Beijing Guoan Football Club (Chinese: 北京国安足球俱乐部; pinyin: Běijīng Guó'ān Zúqiú Jùlèbù), known in AFC competitions as Beijing FC, is a Chinese professional football club based in Beijing, that competes in the Chinese Super League, the top tier of Chinese football. Beijing Guoan plays its home matches at the Workers' Stadium, located within Chaoyang District. In early 2021, the shareholders changed from the real estate company Sinobo Group (64%) and CITIC Limited (36%) of CITIC Group to form Sinobo Group (100%). Beijing Guoan is one of the four clubs to have never been relegated from the Chinese top-flight since the Chinese Super League's foundation in 2004.

The club's predecessor was called Beijing Football Club and they predominantly played in the top tier, where they won several domestic league and cup titles. On 29 December 1992, the club was recognized to become a completely professional football club, making them one of the founding members of the first fully professional top-tier league in China. Since then, they have gone on to win their first ever professional league title in the 2009 league season as well as the 1996, 1997, 2003, and 2018 Chinese FA Cup.

According to Forbes, Guoan was the second most valuable football team in China, with a team value of US$167 million, and an estimated revenue of US$30 million in 2015. According to the disclosure of CITIC Pacific, the club revenue was CN¥244 million in the 2013 season. In the 2015 season, the sponsorship from CITIC Securities was CN¥25 million.

History

1950s–1992: Early club era

Beijing Guoan logo used between 1992 and 1994

The club's first incarnation came in 1951 when the local government sports body decided to take part in China's first fully national football league tournament. To prepare for the competition they participated in the 1951 North China Football Competition where they officially unveiled the team for the first time on 28 October 1951. After this tournament the relevant parties decided to form a football team with the best players from Beijing and Tianjin to create the North China team who were unveiled on 1 December 1951 for the start of the national football league tournament. The team name was taken from the football team in the 1910 multi-sport event Chinese National Games that also represented the same regions. The team ended up finishing fourth in their debut season and with the football league gradually expanding, the players from Beijing and Tianjin were allowed to separate and the local Beijing government sports body was allowed to reform the club as Beijing Football Club in 1955. The club made its debut appearance in the 1956 season and wore an all-white home kit and all-red away strip. In the 1956 campaign, the club was also allowed to enter their youth team called Beijing Youth B, who actually went on to win the league title while Beijing came sixth that season. The club strengthened their hold on the following seasons when they won the 1957 and 1958 league titles. With these results, the club had become a major force within Chinese football, and with the club's youth team still participating within the top tier, there was a constant supply of players coming into the team to fight for places. Being China's capital city and for their success on the field, the club had become a feeder team for the Chinese national team. This often saw the club unable to complete a full championship schedule and the youth team were often used to represent the club, which did little to diminish Beijing football and actually resulted in the youth team winning the 1963 championship for the second time, showing the strength in depth of the region of Beijing football until 1966, when the Chinese Cultural Revolution halted football within the country. When football returned to China, Beijing won the 1973 league title in the newly re-established footballing league. While Beijing once again re-established themselves as major title contenders, they did not win any major titles until 1982, where they won the league title, followed by the 1984 league title and the 1985 Chinese FA Cup title. After this period, Beijing's performances seemed to have declined and were relegated for the first time in their history to the second tier at the end of the 1988 season. However, their time within the second tier was short-lived and they won the division title and promotion to the first tier at the end of the 1990 season. In total, Beijing had won the league title five times during the old Chinese National Football League era before the club was given full professionalism in 1992.

