
Germany Women are the most-successful nation in Women’s European Championship history. And they’re looking to win again. Read on to see their fixtures for Women’s Euro 2025, odds to win the tournament and potential routes to the final.
Latest Germany odds to win Women’s Euro 2025
Germany are third-favourites with most bookmakers to win Euro 2025. Christian Wuck’s side are ranked around 7/1 to lift the trophy, working out to an implied probability of 12.5%.
Opta’s pre-tournament predictions from May gave Germany a 14% chance of winning another European Championship.
Germany Women’s Euro 2025 preview
Germany have won the Women’s European Championship in eight of the 13 editions of the tournament. They’ve only failed to win three of the tournaments they’ve entered. But it’s now 12 years since they last lifted the trophy. Germany were runners-up in 2022, having been underdogs throughout the competition. DFB-Frauen were slightly unfancied once more, but they have a strong young squad. Unfortunately, captain Giulia Gwinn suffered an injury in Germany’s opening game and has been ruled out for the rest of the tournament.
Germany Women’s Euro 2025 group stage results
Germany were commanding in their Euro 2025 qualifying group, winning five of their six matches. They had an interesting group at Euro 2025, drawn against Denmark and Sweden, as well as newcomers Poland. They were given a 49% chance of winning Group C per Opta’s pre-tournament predictions, with a 28% chance of finishing second.
Matchday 1: Germany 2-0 Poland
- Date: Friday 4th July
- Venue: Arena St Gallen, St Gallen
- Kick-off: 8pm (UK time)
Germany had a perfect record against Poland going into their opening game. And that continued in Switzerland. DFB-Frauen wasted a lot of chances in the first half and it took a moment of magic from Jule Brand to break the deadlock just after the break. Lea Schuller doubled Germany’s lead midway through the second half, sealing all three points.
Matchday 2: Germany 3-1 Denmark
- Date: Tuesday 8th July
- Venue: St Jakob-Park, Basel
- Kick-off: 5pm (UK time)
This was the first meeting between the nations since 2023, and it was Denmark who led at half-time through Amalie Vangsgaard, who netted moments after Klara Buhl had a goal ruled out for offside. Germany regrouped during the 15-minute interval and equalised when Sjoeke Nüsken converted from 12 yards. With the game seemingly heading towards a draw, Lea Schüller decided the contest with her second goal of the championship.
Matchday 3: Sweden 4-1 Germany
- Date: Monday 12th July
- Venue: Stadion Letzigrund, Zurich
- Kick-off: 8pm (UK time)
With both teams level on points, this fixture would decide who finishes as the group winners and runner-up. It started promisingly for Germany when Jule Brand netted inside the opening 10 minutes, but the wheels soon came off. Sweden struck twice — Stina Blackstenius and Smilla Holmberg scoring — before Carlotta Wamser was shown a straight red card. Fridolina Rolfo converted a subsequent penalty, with Lina Hurtig rounding off the big win in the late stages.
Germany route to the final
- Quarter-finals: Germany finished as runners-up in Group C and faced Group D winners France. DFB-Frauen won the game on penalties.
- Semi-finals: Group B winners Spain await in the semi-finals.
- Final: England are the expected opponents, but Italy could cause an upset.
Germany’s confirmed Women’s Euro 2025 squad
Giulia Gwinn suffered an injury in Germany’s opening game, keeping her out for “several weeks”. But she remains with the squad without a replacement having been called up.
| Player | Position | Age | Club |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ann-Katrin Berger | Goalkeeper | 34 | Gotham FC |
| Stina Johannes | Goalkeeper | 25 | Wolfsburg |
| Ena Mahmutovic | Goalkeeper | 21 | Bayern Munich |
| Sarai Linder | Defender | 25 | Wolfsburg |
| Kathrin Hendrich | Defender | 33 | Chicago Stars |
| Rebecca Knaak | Defender | 29 | Man City |
| Carlotta Wamser | Defender | 21 | Bayer Leverkusen |
| Janina Minge | Defender | 26 | Wolfsburg |
| Giulia Gwinn | Defender | 26 | Bayern Munich |
| Franziska Kett | Defender | 20 | Bayern Munich |
| Sophia Kleinherne | Defender | 25 | Wolfsburg |
| Sydney Lohmann | Midfielder | 25 | Man City |
| Sjoeke Nusken | Midfielder | 24 | Chelsea |
| Sara Dabritz | Midfielder | 30 | Real Madrid |
| Linda Dallman | Midfielder | 30 | Bayern Munich |
| Elisa Senss | Midfielder | 28 | Eintracht Frankfurt |
| Jule Brand | Midfielder | 22 | Lyon |
| Laura Freigang | Forward | 27 | Eintracht Frankfurt |
| Lea Schuller | Forward | 27 | Bayern Munich |
| Cora Zicai | Forward | 20 | Wolfsburg |
| Selina Cerci | Forward | 25 | Hoffenheim |
| Giovanna Hoffmann | Forward | 26 | RB Leipzig |
| Klara Buhl | Forward | 24 | Bayern Munich |
Who are the favourites for Women’s Euro 2025?
Spain are the favourites to win Women’s Euro 2025, with England not too far behind. But France and Germany have similar odds to lift the trophy. You can find a breakdown of the favourites here.