Manchester United Women’s season may be on pause for the ongoing international break, but a big month on the Reds’ schedule is soon to kick into gear.
March features five big matches for Marc Skinner’s side, including our first-ever Subway Women’s League Cup final and a maiden appearance at the UEFA Women's Champions League quarter-final stage.
The first leg of our last-eight clash with German champions Bayern Munich is one of two games that will be played at Old Trafford as well, with the Barclays Women’s Super League derby at home to Manchester City also being contested in M16, for the third season in a row.
Keep scrolling for everything you need to know about all of our March fixtures, including dates and kick-off times, plus the all-important ticket and TV info…
SUN 15 MARCH: CHELSEA (N)
Subway Women’s League Cup final / Ashton Gate Stadium / 14:15 GMT KO
United’s season is due to resume with no less than the League Cup final, against holders Chelsea, at Bristol City’s Ashton Gate Stadium. Our last outing before the break was against the Blues, who edged an Adobe Women’s FA Cup fifth-round tie that went to extra-time in the capital, but this meeting is on neutral ground and an opportunity to add a new piece of silverware to our cabinet. Skinner’s side received a bye to the quarter-finals of the 2025/26 competition, due to our involvement in Europe, and have since won close encounters with Spurs and Arsenal to set up a mouthwatering March opener.
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WED 18 MARCH: WEST HAM (A)
Barclays Women’s Super League / Chigwell Construction Stadium / 19:15 GMT KO
The Reds were due to face West Ham on the date of the final, but the WSL trip to the Londoners has been rescheduled for three days later. It will be United’s first league outing for more than a month, after we came from behind to beat London City Lionesses 2-1 in the middle of February, a result that ensures we’ll go into this game second in the table. The Chigwell Construction Stadium has proved a tricky place to emerge from with three points in recent years – we’ve been held to draws by the Hammers on three of our last four visits – but we’ll be looking to overcome that run as we face a side that have appointed former Inter and Juventus boss Rita Guarino as their head coach since we beat them 2-1 in December’s reverse fixture.
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SAT 21 MARCH: EVERTON (H)
Barclays Women’s Super League / Progress With Unity Stadium / 12:00 GMT KO
Skinner’s team are due to return home with a third game in seven days, as Everton make the journey to Leigh for a midday kick-off in the league. The Toffees are another side with a new manager since we got the better of them in the first half of the season, with Scott Phelan promoted from the club’s Academy to take charge for the remainder of the term, after Brian Sorensen’s departure last month. United won the previous meeting 4-1 at the Merseysiders’ new Hill Dickinson Stadium in October, and a repeat result would be a boost as we continuing pushing to finish inside one of three Champions League places at the top of the table.
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WED 25 MARCH: BAYERN MUNICH (H)
UEFA Champions League quarter-final first leg / Old Trafford / 20:00 GMT KO
After three big domestic fixtures, attention will return to United Women’s current European campaign, a historic run that has seen us reach the quarter-finals for the first time. That berth was secured with a two-legged victory over Spanish giants Atletico Madrid in February’s knockout play-offs, and we’ll now face the German title-holders for the right to progress to the final four. The first leg will be held under the lights at Old Trafford, where we defeated Paris Saint-Germain earlier in the competition, before April’s second leg at Bayern’s Allianz Arena.
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SAT 28 MARCH: MAN CITY (H)
Barclays Women’s Super League / Old Trafford / 13:30 GMT KO
The Bayern tie is swiftly followed by another blockbuster battle at the Theatre of Dreams, with Skinner’s side set to host WSL leaders and crosstown rivals Manchester City in M16 just three days later. The derby being back at Old Trafford for the third season in a row brings back fond memories of last term's instalment, a 2-2 draw that produced the point we needed to secure our initial Champions League qualification. Just as it was in 2024/25, this is another big game in the WSL run-in, with the stakes likely to be high again for the division’s current top two.
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