1992–1999: Professionalism

Beijing Guoan logo used between 1996 and 2001

Beijing Guoan was formed on 29 December 1992, as a result of the Chinese football reform, which was the Chinese Football Association's attempt to professionalize the Chinese football league system. The club was set up by CITIC Guoan of CITIC Group, a state-owned enterprise of China, and the Beijing Municipal Sports Committee. The club then took part in the 1994 Chinese Jia-A League season, making them a founding member of the first fully professional top-tier league in China and changed their home colors to green to symbolize the change. In their first professional season, Beijing finished in a disappointing eighth out of twelve teams and club manager Tang Pengju was relieved of his duties. The club brought in Jin Zhiyang to manage them the following season and the results under his reign improved enough for them to finish the 1995 campaign in the runner-up position. The following season, Jin Zhiyang lead Beijing to their first professional trophy when they beat Jinan Taishan Jiangjun 4–1 to win the 1996 Chinese FA Cup. Jin Zhiyang was able to retain the Cup the following year with a 2–1 victory against Shanghai Shenhua, which impressed the Chinese FA, who lured him away from Beijing when they offered him a position with the Chinese national team. Assistant coach Shen Xiangfu stepped into the managerial role and in his debut season, he guided the club to third within the league. However, in his second season the team slid down to sixth and he left the club.

2000–2009: Foreign influences and first league title

Beijing Guoan supporters at a Chinese Super League match in June 2009
Beijing Guoan logo used between 2002 and 2021

Serbian Milovan Đorić became Beijing's first foray with a foreign manager when he joined the club at the start of the 2000 league season. His reign was exceptionally short-lived after he lost his first three games of the season before he was replaced with native coach Wei Kexing. At the start of the 2002 league season, Beijing hired their second foreign manager in Ljupko Petrović. Foreign influences continued in 2003, when the club signed a three-year endorsement contract with jointly owned South Korean company Beijing Hyundai, which resulted in the club changing its name to Beijing Hyundai to accommodate this. In 2005, Spanish football club Real Madrid went into negotiations with Beijing on a football development project. At the start of the 2007 league season, two-time Chinese FA Cup winner with Chongqing Lifan and Qingdao Beilaite, Lee Jang-soo, was hired as the team's manager. The South Korean manager, in his debut season, guided the club to second within the league. By the 2009 league season, the club had returned to the Workers Stadium (after it had been in renovation for the 2008 Summer Olympics) under Lee Jang-soo's helm. It looked as if the club would be winning its first professional league title until a 2–0 defeat from Changchun Yatai on 15 September 2009, which saw the club slip to third place and Lee Jang-soo was unscrupulously fired with seven games remaining. Former Beijing player Hong Yuanshuo was immediately brought into the team and on the final day of the season, Beijing thrashed Hangzhou Greentown 4–0 to clinch the 2009 league championship.

2010–present

In 2026, Beijing started the 2026 Chinese Super League season with five points deducted for violation of sports ethics and loss of sportsmanship, engaging in improper transactions to seek illegitimate benefits. The club issued a defiant statement on its social media account which read, "Heaven sees all! (Chinese: 人在做,天在看!头顶三尺有神明!)", without acknowledging or admitting to any wrongdoing.

Ownership

Despite being founded by CITIC Guoan Group, the stake of the football club was held by another subsidiary, CITIC Corp., Ltd. (Chinese: 中国中信股份有限公司) of CITIC Group, a Beijing-incorporated SPV, for a possible listing in mainland China since 2012. (CITIC Group invited other investors to purchase the new shares of CITIC Guoan Group in 2014, making the company no longer a subsidiary of CITIC Group). In 2014, CITIC Group floated, by backdoor listing, most of their assets to their Hong Kong-based subsidiary CITIC Pacific (renaming it to CITIC Limited), including the entire share capital of "CITIC Corp.", thus the stake of the football club was indirectly floated in a stock exchange.[citation needed]

On 27 December 2016, real estate company Sinobo Group participated in the capital increase of the club for a reported 64% stake, which was finalised on 10 January 2017, making them the largest shareholder. According to a Chinese Government database, the share capital of the club had increased from CN¥75 million to CN¥208.33 million, making Sinobo Group own a 64.00% stake with CN¥133.33 million par value and undisclosed share premium. The club was also renamed to Beijing Sinobo Guoan F.C. Co., Ltd.

