
ICC Champions Trophy Winners List (1998-2025): The ICC Champions Trophy is a prominent one-day international elimination tournament launched by the ICC in 1998. The ICC Champions Trophy, which began in 1998 as the ICC Knockout Tournament, was originally intended to subsidise cricket in non-Test nations.
Earlier, the tournament was limited to the top eight teams, a restriction that was established in 2009. It was cancelled after the 2017 edition to improve the efficiency of ICC events. However, in 2021, the ICC announced a return to 2025 (Pakistan) and 2029 (India). We have provided the ICC Champions Trophy Winners List from 1998 to 2025 on this page.
ICC Champions Trophy Winners List (1998-2025)
Let’s take look at the ICC Champions Trophy Winners List form 1998-2025 with winner and runner-up country given in the table below
Year | Winner(s) | Runner-Up | Hosted By |
1998 | South Africa | West Indies | Bangladesh |
2000 | New Zealand | India | Kenya |
2002 | Sri Lanka and India | – | Sri Lanka |
2004 | West Indies | England | England |
2006 | Australia | West Indies | India |
2009 | Australia | New Zealand | South Africa |
2013 | India | England |
England and Wales
|
2017 | Pakistan | India |
England and Wales
|
2025 | India | New Zealand | Pakistan |
ICC Champions Trophy Winners 2025
In the ICC Champions Trophy 2025 final, India defeated New Zealand by four wickets on March 9 at Dubai International Cricket Stadium. India defeated New Zealand 251-7 in the 2025 Champions Trophy final in Dubai, winning by four wickets. India defeated New Zealand by four wickets in the ICC Champions Trophy final in Dubai, making it back-to-back global cricket event victories.
How many India won the Champions Trophy?
India is the most successful team in Champions Trophy history, having won three titles each. The event has had nine editions, with India participating in each one. India won the ICC Champions Trophy thrice in the following year:
- 2002 (Joint winners with Sri Lanka)
- 2013 (Champions defeating England in the final)
- 2025 – Defeated New Zealand in the final