List of ice hockey leagues

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This is a list of ice hockey leagues, both professional and amateur, from around the world; parentheses denote year of establishment and, where applicable, year of disestablishment.

North America[edit]

Major professional[edit]

Minor professional[edit]

Semi-pro[edit]

Junior[edit]

Major junior[edit]

Note: that the major junior level is considered professional by some authorities, including the NCAA, as its players earn a small stipend.

Junior A[edit]

Hockey Canada junior A leagues[edit]
USA Hockey junior leagues[edit]
Tier I
Tier II
Tier III
United Hockey Union (AAU) junior leagues[edit]
Independent junior leagues[edit]

Junior B[edit]

Hockey Canada junior B leagues[edit]

(*) Quebec Junior "AA" is roughly equal to Ontario Junior "B"

Junior C[edit]

Hockey Canada junior C leagues[edit]

(*) Quebec Junior "A" is roughly equal to Ontario Junior "C"

Junior D[edit]

(*) Quebec Junior "B" is roughly equal to Ontario Junior "D"

College[edit]

U Sports hockey (Canada)[edit]

NCAA hockey (United States)[edit]

Notes
  • Two all-sports conferences, the Division I Ivy League and Division III Middle Atlantic Conference, officially sponsor ice hockey for both men and women, but neither hold conference tournaments nor compete for their own automatic bids to the NCAA tournament. All of the hockey-sponsoring schools in both leagues are members of hockey-only leagues and compete for those leagues' automatic bids, with Ivy League members competing in ECAC Hockey and MAC members competing in the United Collegiate Hockey Conference. The Ivies and MAC both extrapolate their own conference champions from results of regular-season games between their own members.
  • The Northeast-10 sponsors a championship for its members that play men's ice hockey, but the NCAA doesn't currently sponsor a national championship at Division II level for either sex. All members of that conference with women's teams participate in the NEWHA.

NAIA hockey (United States)[edit]

Note: there are also independent teams outside of the WHAC.

ACHA hockey (United States and Canada)[edit]

Note: there are also many independent teams in all three ACHA divisions in addition to the many within the hockey conferences and leagues.

Women's[edit]

Senior[edit]

Sanctioned by Hockey Canada or USA Hockey[edit]

Canada[edit]
United States[edit]

School and youth[edit]

High school[edit]

Defunct leagues[edit]

South America[edit]

Africa[edit]

Asia[edit]

China[edit]

Taiwan[edit]

Hong Kong[edit]

India[edit]

Indonesia[edit]

Israel[edit]

Japan[edit]

Defunct

Iran[edit]

Kuwait[edit]

Kyrgyzstan[edit]

Macau[edit]

Malaysia[edit]

Mongolia[edit]

North Korea[edit]

Philippines[edit]

Qatar[edit]

Singapore[edit]

South Korea[edit]

Thailand[edit]

Turkey[edit]

(Leagues involve teams from both Europe and Asia)

Turkmenistan[edit]

United Arab Emirates[edit]

Uzbekistan[edit]

Eurasia[edit]

Europe[edit]

Multinational[edit]

Active
  • Alps Hockey League - multinational league with teams from Austria, Italy and Slovenia.
  • Austrian Hockey League - multinational league with teams from Austria, Hungary, Italy, Croatia and the Czech Republic.
  • Baltic Hockey League - multinational league with teams from Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.
  • BeNe League - multinational league with teams in the Netherlands and Belgium.
  • Champions Hockey League - multinational league/competition featuring top teams from first-tier leagues across Europe.
  • Erste Liga - multinational league with teams from Hungary, Romania and Austria.
  • Kontinental Hockey League - multinational league with teams from Russia, Belarus, China, Finland, Latvia and Kazakhstan.
  • Tipsport liga - Slovak league with two teams from Hungary.
  • Elite Women's Hockey League - multinational league/competition featuring teams from across Europe.
Defunct