Name history

  • 1956: Beijing Physical Education Normal University 北京体院队
  • 1957–1960: Beijing 北京队
  • 1961–1964: Beijing Youth 北京青年队
  • 1965–1990: Beijing 北京队
  • 1991: Beijing Shenzhou 北京神州队[citation needed]
  • 1992: Beijing 北京队
  • 1993–2002: Beijing Guoan 北京国安队
  • 2003–2005: Beijing Hyundai 北京现代队
  • 2006–2015: Beijing Guoan 北京国安队
  • 2016: Beijing Guoan LeEco 北京国安乐视队
  • 2017–2020: Beijing Sinobo Guoan 北京中赫国安队
  • 2021–: Beijing Guoan 北京国安队

Stadiums

Workers' Stadium, a stadium rebuilt on the site of the original Workers' Stadium and home ground of Beijing Guoan since 2023

Five stadiums in four sites have been used as the home ground of Beijing Guoan since 1994:

Kits

1995–1996 Kits
2002–2003 Kits

Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors

PeriodKit supplierShirt sponsor
1993England Umbro
1994
1995United States NikeRyobi
1996Ryobi
1997Ryobi
1998Ryobi
1999Ryobi
2000中信国安
2001华友通信
2002京华时报
2003SONATA
2004北京现代
2005北京现代
2006Germany Adidas北京现代 (CSL rounds 1–4) No sponsor (CSL rounds 5–28)
2007中信银行
2008中信银行 (CSL) BBVA (ACL)
2009中信银行 (CSL) BBVA (ACL)
2010United States Nike中信银行 (CSL) BBVA (ACL)
2011中信银行 (CSL)
2012中信银行 (CSL) BBVA (ACL)
2013中信银行 (CSL 1st half of season) 华泰汽车 (CSL 2nd half of season) BBVA (ACL)
2014警视媒体 (CSL) 华泰汽车 (ACL play-off) 中信银行 (ACL group stage)
2015中信证券 (CSL) 中信银行 (ACL)
2016中信证券
2017中信证券
2018中赫集团
2019中赫集团
2020中赫集团 (CSL, ACL rounds 2–6, ACL knockouts) 武汉加油 (ACL round 1)
2021中赫集团
2022中赫集团
2023JD.com
2024JD.com
2025JD.com

Rivalries

Tifo of a roaring lion in the Jing-Hu derby between Beijing Guoan and Shanghai Shenhua at the Workers' Stadium

Beijing Guoan's fiercest and oldest rivalry is against Shanghai Shenhua and is often referred to as the Jing-Hu derby, or the rivalry between Beijing and Shanghai. The rivalry with Shenhua is viewed as a manifestation of the rivalry that exists between the cities which are the most important for the nation, as one is the center of government while the other is the financial centre. With each club being able to claim an extensive history spanning successful periods, direct competition for silverware, however, rarely coincided until the 1997 league season. With Shenhua having won the 1995 league title and Beijing having won the 1996 Chinese FA Cup, both teams looked as if they had the pedigree to win silverware that season and on 20 July 1997, in a vital league game, Beijing thrashed Shenhua 9–1 at the Workers' Stadium in Beijing. It was Beijing's largest victory and Shenhua's greatest defeat ever recorded. Soon after that match, both teams met again in the 1997 FA Cup final, which saw Beijing win the cup. Between 2010 and 2024, Beijing Guoan held a record of twelve straight wins over Shanghai Shenhua at the Workers' Stadium, Beijing Guoan's home ground.

The Jing-Jin derby is a local and long-standing rivalry between Beijing Guoan and neighboring Tianjin Jinmen Tiger. Both teams can trace their histories to the North China team before it split to form the Beijing Football Club and Tianjin Football Club. Since then, both clubs have predominantly remained within the top tier of Chinese football, providing a constant rivalry fixture which has led to intense matches that have spilled out away from the stadiums and onto the streets that have led to property destruction as well as further intensifying their relationship.

