Est. 1970 · Paris, France · Ici c'est Paris
Paris Saint-Germain
Founded in 1970, PSG rose from a modest Parisian club to one of the most recognisable names in world football following the Qatar Sports Investments takeover in 2011. Champions of Europe in 2025. 323 PSG kits catalogued on ShirtSociety.
2025-26 kit
2025-26
PSG's current kits continue the partnership with Nike that has spanned over three decades. The navy and red identity established by Daniel Hechter in the 1970s remains the foundation of every home design.
From local club to global brand
1970 · Founding
Paris Saint-Germain was founded on 12 August 1970 as a merger between Paris FC and Stade Saint-Germain-en-Laye. The club played in the lower divisions before earning promotion to the top flight in 1974. Fashion designer Daniel Hechter joined the board in the mid-1970s and introduced the now-iconic navy strip with the red and blue Eiffel Tower crest, a design that defines PSG to this day.
Browse home kits1991–2011 · Canal+ era
European glory: Weah, Djorkaeff and the CWC
French broadcaster Canal+ took over in 1991 and invested heavily. David Ginola and George Weah electrified the Parc des Princes in the early 1990s, with Weah winning the Ballon d'Or in 1995. By the 1995-96 season both had departed, but the squad rebuilt around Youri Djorkaeff, Raí and Leonardo delivered the club's greatest European achievement: the Cup Winners' Cup, beating Rapid Vienna 1-0 in Brussels. Ronaldinho joined in 2001, dazzling Paris before his move to Barcelona in 2003.
2011 · Qatar Sports Investments
The project begins
In June 2011 Qatar Sports Investments (QSI) completed a full takeover. The spending that followed was unprecedented. Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Thiago Silva, Edinson Cavani and Marco Verratti arrived in quick succession. PSG won Ligue 1 in 2012-13 and would go on to dominate French football, claiming title after title through the decade.
2017–2024 · The Galactico project
Neymar, Mbappe and the hunt for the UCL
The summer of 2017 changed football transfer records forever. PSG paid €222 million for Neymar, then secured Kylian Mbappe on loan. In 2018 Nike launched the Air Jordan collaboration, replacing the Nike swoosh with the Jumpman on European and cup kits. The 2019-20 squad reached the Champions League final in Lisbon, where they lost 1-0 to Bayern Munich. Messi joined in 2021, briefly forming the MNM trio with Mbappe and Neymar. Mbappe departed for Real Madrid in 2024.
Browse all PSG kits2024-25 · Champions of Europe
The dream realised
Fifteen years after the QSI project began, PSG finally won the Champions League in 2025. Without Mbappe and built on a collective, high-pressing identity under Luis Enrique, the club defeated Inter Milan 5-0 in the final in Munich. The kit worn that night in the Allianz Arena is already one of the most significant in the club's history.
Key milestones
Club founded
Paris Saint-Germain formed on 12 August 1970. The Eiffel Tower crest and navy strip introduced by Daniel Hechter in the mid-1970s remain the club's identity today.
First Ligue 1 title
PSG win their first league championship, establishing themselves as a genuine force in French football for the first time.
Cup Winners' Cup
PSG beat Rapid Vienna 1-0 in Brussels with a squad built around Raí, Youri Djorkaeff and Leonardo. Weah had won the Ballon d'Or the previous year, 1995, while Ginola had already left for Newcastle. Browse the 1995-96 kit.
QSI takeover
Qatar Sports Investments complete their purchase of the club. A new era begins with unlimited ambition and the largest transfer budgets in French football history.
The €222m transfer
Neymar joins from Barcelona for a world-record fee. Within weeks PSG also secure Kylian Mbappe on loan. The ambition of the project is laid bare.
Air Jordan collaboration
Nike and Jordan Brand launch a partnership with PSG. The Jumpman replaces the Nike swoosh on European and cup kits, while the club crest remains on the shirt. The 2019-20 UCL final kit is the most notable from this collaboration.
Champions League final
PSG reach the UCL final in Lisbon's empty stadium. Bayern Munich win 1-0 via Kingsley Coman. The Jordan-branded shirt worn that night becomes one of the most collected of the era. Browse the 2019-20 kit.
Champions League winners
PSG defeat Inter Milan 5-0 in Munich to win the Champions League for the first time. Fifteen years of ambition, record transfers and near-misses finally rewarded.
Kit manufacturers
Nike has supplied PSG since the early 1990s, including a landmark collaboration with Air Jordan.
Adidas supplied PSG kits before the Nike partnership began. These early kits are among the rarest in the ShirtSociety archive.
The dominant partnership spanning over 30 years. From the Ginola and Weah era through to the QSI project and beyond. More than 270 kits in the ShirtSociety archive.
Nike and Jordan Brand collaboration on PSG's European and cup kits. The Jumpman replaces the Nike swoosh while the PSG crest stays on the shirt. The 2019-20 UCL final kit is the most collected of the partnership.
323
Kits in ShirtSociety
13
Ligue 1 titles
1
UCL title
1970
Founded
Iconic PSG kits
Standout PSG shirts across every era, from the Cup Winners' Cup to the Champions League.

