Share
Here is the official and printable NCAA bracket for the 2025 NCAA Division I women’s basketball tournament.
No. 2 UConn won the championship 82-59 over No. 1 South Carolina.
NCAA bracket 2025: Printable March Madness bracket for the women’s tournament
Click or tap here to open the printable bracket | Click or tap here for the interactive bracket

2025 NCAA women’s tournament schedule, scores, highlights
All times ET
Sunday, April 6 (National championship game in Tampa, Fla.)
Wednesday, March 19 (First Four)
Thursday, March 20 (First Four)
Friday, March 21 (First Round/Round of 64)
(6) Michigan 80, (11) Iowa State 74
(4) Kentucky 79, (13) Liberty 78
(9) Indiana 76, (8) Utah 68
(3) Notre Dame 106, (14) Stephen F. Austin 54
(5) Kansas State 85, (12) Fairfield 41
(4) Baylor 73, (13) Grand Canyon 60
(2) TCU 73, (15) FDU 51
(1) South Carolina 108, (16) Tennessee Tech 48
(10) Oregon 77, (7)Â Vanderbilt 73 (OT)Â
(4) Ohio State 71, (13) Montana State 51
(5) Ole Miss 83, (12) Ball State 65
(7) Louisville 63, (10) Nebraska 58
(8) Richmond 74, (9) Georgia Tech 49
(5) Tennessee 101, (12) South Florida 66
(2) Duke 86, (15) Lehigh 25
(1) UCLA 84, (16) Southern U. 46Â
Saturday, March 22 (First Round/Round of 64)
(6) Iowa 92, (11) Murray State 57
(2) UConn 103, (15) Arkansas State 34
(5) Alabama 81, (12) Green Bay 67
(2) NC State 75, (15) Vermont 55
(6) West Virginia 78, (11) Columbia 59
(3) Oklahoma 81, (14) FGCU 58
(1) Southern California 71, (16) UNC Greensboro 25
(10) South Dakota State 74, (7) Oklahoma State 68
(4) Maryland 82, (13) Norfolk State 69
(3) North Carolina 70, (14) Oregon State 49
(7) Michigan State 64, (10) Harvard 50
(9) Mississippi State 59, (8) California 46
(8) Illinois 66, (9) Creighton 57
(6) Florida State 94, (11) George Mason 59
(1) Texas 105, (16)Â William & Mary 61
(3) LSU 103, (14) San Diego State 48
Sunday, March 23 (Second Round/Round of 32)
Monday, March 24 (Second Round/Round of 32)
Friday, March 28 (Sweet 16)
Saturday, March 29 (Sweet 16)
Sunday, March 30 (Elite Eight)
Monday, March 31 (Elite Eight)
Friday, April 4 (Final Four in Tampa, Fla.)
This is the schedule for the tournament:
Selection Sunday:Â 8 p.m. ET Sunday, March 16 on ESPN
First Four:Â March 19-20
First round:Â March 21-22
Second round:Â March 23-24
Sweet 16:Â March 28-29
Elite Eight: March 30-31
Final Four: Friday, April 4 at 7 p.m. with the second semifinal starting 30 minutes after the first game ends. Both will be at Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida
NCAA championship game: Sunday, April 6 at 3 p.m. ET on ABC, hosted at Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida
Beginning in 2023, the Sweet 16/Elite Eight will be held at two sites per year, with eight teams competing at each site:
2025Â Regional ROUND SITES
Â
Â
Â
Round
City
Venue
Dates
Sweet 16/Elite Eight
Birmingham, Alabama
Legacy Arena
March 30-31
Sweet 16/Elite Eight
Spokane, Washington
Spokane Arena
March 30-31
These are the future sites for the championship:
YEAR/DATES
CITY
HOST
FACILITY
2025: April 4 and 6
Tampa Bay, Florida
University of South Florida and the Tampa Bay Sports Commission
Amalie Arena
2026: April 3 and 5
Phoenix
Arizona State University
Footprint Center
2027: April 2 and 4
Columbus, Ohio
The Ohio State University and the Greater Columbus Sports Commission
Nationwide Arena
2028: March 31 and April 2
Indianapolis
Horizon League, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis and the Indiana Sports Corp
Gainbridge Fieldhouse
2029: March 30 and April 1
San Antonio
University of the Incarnate Word, University of Texas at San Antonio and San Antonio Sports
Alamodome
2030: April 5 and 7
Portland, Oregon
University of Portland and Sport Oregon
Moda Center
2031: April 4 and 6
Dallas
Big 12 Conference and the Dallas Sports Commission
American Airlines Center

The closest calls for 14-over-3 NCAA women’s basketball tournament upsets
Here are the 17 times in March Madness history that 14 vs. 3 games have been decided by fewer than 10 points in the NCAA women’s basketball tournament.

The 10 undefeated women’s basketball national champions
Since 1982, there have been 10 undefeated champions in Division I women’s basketball. Here is a quick look at each of those teams.
Schools with the most DI women’s basketball national championships
UConn has more DI women’s college basketball titles than any other program. Here’s a look at the women’s basketball teams that have won two or more national championships.