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Women’s March Madness 2025 Bracket, Seeds, and NCAA Tournament Schedule

Written by: Eddie Griffin
Last Updated:
Read Time: 9 minutes

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Last year’s NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Tournament was a record-breaking event, as South Carolina outlasted the field of 68 to finish a perfect season. Many of the stars of last year’s tournament are now in the WNBA, but the 2025 women’s March Madness bracket contains no shortage of anticipation, excitement, and intrigue.
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South Carolina Seeks Third Title in Four Years
After concluding their collegiate careers in last year’s tournament, the likes of Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese, Kamila Cardoso, Cameron Brink, and Rickea Jackson moved on to the WNBA. Clark, the WNBA Rookie of the Year, Reese (named an All-Star), Jackson, and Cardoso were named to the WNBA All-Rookie team, while a torn ACL in June ended a promising start for Brink.
But while that quintet, as well as WNBA first-round picks Jacy Sheldon, Aaliyah Edwards, and Alissa Pili have moved on to the pros, this year’s tournament will be full of stars, several of whom will be a part of the upcoming WNBA season.
That includes Paige Bueckers, who will be looking to round out her stellar collegiate career by winning an elusive national championship.
Bueckers, who is as much of a lock to be the first overall pick in the 2025 WNBA Draft as Duke’s Cooper Flagg is to be the #1 pick in this summer’s NBA Draft, and the UConn Huskies are a #2 seed in the 2025 women’s March Madness bracket as they look to win the program’s first title since 2016.
Everyone in the bracket will be looking to keep Dawn Staley and South Carolina from winning a second straight championship and a third in four seasons. The Gamecocks are a #1 seed, along with Texas, USC, and UCLA, who is the top overall seed after going 30-2 in the regular season and winning the Big Ten tournament title.
Check out the complete 2025 women’s March Madness bracket below so you can start looking ahead to the potential matchups that may be ahead.
2025 NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Tournament Bracket
Spokane 1 Regional and Spokane 4 Regional
Seed | Spokane 1 Regional | Spokane 4 Regional | Seed |
---|---|---|---|
1 | UCLA (Los Angeles, CA) | USC (Los Angeles, CA) | 1 |
16 | UC San Diego/Southern | UNC Greensboro | 16 |
8 | Richmond | California | 8 |
9 | Georgia Tech | Mississippi State | 9 |
5 | Ole Miss (Waco, TX) | Kansas State (Lexington, KY) | 5 |
12 | Ball State | Fairfield | 12 |
4 | Baylor | Kentucky | 4 |
13 | Grand Canyon | Liberty | 13 |
6 | Florida State (Baton Rouge, LA) | Iowa (Norman, OK) | 6 |
11 | George Mason | Murray State | 11 |
3 | LSU | Oklahoma | 3 |
14 | San Diego State | Florida Gulf Coast | 14 |
7 | Michigan State (Raleigh, NC) | Oklahoma State (Storrs, CT) | 7 |
10 | Harvard | South Dakota State | 10 |
2 | NC State | UConn | 2 |
15 | Vermont | Arkansas State | 15 |
Birmingham 2 Regional and Birmingham 3 Regional
Seed | Birmingham 2 Regional | Birmingham 3 Regional | Seed |
---|---|---|---|
1 | South Carolina (Columbia, SC) | Texas (Austin, TX) | 1 |
16 | Tennessee Tech | High Point/William & Mary | 16 |
8 | Utah | Illinois | 8 |
9 | Indiana | Creighton | 9 |
5 | Alabama (College Park, MD) | Tennessee (Columbus, OH) | 5 |
12 | Green Bay | South Florida | 12 |
4 | Maryland | Ohio State | 4 |
13 | Norfolk State | Montana State | 13 |
6 | West Virginia (Chapel Hill, NC) | Michigan (Notre Dame, Indiana) | 6 |
11 | Columbia/Washington | Iowa State/Princeton | 11 |
3 | North Carolina | Notre Dame | 3 |
14 | Oregon State | Stephen F. Austin | 14 |
7 | Vanderbilt (Durham, NC) | Louisville (Fort Worth, TX) | 7 |
10 | Oregon | Nebraska | 10 |
2 | Duke | TCU | 2 |
15 | Lehigh | Fairleigh Dickinson | 15 |
Women’s March Madness 2025 Information
When does this year’s women’s NCAA Tournament take place?
Here is a look at the 2025 women’s March Madness schedule:
- First Four: Wednesday, March 19 & Thursday, March 20
- First Round: Friday, March 21 & Saturday, March 22
- Second Round: Sunday, March 23 & Monday, March 24
- Sweet Sixteen: Friday, March 28 & Saturday, March 29
- Elite Eight: Sunday, March 30 & Monday, March 31
- Final Four: Friday, April 4 (national semifinals) & Sunday, April 6 (national championship game)
Where does women’s March Madness take place this year?
This is an area where the women’s tournament differs significantly from the men’s tournament.
In the men’s tournament, the First Four is held entirely in Dayton, Ohio. The first and second rounds are held at eight different neutral sites around the country, then the regional semifinals and regional finals are held at four different neutral sites.