Current squad

First team

As of 3 March 2026

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
No. Pos. Nation Player 2 DF CHN Wu Shaocong 3 DF CHN He Yupeng 4 DF CHN Li Lei 5 DF POR Guilherme Ramos 6 MF CHN Chi Zhongguo 7 MF CHN Sai Erjini'ao 8 MF MLI Boubacar Konté 9 FW CHN Zhang Yuning 10 MF CHN Zhang Xizhe (captain) 11 FW CHN Lin Liangming 14 GK CHN Lu Tongyun 16 DF CHN Feng Boxuan 17 FW CHN Yang Liyu 18 MF CHN Wang Yu 20 MF FRA Béni Nkololo 21 DF HKG Yue Tze Nam 22 GK CHN Han JiaqiNo. Pos. Nation Player 23 MF BRA Dawhan 24 DF CHN Abduhamit Abdugheni 26 DF CHN Bai Yang 27 DF CHN Wang Gang 29 FW ANG Fábio Abreu 30 DF CHN Fan Shuangjie 32 MF CHN wang Size 33 GK CHN Nureli Abbas 34 GK CHN Hou Sen 35 MF CHN Jiang Wenhao 36 MF CHN Jia Feifan 37 MF CHN Cao Yongjing 39 GK CHN Zhang Jianzhi 41 MF CHN Cheng Xi 42 DF CHN Lin Hanqi 45 FW CHN Ma Mingyang 47 DF CHN Deng Jiefu
2DFCHNWu Shaocong
3DFCHNHe Yupeng
4DFCHNLi Lei
5DFPORGuilherme Ramos
6MFCHNChi Zhongguo
7MFCHNSai Erjini'ao
8MFMLIBoubacar Konté
9FWCHNZhang Yuning
10MFCHNZhang Xizhe (captain)
11FWCHNLin Liangming
14GKCHNLu Tongyun
16DFCHNFeng Boxuan
17FWCHNYang Liyu
18MFCHNWang Yu
20MFFRABéni Nkololo
21DFHKGYue Tze Nam
22GKCHNHan Jiaqi
No.Pos.NationPlayer
23MFBRADawhan
24DFCHNAbduhamit Abdugheni
26DFCHNBai Yang
27DFCHNWang Gang
29FWANGFábio Abreu
30DFCHNFan Shuangjie
32MFCHNwang Size
33GKCHNNureli Abbas
34GKCHNHou Sen
35MFCHNJiang Wenhao
36MFCHNJia Feifan
37MFCHNCao Yongjing
39GKCHNZhang Jianzhi
41MFCHNCheng Xi
42DFCHNLin Hanqi
45FWCHNMa Mingyang
47DFCHNDeng Jiefu

Reserve team

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
No. Pos. Nation Player

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
No. Pos. Nation Player — DF CHN Li Ruiyue (at Foshan Nanshi until 31 December 2026)No. Pos. Nation Player — DF CHN Nebijan Muhmet (at Henan FC until 31 December 2026)
DFCHNLi Ruiyue (at Foshan Nanshi until 31 December 2026)
No.Pos.NationPlayer
DFCHNNebijan Muhmet (at Henan FC until 31 December 2026)

Retired numbers

12 – retired in Jan 2016 for club Supporters (the 12th Man).

13 – retired for the club legend, Xu Yunlong.

Senior club officials

PositionStaff
ChairmanChina Zhou Jinhui
Sporting directorGermany Matthias Brosamer
DirectorChina Zhu Jialin
DirectorChina Wu Ning
DirectorChina Tang Zhenyi
DirectorChina Liu Xin
DirectorChina Sun Peng
Deputy general managerChina Gao Chao
Deputy general managerChina Zhang Sihua
Deputy general managerChina Pan Yegang
Youth Training DirectorNetherlands Patrick Ladru
Youth Training Development DirectorChina Wei Kexing
Youth Training Executive DirectorNetherlands Paul Van Lith
Deputy Youth Training Development DirectorChina Yang Pu
chief financial officerChina Li Ping
Chief Commercial OfficerChina Xu Yunlong
Head of Training DepartmentChina Lü Jun
Corporate Communication DirectorChina Cao Xiao
Manager of Cooperative Youth Training SchoolsChina Zhang Xinxin

Technical staff

PositionStaff
Head coachScotland Nick Montgomery
Assistant coachChina Sui Dongliang China Tao Wei Portugal Filipe Pedro Scotland Andy Thomson
Goalkeeping coachAustria Hans-Peter Berger
Fitness coach
Team physicianChina Wang Kai China Zhang Zhiguo
Team leaderChina Fu Bin
AnalystChina Cheng Jun
Kit managerChina Kang Yuming
InterpreterChina Jiang Xiaojun
InterpreterChina Fu Hao
U-21 team head coachChina Zhai Biao
U-19 team head coachChina Le Beisi
U-17 team head coachChina Yu Dabao
U-15 team head coachChina Huang Yong
U-14 team head coachChina Wang Ruijie
U-13 team head coachChina Tang Xiaokun (Southern team) China Ruan Jia (Northern team)

