Who Has Won the Africa Cup of Nations? Full List and Morocco’s Place in History

The Africa Cup of Nations has crowned champions for decades. Here is the complete AFCON winners list by year, plus key takeaways on the most successful nations and Morocco’s historic 1976 title.
Fans celebrating inside a packed Morocco stadium during an Africa Cup of Nations match

Photo by Rwanda Lens via Pexels

As Morocco prepares to host the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations, the tournament returns to a country that holds a unique place in African football history. From Egypt’s long-standing dominance to Cameroon’s consistency and the recent rise of Côte d’Ivoire and Senegal, the AFCON story is one of cycles, eras, and rare home triumphs.

Hosting the competition once again places Morocco at the center of that history, and opens the door to rewriting it.

A Look Back at Every AFCON Champion

Since its creation in 1957, the Africa Cup of Nations has crowned champions across the continent, reflecting shifts in power, football development, and regional dominance. Some nations built dynasties, while others seized a single historic moment.

Africa Cup of Nations – Champions by Year

YearHost CountryChampion
1957SudanEgypt
1959EgyptEgypt
1962EthiopiaEthiopia
1963GhanaGhana
1965TunisiaGhana
1968EthiopiaDR Congo
1970SudanSudan
1972CameroonCongo
1974EgyptDR Congo
1976EthiopiaMorocco
1978GhanaGhana
1980NigeriaNigeria
1982LibyaGhana
1984Côte d’IvoireCameroon
1986EgyptEgypt
1988MoroccoCameroon
1990AlgeriaAlgeria
1992SenegalCôte d’Ivoire
1994TunisiaNigeria
1996South AfricaSouth Africa
1998Burkina FasoEgypt
2000Ghana / NigeriaCameroon
2002MaliCameroon
2004TunisiaTunisia
2006EgyptEgypt
2008GhanaEgypt
2010AngolaEgypt
2012Gabon / Equatorial GuineaZambia
2013South AfricaNigeria
2015Equatorial GuineaCôte d’Ivoire
2017GabonCameroon
2019EgyptAlgeria
2021CameroonSenegal
2023*Côte d’IvoireCôte d’Ivoire
2025MoroccoTo be decided

*Tournament played in early 2024.

Morocco’s only title came in 1976, during a unique final-group format. Nearly five decades later, the Atlas Lions return as hosts with an entirely different profile — global stars, modern infrastructure, and continental expectations.

Which Nations Dominate AFCON History?

While many countries have lifted the trophy at least once, only a few have managed sustained dominance. Titles often reflect long-term football structures rather than single golden generations.

Africa Cup of Nations – Titles by Nation (All-Time)

NationAFCON Titles
Egypt7
Cameroon5
Ghana4
Nigeria3
Côte d’Ivoire3
Algeria2
DR Congo2
Morocco1
Tunisia1
South Africa1
Zambia1
Senegal1
Ethiopia1
Sudan1
Congo1

Egypt remains the benchmark, including a historic three-peat between 2006 and 2010. Cameroon follows with consistency across generations, while Côte d’Ivoire’s recent triumph confirms its modern resurgence.

Morocco, by contrast, sits among nations with a single title, a category that includes Senegal and Algeria until recently.

Why AFCON 2025 Matters So Much for Morocco

Hosting AFCON is rarely neutral. Historically, it brings pressure — but also opportunity.

Morocco enters the 2025 edition with:

  • One of Africa’s most complete squads
  • European-based leaders like Achraf Hakimi and Brahim Díaz
  • Modern stadiums across multiple cities
  • Recent global credibility following the 2022 World Cup

A home victory would not simply add a trophy. It would:

  • End a 49-year title drought
  • Move Morocco out of the “single-title” category
  • Cement its status as a modern African powerhouse
  • Redefine its historical standing alongside elite nations

In AFCON history, moments like these reshape narratives permanently.

Related:

MoroccoBeat Team

We created MoroccoBeat from a shared passion for storytelling and a clear ambition: to reflect the rhythm of a nation in motion. Morocco is a land of contrasts, where deep-rooted heritage coexists with ambitious visions for the future, and our work seeks to capture this dynamic with accuracy, depth, and purpose. From the evolving urban energy of Casablanca to the vast stillness of the Moroccan Sahara, we explore the places, people, and projects that are shaping the country today. Our editorial approach blends narrative insight with practical value, offering readers both compelling stories and useful guidance across culture, sports, tourism, and innovation. Through MoroccoBeat, we aim to connect audiences beyond borders, inspire informed and meaningful journeys, and shed light on Morocco’s growing role as a regional and global hub of creativity, ambition, and opportunity.

We will be happy to hear your thoughts

      Leave a reply

      Morocco Beat
      Logo