However, for the women’s tournament, the First Four, first round, and second round are held at campus sites.
The top four seeds in each region will host the first two rounds in their section of the women’s March Madness bracket, and any First Four matchups in those sections will be held in the corresponding locations.
For example, the UC San Diego-Southern matchup in the First Four will be played at Pauley Pavilion in Los Angeles, the home court of #1 seed UCLA, who either the Tritons or Jaguars will face in the first round.
Also, instead of there being four different locations for the regional semifinals and regional finals, two regionals will be decided in Spokane, Washington, and the other two will be decided in Birmingham, Alabama. This is the third year that the NCAA Division I women’s basketball tournament has used this format.
First Four – March 19
- Los Angeles, California (UC San Diego vs Southern)
- Notre Dame, Indiana (Iowa State vs Princeton)
First Four – March 20
- Austin, Texas (High Point vs William & Mary)
- Chapel Hill, North Carolina (Columbia vs Washington)
1st and 2nd Rounds – March 21 & 23
- Columbia, South Carolina (Colonial Life Arena – South Carolina)
- Columbus, Ohio (Value City Arena – Ohio State)
- Durham, North Carolina (Cameron Indoor Stadium – Duke)
- Lexington, Kentucky (Memorial Coliseum – Kentucky)
- Los Angeles, California (Pauley Pavilion – UCLA)
- Notre Dame, Indiana (Purcell Pavilion – Notre Dame)
- Storrs, Connecticut (Gampel Pavilion – UConn)
- Waco, Texas (Foster Pavilion – Baylor)
1st and 2nd Rounds – March 22 & 24
- Austin, Texas (Moody Center – Texas)
- Baton Rouge, Louisiana (Pete Maravich Assembly Center – LSU)
- Chapel Hill, North Carolina (Carmichael Arena – North Carolina)
- College Park, Maryland (Xfinity Center – Maryland)
- Fort Worth, Texas (Schollmaier Arena – TCU)
- Los Angeles, California (Galen Center – USC)
- Norman, Oklahoma (Lloyd Noble Center – Oklahoma)
- Raleigh, North Carolina (Reynolds Coliseum – North Carolina State)
Sweet Sixteen (Regional Semifinals) and Elite Eight (Regional Finals) – March 28-31
- Birmingham, Alabama (Legacy Arena)
- Spokane, Washington (Spokane Arena)
Final Four – April 4 & 6
- National Semifinals (April 4) & National Championship Game (April 6): Tampa, Florida (Amalie Arena)
How can I watch the women’s NCAA basketball tournament in 2025?
All 67 women’s March Madness games this year will be broadcast on ABC, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, or ESPNEWS.
How many teams are in women’s March Madness?
In 2022, the NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Tournament expanded from 64 to 68 teams and added the First Four, giving women’s March Madness the same format as the men’s tournament.
This year will be the fourth year that the field for the women’s tournament features 68 teams.
The 68 teams in the women’s March Madness bracket are grouped into four regions. The First Four features eight teams and four games, with the four winners moving on to the 64-team first round.
Who are the favorites to win the women’s NCAA Tournament this year?
Women’s March Madness 2025 Futures Odds
Who has won the most NCAA Division I women’s basketball championships?
Like UCLA on the men’s side, UConn leads the way on the women’s side with 11 national titles. The Huskies’ most recent title came in 2016, the last title of the first four-peat in women’s tournament history.
Tennessee, who has not won a national title since 2008, is next in line with eight championships.
Baylor (2005, 2012, 2019), South Carolina (2017, 2022, 2024) and Stanford (1990, 1992, 2021) are the only other teams at least three national championships. Louisiana Tech (1982 & 1988), Notre Dame (2001 & 2018), and USC (1983 & 1984) are the only other programs with multiple titles in the Division I era.
The other eight women’s Division I national championship winners are LSU (2023), Maryland (2006), North Carolina (1994), Old Dominion (1985), Purdue (1999), Texas (1986), Texas A&M (2011), and Texas Tech (1993).
More March Madness Information
All of our content for this year’s NCAA Division I men’s and women’s basketball tournaments can be found in one place. Bookmark our March Madness main page to keep up with our picks, predictions, and tips on how to bet on the action at the best online sportsbooks.
The tips, tricks, and picks we provide are not only helpful for moneyline betting, spread betting, and over/under betting on games and futures bets on the tournament as a whole. They can also be valuable for your March Madness bracket challenges, including our very own Betting News Bracket Mania.
Also, follow us X (formerly known as Twitter), Twitch, and TikTok to catch all of the March Madness content that we will be posting on our socials.
Learn More About Sports Betting
This page provides valuable information for bettors who plan to bet on March Madness in 2025, whether they are new to betting on the NCAA Tournament or have been doing so for years.
Along with our March Madness-specific content, we have an ever-growing collection of guides designed to come in handy for betting on March Madness, college basketball, or other sports and events.
Whether you want to learn about over/under bets, prop bets, and other types of bets, sportsbook bonuses such as the Everygame Sportsbook March Madness promo, notable sports betting terms and phrases, or sports betting strategies such as hedging and middling, we have you covered.
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Women’s March Madness FAQ
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