Armenia[edit]

Austria[edit]

Men[edit]

Women[edit]

Belarus[edit]

Belgium[edit]

Defunct

Bosnia and Herzegovina[edit]

Bulgaria[edit]

Men[edit]

Women[edit]

Croatia[edit]

Czech Republic[edit]

Czechoslovakia[edit]

Denmark[edit]

East Germany[edit]

Estonia[edit]

Finland[edit]

Men[edit]

Defunct

Women[edit]

France[edit]

Men[edit]

Women[edit]

Georgia[edit]

Germany[edit]

Men[edit]

Women[edit]

Greece[edit]

Hungary[edit]

Iceland[edit]

Ireland[edit]

Italy[edit]

Semi-pro[edit]

Amateur[edit]

  • Italian Hockey League - Division I (former Serie C)

Junior and youth[edit]

  • Under 19 (1 national division)
  • Under 17 (1 national division)
  • Under 15 (2 national divisions)
  • Under 13 (many regional divisions)
  • Under 10 (many regional divisions)
  • Under 8 (many regional divisions)

Women[edit]

Latvia[edit]

Amateur[edit]

Lithuania[edit]

Luxembourg[edit]

The Netherlands[edit]

Defunct

Junior and youth[edit]

  • U17
  • U14
  • U12

Norway[edit]

Junior and youth[edit]

Poland[edit]

Romania[edit]

Russia[edit]

Men[edit]

Major professional[edit]

Minor professional[edit]

Semi-pro[edit]

Junior[edit]

Youth[edit]

Amateur[edit]

  • Night Hockey League

Women[edit]

Defunct[edit]

Serbia[edit]

Slovakia[edit]

  • Tipsport liga (1993–present after dissolution of Czechoslovakia. Czechoslovak First Ice Hockey League (1931–1993))
  • Slovak 1. Liga (12 teams, first 8 participate in play-offs and the winner plays with the worst team from Extraliga, last four teams participate in a play-out and 4th team after play-out plays a relegation game with the best team in 2.Liga)
  • Slovak 2. Liga

Slovenia[edit]

Soviet Union[edit]

Spain[edit]

Men[edit]

Women[edit]

Sweden[edit]

Men[edit]

  • Swedish Hockey League (New name for the top league in 2013. The national championship has been played since 1922 in other forms. 14 teams)
  • HockeyAllsvenskan (The Swedish second league. The four best teams compete in the end of the season with the two worst placed team in SHL. 14 teams.)
  • Hockeyettan, Division 1 (Divided into 4 regions: North, East, West, and South. The five best teams in each region make 2 new series called Allettan at the conclusion of the regions. The two Allettan winners, and the two teams that survive a three-round playoff, compete with the last two teams in HockeyAllsvenskan for their spots in the higher league. 48 teams at present. This is the lowest tier organised nationally.)
  • Hockeytvåan (Divided into 9 regions.)
  • Hockeytrean (Divided into 14 regions.)
  • Hockeyfyran (Divided into 7 regions. The league does not cover all of Sweden.)
  • Division 5 (Divided into 2 regions, both in Stockholm.)

Junior and youth[edit]

  • J20 SuperElit (Under 20, junior league.)
  • J20 Elit (Under 20, junior second league. Divided into 4 regions: North, East, West, and South.)
  • J18 Elit (Under 18, divided into 4 regions.)

Women[edit]

Switzerland[edit]

Men[edit]

Amateur[edit]

Women[edit]

Ukraine[edit]

Junior[edit]

Defunct[edit]

United Kingdom[edit]

Defunct Leagues

English Ice Hockey Association Women's Leagues

West Germany[edit]

Yugoslavia[edit]

Oceania[edit]

Australia[edit]

Men[edit]

Junior[edit]

Women[edit]

New Zealand[edit]

Disabled hockey leagues[edit]

Leagues for disabled hockey players:

References[edit]