Manager history

Source:

NameCoaching period
China Xue Jizhu1956
China Chen Chengda1957–1958
China Shi Wanchun1959–1972
China Zeng Xuelin1973–1982
China Sun Yunshan1983–1985
China Jin Zhiyang1986
China Cheng Wenkuan1987
China Tang Pengju1988–1994
China Jin Zhiyang1995–1998
China Shen Xiangfu1998–1999
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Milovan Đorić1999–2000
China Wei Kexing2000–2002
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Ljupko Petrović2002
Brazil Jose Carlos de Oliveira2002–2003
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Ljupko Petrović2003
China Wei Kexing2003–2004
China Shen Xiangfu2005–2006
South Korea Lee Jang-soo2006–2009
China Hong Yuanshuo2009–2010
China Wei Kexing2010 (caretaker)
Portugal Jaime Pacheco2010–2012
Serbia Aleksandar Stanojević2012–2013
China Xie Feng2014 (caretaker)
Spain Gregorio Manzano2014–2015
Italy Alberto Zaccheroni2016
China Xie Feng2016 (caretaker)
Spain José González2016–2017
China Xie Feng2017 (caretaker)
Germany Roger Schmidt2017–2019
France Bruno Génésio2019–2020
Croatia Slaven Bilić2021
China Xie Feng2022
China Sui Dongliang2022 (caretaker)
Netherlands Stanley Menzo2022–2023
Portugal Ricardo Soares2023–2024
Spain Quique Setién2025
Spain Ramiro Amarelle2025 (caretaker)
Scotland Nick Montgomery2026–

Captain history

CaptainBirth yearPeriod
China Wei Kexing19631994
China Cao Xiandong19681995–1997
China Zhou Ning19741998
China Xie Zhaoyang[zh]19721999–2003
China Tao Wei19782004–2008
China Yang Pu19782007–2008
China Xu Yunlong19792008–2016
China Zhang Yonghai19792009
China Yang Zhi19832017
China Yu Dabao19882018–2024
China Zhang Xizhe19912025–

Honours

First team

All-time honours list, including semi-professional Beijing period.

Chinese Super League

Chinese Jia-A League

  • Winners (5): 1957, 1958, 1973, 1982, 1984

Chinese FA Cup

Chinese FA Super Cup

Personal honours

Fábio Abreu is the third and most recent CSL Golden Boot winner from Beijing Guoan, scoring 28 goals in the 2025 league season.
PlayerHonourSeason
Paraguay Jorge Luis CamposPlayer of the Year1997
Serbia Branko JelićPlayer of the Year2005
Serbia Branko JelićChinese Super League Top Scorer2005
Spain Gregorio ManzanoChinese Football Association Coach of the Year2014
Democratic Republic of the Congo Cédric BakambuChinese Super League Top Scorer2020
Angola Fábio AbreuChinese Super League Top Scorer2025

Results

All-time league rankings

As of the end of the 2025 league season.