Worn in the first Champions League final in PSG's history. The Jordan Jumpman on the chest, Mbappe and Neymar on the pitch. Bayern Munich won on the night, but this shirt became a collector's landmark the moment the final whistle blew.

The shirt worn when PSG finally lifted the Champions League. Without Mbappe, without Neymar, without Messi. Built on a collective and a high press, the 2024-25 season delivered the trophy fifteen years in the making.

Neymar wore this shirt in his first season. The record transfer reshaped football economics. Mbappe arrived on loan the same summer. PSG looked unstoppable, and this shirt is the emblem of that moment.

Messi, Neymar and Mbappe in the same squad. The forward line that should have been unstoppable. The shirt from the season everyone watched PSG with fascination.

PSG's greatest European achievement before 2025. George Weah won the Ballon d'Or. The squad included Ginola and Djorkaeff. The Cup Winners' Cup final in Brussels delivered PSG's first continental trophy.

The earliest PSG shirt in the ShirtSociety archive. Canal+ had just taken over and the club was building towards European competition. The Hechter-influenced design at its most iconic, worn before the club became a global brand.
Legends
The players who made the navy shirt iconic.
George Weah
1992–1995Ballon d'Or 1995. 66 goals in 122 appearances. The African footballer who captivated the Parc des Princes before moving to AC Milan.
David Ginola
1992–1995The most naturally gifted player in PSG history before the QSI era. His performances in the 1994-95 European campaign remain legendary in Paris.
Zlatan Ibrahimovic
2012–2016Four consecutive Ligue 1 titles. 156 goals in 180 appearances. He announced his departure with a message that became folklore: "Good luck finding a replacement."
Edinson Cavani
2013–2020200 goals in 301 appearances, PSG's record holder until Mbappe surpassed him. Seven seasons of relentless pressing and clinical finishing. The hardest-working striker in the club's history.
Marco Verratti
2012–202311 seasons. The heartbeat of every PSG midfield for over a decade. One of the finest passers of his generation and the defining player of the QSI project.
Neymar
2017–2023The most expensive footballer in history at the time of his signing. Six seasons of individual brilliance, injuries and controversy. At his best, unplayable.
Kylian Mbappe
2017–2024World Cup winner at 19. 256 goals in 308 appearances, surpassing Cavani to become PSG's all-time top scorer. Left for Real Madrid in 2024.
Parc des Princes
The Parc des Princes has been PSG's home since 1974. Located in the 16th arrondissement of Paris, the stadium was rebuilt to its current form for the 1972 European Championship and has a capacity of around 47,929.
The atmosphere on Champions League nights has become one of the most recognisable in European football. PSG have discussed plans for a new stadium or expanded venue as ambitions grew following the UCL triumph.
1972
Built
47,929
Capacity
Paris 16
Location
Parc des Princes
Name
2010/11
FinishedJul 2010 – May 2011
Home
Away
place
2009/10
FinishedHome
Away
place
2008/09
FinishedHome
Away
place
2007/08
FinishedHome
Away
place
2006/07
FinishedHome
Away
place
2005/06
FinishedHome
Away
place