History
Major League Soccer is the top-flight professional soccer league in the United States and Canada, and began play in 1996 after the USA hosted the 1994 FIFA World Cup. Originally represented by 10 teams, MLS has witnessed incredible growth, welcoming 12 new clubs to the league since 2015. Commissioner Don Garber has held his current role at MLS since 1999.
Teams
In 2025, 30 clubs compete in MLS play with fifteen teams competing in the Eastern Conference and 15 in the Western Conference. Expansion side San Diego FC, the league's 30th club, will debut in 2025.
2025 MLS Season
The 2025 MLS regular season begins on February 22, 2025 and will conclude on Decision Day, October 18. Each of the 30 MLS clubs will play 34 matches in the MLS regular season, 17 at home and 17 away. Clubs will play conference opponents twice (28 games), once at home and once away. Each club will play six different cross-conference opponents.
The top nine teams from each conference will qualify for the 2025 Audi MLS Cup Playoffs. The Audi 2025 MLS Cup Playoffs will culminate in Major League Soccer’s championship match, 2025 MLS Cup presented by Audi.
Soccer Stadiums
MLS is home to world-class stadiums and training facilities, having opened 12 new stadiums built for soccer in the past nine years, with more to come in New York City and Miami in the next few years.
MLS Season Pass on Apple TV
In 2023, Apple and Major League Soccer launched MLS Season Pass – an unprecedented subscription service available to fans in over 100 countries and regions featuring live broadcasts and replays of every match of the MLS regular season, Audi MLS Cup Playoffs, and Leagues Cup – all in one place and with no blackouts.
All matches are available on billions of devices through the Apple TV app on Apple devices, smart TVs, streaming devices, set-top boxes, and game consoles, and the web at tv.apple.com. The launch of MLS Season Pass marked the official kickoff of the 10-year partnership between MLS and Apple, a historic first for a major professional sports league.
MLS is the Most Globally-Diverse Men’s Professional League in North America
With players from 79 countries across six continents represented on 2024 rosters, Major League Soccer features the most geographically diverse and youthful player pool of any men’s professional league across North America.
Beyond North America, MLS continues to be the most globally representative league among the top men’s soccer leagues around the world, including the English Premier League (69 countries represented), France’s Ligue 1 (68), Italy’s Serie A (65), Spain’s La Liga (60), and Germany’s Bundesliga (54).
Record-Setting 2022 FIFA World Cup Representation
Major League Soccer was represented by a league-record 37 players at the World Cup in Qatar – the most of any league in the Western Hemisphere and only eclipsed globally by the Premier League, La Liga, Bundesliga, Serie A, and Ligue 1 in overall number of players called in to the World Cup. Atlanta United’s Thiago Almada of Argentina became the first active MLS player to be a member of the victorious World Cup squad.
Club Valuations
Per a Sportico report in January 2024, MLS clubs were valued at an average of $678 million, a near $100 million increase since September 2022. In 2024, four different MLS clubs were valued at more than $1 billion.