YearDivPldWDLGFGAGDPtsPos.FA CupSuper CupLeague CupACLOtherAtt./GStadium
1956162317529163
195711183028101830CNHXiannongtan Stadium
1958121173154134158CNH
19601155371421−75214QR1Workers' Stadium / Xiannongtan Stadium
19613119793271413924NHOfficial Park Stadium / Workers' Stadium
1962115114043736102–4NHXiannongtan Stadium / Workers' Stadium
1963197202151672–4NH
196412292112429−5206NHWorkers' Stadium / Official Park Stadium
196511152416142123NH
19731221525432518212CNHWorkers' Stadium / Xiannongtan Stadium
1974192622212172521221523NHWorkers' Stadium / Xuanwu Stadium
197619711255201511NH
1977117106141142772RUNH
197813016122411823443NH
1979130911102427−32910NH
198013091110353322859NH
19811302010403NH
198213022837181944CNH
1983116124191632426NH
198413023747301746C5
1985115781610C
198611484220128203RU
19871145271925−6176NH
1988125123102527−240.59NH
19892229103321517403NH
1990222146240211948CSF
199111455422211163SF
199211453621201136QF
199311260618144123NHHeshan City Stadium
199412278742348228NHDNE14,091Xiannongtan Stadium
1995122126436201642RUSFDNQ26,364
199612296730255334CDNQ36,182Workers' Stadium
19971228104342014343CRUACWC324,727
199812610133321913433QFCACWCR227,538
1999126998382513366QFDNQ24,231
200012698938326356RUDNQ18,692
200112696113033−3338RUDNQ15,385
20021281576492920523R2DNQ32,429
2003128991034268369CC16,500
200412287735332287R2NHR110,864
200512612410463214406SFNHQF18,923
200612813105271611493R2NHNH13,571Fengtai Stadium
2007128159445192654RUNHNHNH21,571
200813016104442717583NHNHNHGroup14,641
20091301312548282051CNHNHNHGroup36,805Workers' Stadium
20101301210835296465NHNHNHR1633,342
20111301411549212853RUSFNHNHDNQ40,397
2012130146103435−1483QFDNQNHGroup36,879
20131301497543123513SFDNQNHR1639,269
2014130214550252567RUQFDNQNHGroup39,395
20151301686462620564R4DNQNHR1640,997
201613011109342618435QFDNQNHDNQ38,140
20171301171242420409R4DNQNHDNQ34,686
20181301587644519534CDNQNHDNQ41,743
2019130231660263470RUQFRUNHGroup39,938
2020120710777374472771772813QFDNQNHQF–8–8
20211227976777267287-27335R4DNQNHGroup–9–9
20221341771057498587R2DNQNHDNQ–10–10
20231301497533518516QFDNQNHDNQ43,769Workers' Stadium
20241301686653530564QFDNQNHDNQ46,444
20251301767694623574CDNQNHDNQACL TwoGroup44,975
  • No league games in 1959, 1966–72, and 1975.
  • ^1 In group stage.
  • ^2 In final group stage.
  • ^3 Unable to complete full season, Youth team representing region.
  • ^4 Did not play for position.
  • ^5 Deducted one point.
  • ^6 In the northern league.
  • ^7 Includes playoffs.
  • ^8 The 2020 Chinese Super League was held behind closed doors most of the time; attendance and stadium not applicable.
  • ^9 The 2021 Chinese Super League was held behind closed doors as tournament-style competition due to COVID-19 pandemic; attendance and stadium not applicable.
  • ^10 The 2022 Chinese Super League was held mostly behind closed doors due to COVID-19 pandemic; attendance and stadium not applicable as the earlier part of the season was played tournament-style in select locations. Guoan utilized the Rizhao International Football Center Stadium for the latter portion of the season when the league returned to playing home-away games.

Key

China top division China second division China third division C Champions RU Runners-up 3 Third place RelegatedPld = Played W = Games won D = Games drawn L = Games lost F = Goals for A = Goals against Pts = Points Pos = Final positionR1 = Round 1 R2 = Round 2 R3 = Round 3 R4 = Round 4F = Final SF = Semi-finals QF = Quarter-finals R16 = Round of 16 Group = Group stage GS2 = Second Group stage QR1 = First Qualifying Round QR2 = Second Qualifying Round QR3 = Third Qualifying Round
China top division
China second division
China third division
CChampions
RURunners-up
3Third place
Relegated

