Libmonster ID: UK-3187

Question that is asked more and more as women's football grows in popularity: who fills the stadiums and watches broadcasts? Women supporting their gender? Or men who have been following football out of habit but now discover new names? The answer, as usual, is more complex than it seems. The closer we get to 2026, the more obvious it becomes that gender boundaries on the stands are blurring.

Myth of the "women's" fan

For a long time, it was believed that women, especially teenage girls, were the main audience for women's football. There was logic in this: a role model, the struggle for equality, the desire to support "their own". But research on the audience in recent years (including surveys at the 2019 and 2023 World Cups) paints a different picture. On average, the proportion of men among the audience for women's football ranges from 45% to 55%, and even reaches 60% at top tournaments. That is, men are not less, and sometimes even more passionate. The difference is in how they watch and which matches they choose.

Male audience: fans of the game, not gender

Men coming to women's football rarely discuss "cuteness" or "femininity". They talk about tactics, speed, shots. For them, it's just good football. Research shows that men are more likely to watch playoffs and finals of major tournaments than group matches. They are attracted by the heat, penalty shootouts, drama. Especially popular is women's football among fathers with daughters who play football. They switch from "men's" football because they see the same dedication in girls. Men in the millennial age group (30-45 years) are the most active group: they grew up in an era when women's football was already on TV, and do not feel uncomfortable with the thought that a woman is kicking the ball.

Female audience: identity and empathy

Women undoubtedly make up the backbone of support. But their motivation is different. They value representation: seeing strong, successful athletes on screen who are not fighting for men's attention but for trophies. Women are more likely to watch women's football in company (friends, mothers with daughters) and less likely to watch alone. For them, going to the stadium is also an act of solidarity. Moreover, women value the "purity" of the game more: less simulation, less dirt, less arguing with referees. According to surveys, the female audience is more loyal to losses: they continue to attend matches even in a bad season.

Stereotypes that are being broken

The common myth: men do not watch women's football because it is "slow" and "unexciting". In fact, the speed of women's football is lower, but the intelligence of the game is higher. Men who are fans of tactics appreciate this. Another myth: women on the stands are attracted only by the appearance of players. This is an offensive simplification. Yes, there are fan communities focused on idols among teenage girls, but they are also present in men's football. The third myth: women's football is watched only in countries where it is developed (USA, Germany, England). But, for example, in Brazil and Japan, the proportion of male viewers reaches up to 65%.

Geography and cultural differences

In the USA, women's football (football is the number one women's sport there) is watched mainly by women and girls. Men are more committed to American football. In Europe, the balance is more even. In England, men are even slightly more than women at women's Super League matches (52% vs 48%). In Germany, on the other hand, women account for up to 55%. In Scandinavia, women's football is perceived as a natural part of society, and the gender gap is minimal. In Latin America, the traditionally high level of machismo has an impact: men rarely admit that they watch women's football, but television ratings show the opposite - they watch, but do not advertise it.

Examples from life: stories of fans

Take Mario, 34, a turner from Porto. He admits: "I am a fan of 'Benfica' (men's), but my daughter brought me to a women's team game. I expected boredom, but I got into real adrenaline. Now I don't miss the derby of the women's league." And Anna, 28, a student from Minsk: "I watch women's football because men's football seems too commercial. There are legionnaires, millionaires, but here you can see the soul. But I go to matches with a guy, he also watches." Ilya, 45, a physical education teacher: "My students play football, and I started watching women's championships to understand the trends. Before, I only knew Messi, now - Morgan, Renar, Harder."

Who pays money and goes to the stadium

Men are more likely to buy season tickets and spend money on merchandise. This is due to tradition: men invest more in sports consumption. But women are more likely to come to matches in groups (one ticket for four). At the same time, women are more willing to go to experimental formats (family sections, picnics on the stadium). Men are more conservative in choosing a place: they need an active support section where they can shout and stand.

The impact of media and marketing

When women's football broadcasts were removed from paid channels and made free, the male audience grew by 40%. Men are not willing to pay for something they are not used to watching. Free matches on YouTube and TikTok attracted a new young male audience (16-25 years old) who do not remember old stereotypes. Women are more likely to subscribe to paid streaming services for women's football because they value the guarantee of broadcast.

Conclusion: the future is for mixed support

By 2026, it is already absurd to ask "whose sport it is". Women's football is loved by everyone: fathers with daughters, boys with girls, friends without boys, grandfathers with grandchildren. Gender division is fading. What matters is what attracts - the purity of the game, drama, speed, empathy. Marketers stop dividing the audience into "female" and "male" and start dividing by values. And the truth is that when the ball goes into the net, it doesn't matter who is shouting on the stands. Everyone shouts as loudly.


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Quid est pro feminis certaminibus pugnat? // London: British Digital Library (ELIBRARY.ORG.UK). Updated: 11.06.2026. URL: https://elibrary.org.uk/m/articles/view/Quid-est-pro-feminis-certaminibus-pugnat (date of access: 12.06.2026).

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