after 95 days, the second half was played at La Romareda, and Hugo Sánchez managed to score the equalizer in the 86th minute, marking the longest goal from the opening whistle in Real Madrid's history.[28]
- Éder Militão scored a goal from Real's own half (60 meters) in a friendly match against Leganés on 5 August 2025.[31]
- Zamorano took only one penalty during his career with Real Madrid, and he failed to convert it, in a match against Real Zaragoza on 4 September 1995.
- Two scored by Hugo Sánchez and one by Bernd Schuster.
- No player has scored more than one own goal in a single match.
- Sañudo is the only player to score three headed goals in one half in Real Madrid history.
- In addition, Cándido Urretavizcaya scored a goal from a corner kick against Real Unión in 1930–31 La Liga on 15 February 1931. Many newspapers at the time mentioned that he scored the second goal from a corner kick, but in the end, the goal was credited to Antonio Emery as an own goal.[40]
- No goalkeeper has ever scored for Real Madrid in an official match throughout the club's history. The closest moment for a goalkeeper to score was Thibaut Courtois against Valencia in 2019–20 La Liga on 15 December 2019, when he headed the ball in the final minutes of the match, forcing a difficult save from the goalkeeper, and Karim Benzema followed up to score.
- Fernando Hierro played as a midfielder for three seasons between 1991–92 and 1993–94, after Radomir Antić converted him from centre-back to midfield. Benito Floro continued to deploy him in that role over the following two seasons, before Jorge Valdano restored him to the centre-back position in 1994–95.[41][42] During those three seasons in midfield, he scored 56 goals, while he netted 72 goals as an out-and-out defender across his remaining seasons at Real Madrid. Excluding this period in midfield, Sergio Ramos is the highest-scoring defender in Real Madrid history, with 101 goals.
- He played a total of 645 matches, the sixth overall in the club, and he managed to score in his second and in his last matches.
- This spanned 1,415 minutes, one minute short of Rafael Marañón's goalless streak.
- Three in Copa Iberoamericana, three in Supercopa de España, two in UEFA Cup, one in Copa del Rey and one in Copa de la Liga
- He did so against Kairat Almaty on 30 September 2025 and against Manchester City on 11 March 2026, both in the 2025–26 UEFA Champions League.
- He scored the goal to reduce the deficit after dribbling past the players and scoring the goal.
- Scored from a penalty kick. In the same match, he also scored a penalty shootout kick, eliminating Real Madrid from the competition.
- Scored after the ball rebounded from a save by goalkeeper Miguel Ángel following a penalty kick.
- Scored from a free kick.
- Scored a second-half stoppage time (eighth minute) goal for Benfica on 28 January 2026, in the last game of the league phase, and qualified his team for the play-offs.
- It does not include players who played in more than one primary position, such as Arthur Johnson, who played as both a forward and a goalkeeper.
- On 1 December 1940, during a match between Real Madrid and Barcelona at Camp de Les Corts, Spanish defender Jacinto Quincoces was forced to take over as goalkeeper in the 77th minute after the team's regular keeper, Enrique Esquiva, suffered a back injury following a collision with both Quincoces and Barcelona forward Julián Vergara. With no substitutions allowed at the time, Quincoces stepped into goal for the remainder of the match. Despite being a central defender, he made two notable saves, preventing further goals. The match ended in a 3–0 victory for Barcelona.[47]
- José Bañón suffered a knee injury caused by José Juncosa, Atlético’s forward, which caused him to lose consciousness, prompting Barinaga to guard Real Madrid’s goal for the remaining seven minutes of the first half. After the break, Bañón returned to his position that day.[48]
- On 6 March 1949, during the match between Real Madrid and Celta Vigo at the Balaídos stadium, José Bañón, Real Madrid’s goalkeeper, sustained a hand injury two minutes before the end of the first half after a collision with Celta Vigo players' feet. He was temporarily replaced by Macala for the remaining two minutes of the half. During halftime, it was confirmed that the goalkeeper had suffered a dislocated hand. Although the backup goalkeeper, Adauto Iglesias, was part of the squad traveling to Vigo, he was unable to participate due to illness. Consequently, coach Michael Keeping decided to deploy Sabino Barinaga as goalkeeper, field José Bañón as a winger, and return Macala to his natural position. This lineup remained unchanged until the end of the match.[49][50]
- Barinaga is the only outfield player in Real Madrid’s history who has taken the goalkeeper position more than once. Additionally, he is the outfield player who played as goalkeeper for the longest duration with Real Madrid, having played a full half.
- In the 27th minute, Real Madrid goalkeeper José Vicente suffered a concussion after a heavy collision with opposing players. Ignacio Zoco took his place for three minutes before Vicente returned to play. During those three minutes, Zoco was not involved in any play.[51]
- Other players (vice-captains) have led the team on the pitch when the club captain was not playing.
- The final match originally finished 1–0 for Senegal after extra time. On 17 March 2026, the CAF Appeal Board ruled that Senegal had forfeited the match for temporarily refusing to play and leaving the pitch in protest of a refereeing decision.[60] Pursuant to articles 82 and 84 of the competition regulations, the final was awarded as a 3–0 win for Morocco, thereby retroactively declaring them as 2025 Africa Cup of Nations champions and stripping Senegal of the title.[61]
- Initial €103 million plus reported €30.9 million bonuses
- Initial £89 million plus reported £60 million bonuses
- Initial €80 million plus reported €20 million bonuses
- Fee originally in 150 billion lire; the fixed exchange rate between euro and lire was 1:1936.27
- 36 wins in 48 matches
- All the matches played by the team this season were friendly matches. This was the only season in which Real Madrid did not participate in any official or regional match at all.
- The match began on 12 December 2004, and continued until the 88th minute when a false bomb threat forced the referee to suspend the game with the score at 1–1. Later, after 24 days, the remaining six minutes, including four minutes of added time, were resumed on 5 January 2005. Zinedine Zidane scored a penalty just four minutes into the restart.[86]
- Does not include the win over Cruz Azul in the semi-finals of the FIFA Club World Cup on 16 December 2014, as it was technically a neutral venue.
- Does not include the first five finals that Real Madrid won between 1956 and 1960, including the 1957 final against Fiorentina, which was held at the Santiago Bernabéu, as it was technically a neutral venue.
- Does not include the win in the 1980 Copa del Rey final, although despite the victory against their own reserve team, Real Madrid Castilla, at the Santiago Bernabéu, the match was technically a neutral venue.
- Real Madrid played this match under the name Madrid-Moderno, a merger between Madrid FC and Moderno.
- Kylian Mbappé was La Liga top scorer (31 goals) and won the European Golden Shoe.
- The 1903 championship was won by Moderno FC and was included in Real Madrid's trophies following their merger in 1904.
- In the 1906–07 season, Madrid FC won the tournament, but the Madrid Football Federation annulled the results.
- Inaugural winners.