Come and watch the Lionesses, and hopefully share the joy of winning ! We will show the game on the big screen inside.
London's Wembley Stadium will host the 2022 final.
This will be the first Women's EURO final at Wembley, but the stadium has staged the men's decider twice, in 1996 and 2021, along with the 1966 FIFA World Cup final and countless other big events – not to mention the annual FA Women's Cup final since 2015.
If the score is equal at the end of normal time, two 15-minute periods of extra time are played. If one of the teams scores more goals than the other during extra time, that team are declared the winners. Two previous finals have been decided in extra time, Germany beating Norway 3-1 in Aalborg in 1991 and then a decade later also overcoming Sweden 1-0 in Ulm courtesy of a Claudia Müller golden goal.
If the score is still equal after extra time, the winners are determined by a shoot-out. The only final to go to penalties was in Luton in 1984, also the sole two-legged decider.