International results

As of 11 December 2025

SeasonCompetitionRoundOppositionScore
1997–98Asian Cup Winners' CupFirst roundMaldives New Radiant4–0 (H), 8–0 (N)
Second roundBangladesh Abahani KC0–1 (A), 2–0 (H)
Quarter-finalsJapan Verdy Kawasaki0–2 (A), 1–0 (H)
Semi-finalsSouth Korea Suwon Samsung Bluewings0–5 (N)
Third place matchTurkmenistan Köpetdag Aşgabat4–1 (N)
1998–99Asian Cup Winners' CupFirst roundIndia Salgaocar1–0 (A), 4–0 (H)
Second roundSouth Korea Chunnam Dragons0–2 (H), 2–0 (A)
2008AFC Champions LeagueGroup FVietnam Nam Định F.C.1–3 (A), 3–0 (H)
Thailand Krung Thai Bank F.C.4–2 (H), 5–3 (A)
Japan Kashima Antlers1–0 (A), 1–0 (H)
2009AFC Champions LeagueGroup EAustralia Newcastle Jets FC2–0 (H), 2–1 (A)
Japan Nagoya Grampus0–0 (A), 1–1 (H)
South Korea Ulsan Hyundai FC1–0 (A), 0–1 (H)
2010AFC Champions LeagueGroup EAustralia Melbourne Victory FC1–0 (H), 0–0 (A)
Japan Kawasaki Frontale1–3 (A), 2–0 (H)
South Korea Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma3–1 (A), 0–1 (H)
Round of 16South Korea Suwon Samsung Bluewings2–0 (A)
2012AFC Champions LeagueGroup FSouth Korea Ulsan Hyundai FC2–1 (A), 2–3 (H)
Australia Brisbane Roar FC1–1 (H), 1–1 (A)
Japan FC Tokyo1–1 (H), 3–0 (A)
2013AFC Champions LeagueGroup GSouth Korea Pohang Steelers0–0 (A), 2–0 (H)
Japan Sanfrecce Hiroshima2–1 (H), 0–0 (A)
Uzbekistan Bunyodkor PFK0–0 (A), 0–1 (H)
Round of 16South Korea FC Seoul0–0 (H), 3–1 (A)
2014AFC Champions LeaguePlay-off round 3Thailand Chonburi F.C.4–0 (H)
Group FJapan Sanfrecce Hiroshima1–1 (A), 2–2 (H)
South Korea FC Seoul1–1 (H), 2–1 (A)
Australia Central Coast Mariners FC2–1 (H), 1–0 (A)
2015AFC Champions LeaguePlay-off roundThailand Bangkok Glass F.C.3–0 (H)
Group GAustralia Brisbane Roar FC0–1 (A), 0–1 (H)
South Korea Suwon Samsung Bluewings1–0 (H), 1–1 (A)
Japan Urawa Red Diamonds2–0 (H), 1–1 (A)
Round of 16South Korea Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors FC1–1 (A), 0–1 (H)
2019AFC Champions LeagueGroup GSouth Korea Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors FC0–1 (H), 3–1 (A)
Japan Urawa Red Diamonds0–0 (H), 3–0 (A)
Thailand Buriram United2–0 (H), 1–3 (A)
2020AFC Champions LeagueGroup ESouth Korea FC Seoul2–1 (N), 3–1 (N)
Thailand Chiangrai United0–1 (A), 1–1 (N)
Australia Melbourne Victory3–1 (N), 2–0 (N)
Round of 16Japan FC Tokyo1–0 (N)
Quarter-finalSouth Korea Ulsan Hyundai0–2 (N)
2021AFC Champions LeagueGroup IPhilippines United City1–1 (N), 2–3 (N)
Japan Kawasaki Frontale0–7 (N), 0–4 (N)
South Korea Daegu FC0–5 (N), 0–3 (N)
2025–26AFC Champions League TwoGroup EFootball Australia Macarthur0–3 (A), 1–2 (H)
Football Association of Hong Kong, China Tai Po3–3 (A), 3–0 (H)
Vietnam Football Federation Công An Hà Nội2–2 (H), 1–2 (A)

On neutral venues, the scores for Beijing F.C. are written first.

Key

  • (H) = Home
  • (A) = Away
  • (N) = Neutral

Records

Wins

Defeats

Streaks

  • Consecutive league wins: 10 (from 1 March 2019 to 17 May 2019)
  • Consecutive league matches unbeaten: 25 (4 August 2024 Round 21 – 30 June 2025 Round 16)
  • Consecutive league home matches unbeaten: 29 (29 September 1996 – 4 April 1999)

See also

Notes

External links

  • (in Chinese)
  • (in Chinese)
  • (in Chinese)