With the Women’s Euro 2025 tournament kicking off next week, we’re giving readers the score on the 16 kits worn by the teams playing in this year’s competition.
Venues across Switzerland are hosting matches from 2 to 27 July 2025, making up the 14th edition of tournament.
Each of Adidas’ designs are informed by artistic movements native to the corresponding country, while Nike chose to nod to national traditions and legacies. Puma designed kits make reference to country-specific craft techniques, natural landscapes and national flags, Hummel’s single kit references timeless Danish design.
Presented in alphabetical order, read on to find out about the strips that will clothe each of the 16 teams taking part in Women’s Euro 2025:
Belgium by Adidas
Adidas created six of the 16 kits for the competition, all informed by the artistic movements synonymous with country’s cultural heritage. Despite their differing appearances, all of the strips incorporate technology designed to keep players dry and comfortable during play.
For the Belgian team, the sportswear brand decorated the away kit with abstract geometric patterns rendered in yellow, orange and red with purple accents, in reference to motifs prevalent within Belgian art from the 1920s.
On the rear of the neck, a sign-off reading Belgium is decorated with a flame-like font to reference the team’s name, the Red Flames.
Denmark by Hummel
Danish sportswear brand Hummel designed one strip to be worn in the Women’s Euro 2025 tournament for its own national team.
The unadorned, simplistic shirt coloured in block red draws on the country’s deeply engrained design heritage, with Hummel’s signature chevrons and other detailing picked out in contrasting white.
England by Nike
Shifting colours were chosen by Nike to represent England‘s pioneering team playing through the 70s and 80s for this year’s primary kit.
Designed as an homage to the team’s victories, the kit features a white jersey contrasted with vibrant red and blue hues, and is complete with the traditional England crest.
Image courtesy of SPL / Karim Awad
Finland by Nike
Nike collaborated with designer Klaus Haapaniemi to design Finland’s latest home kit, which sees its white shirt adorned by a central blue stripe.
The shirt, which features gold detailing and graphic patterns by Haapaniemi, is complete with a hand-drawn font that draws on Finnish Art Nouveau architecture.
France by Nike
Red specs decorate the deep blue-coloured jersey chosen for the 2025 France kits designed by Nike to pay tribute to the country’s artistic revolutionaries.
Statement details of the kit include a white Col Claudine collar, three-colour labels on the sleeves, and names and numbers written in an Art Nouveau-informed font.
Germany by Adidas
Adidas’ kit for the German team is decorated with chunky, gradually fading lines reminiscent of the marks made using spray paint cans that the graffiti artwork that decorates the country’s major cities.
The shades of red and pink are contrasted with yellow detailing on either side of the chest as well as in the Deutschland sign-off on the reverse of the neck, which is written in a spray paint-like font.
Further elements added to Adidas’ shirts to enhance wearer comfort include additional mesh panels and lighter crests, both of which help to improve air circulation during wear.
Iceland by Puma
The pastel purples, blues and greens that make up the northern lights were the basis of Iceland‘s away kit designed by Puma.
Horizontal bands of cool-toned gradient colour decorate the shirt, which has lavender purple cuffs around the arms and neck and a black Puma logo picked out on the chest.
Italy by Adidas
Italy’s Renaissance period – which took place between the 15th and 17th centuries – informed further artistic movement such as the Realism and Naturalism movements. Adidas recalled these in the design of the Italian away kit, which comprises overlapping botanical motifs.
The majority of the shirt is rendered in shades of green and white which, combined with red details, recalls the colours of the Italian flag, placed in shield form in the centre of the chest.
Netherlands by Nike
The traditional Dutch oranje colour was contrasted with white graphics and micro-dots influenced by a national art movement of the 90s for this year’s Netherlands kit.
The shirt is finished with a red, white and blue trim that honours the national flag, while fonts used for the names and numbers nod to works by contemporary Dutch artists.
Norway by Nike
Norwegian methods of knitting informed the graphics and patterned trims that adorn this year’s Norway kits.
Defined by its deep-red hue, the shirt is complemented by blue and white accents that reflect the country’s flag, which is embroidered onto its centre.
Poland by Nike
Poland decided to keep its home kit the same as last year’s – retaining its classic colours of white and red.
The kit’s white shirt is offset by a red ribbed polo collar and matching red cuffs. A large crest is placed on the front of the shirt and paired with a the Polish Football Federation’s logo on the back of the collar.
Portugal by Puma
Sampled from the Quinas emblem found on the Portuguese coat of arms and the team’s shield, Puma picked out red and green to decorate the national team’s away kit.
The distinctive colour pairing manifests in a densely-spotted pattern of different sized dots, arranged in various clusters that create a dynamic overall sense of movement, grounded by black bands around the neck and arms.
Spain by Adidas
Pale blue and pale pink straight-edged shapes cover this jersey for Spain, in reference to the artistic movement Cubism, which was partly pioneered by Spanish artist Pablo Picasso.
In keeping with the rest of Adidas’ strips for the tournament, the shirt has triple stripe shoulder details and an Adidas logo placed on the front, this time picked out in a contrasting navy colour.
Sweden by Adidas
Understated gradient patterns in shades of blue recall early works in the Swedish Abstract Expressionism style that emerged in the Scandinavian country in the early 20th century.
The rich blue colour also recalls the base colour of Sweden’s flag, with shoulder stripes, shield and the centrally-placed Adidas logo rendered in yellow to complete the references to the flag’s colours.
Switzerland by Puma
The Swiss team are playing on home turf, and Puma referenced the the country’s identity throughout the design of this strip.
A red background that recalls the country’s flag is overlaid with a pattern of monograms similar to those present on traditional Swiss textiles. A white cross sits on one side of the chest – the Swiss flag in miniature.
Wales by Adidas
The shape of the carved wooden handles of traditional Welsh love spoons were the basis for this kit design, which features undulating shapes in shades of fresh, minty green.
A red dragon shield on the chest further celebrates Welsh national identity, reinforced by the sign-off on the back of the neck that reads ‘Gorau Chwarae Cyd Chwarae’, a Welsh phrase emphasising the importance of strength as a result of togetherness and teamwork.
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