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Teams with most NCAA Tournament championship wins

College basketball has been played at the national championship level since 1939. In the decades since Oregon cut down the first set of nets, dozens of programs have chased the title, but only a handful have made winning it feel like a habit. These are the schools that didn’t just show up at the Big Dance; they ran it.

The championship standings tell a story that stretches across eras, coaches, and generations of players. Some programs built their legacy in a single golden window and never quite returned. Others have reinvented themselves across different decades to stay relevant at the very top. A few are doing it right now. What they all share is a culture that knows how to win when everything is on the line and a fanbase that expects nothing less.

From the programs with three titles to those that turned March into their personal property, here are the nine most decorated programs in NCAA tournament history, ranked from the pack to the pinnacle.

9. Florida Gators — 3 titles

Mar 20, 2026; Tampa, FL, USA; Florida Gators forward Thomas Haugh (10) moves the ball during the first half against the Prairie View A&M Panthers during a first-round game of the men’s 2026 NCAA Tournament at Benchmark International Arena. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

Championships: 2006, 2007, 2025

Florida became the first program since UConn to win back-to-back championships when Billy Donovan’s Gators repeated in 2007. Then, nearly two decades later, they came back and did it again in 2025, reminding everyone that the Gators were never just a two-title wonder. Three championships across three different generations of players is the kind of résumé that earns a program genuine blue-blood consideration.

8. Villanova Wildcats — 3 titles

Mar 20, 2026; San Diego, CA, USA; Villanova Wildcats guard Bryce Lindsay (2) and guard Malachi Palmer (7) react after the second half against the Utah State Aggies during a first-round game of the men’s 2026 NCAA Tournament at Viejas Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Championships: 1985, 2016, 2018

Villanova’s 1985 title remains one of the great upsets in tournament history, a No. 8 seed defeating Patrick Ewing’s Georgetown on a night where they shot 78.6 percent from the field in the second half. Jay Wright then brought two more in 2016 and 2018, the latter sealed by Donte DiVincenzo’s eruption off the bench. Three titles from three Final Four appearances in the championship game tells you everything about how Villanova handles the biggest moments.

​MORE: All you need to know about March Madness

7. Kansas Jayhawks — 4 titles

Mar 12, 2026; Kansas City, MO, USA; Kansas Jayhawks guard Darryn Peterson (22) during a break in play during the second half against the TCU Horned Frogs at T-Mobile Center. Mandatory Credit: William Purnell-Imagn Images

Championships: 1952, 1988, 2008, 2022

Kansas has been a cornerstone of college basketball since the sport’s earliest days, which makes sense given that the game’s inventor, Dr. James Naismith, coached there first. The Jayhawks’ four titles span seven decades, with Bill Self delivering the most recent in 2022 after surviving a 15-point deficit against North Carolina in the championship game. Their consistency in the tournament is almost as impressive as their wins. Kansas is a program that simply does not rebuild. It reloads.

6. Duke Blue Devils — 5 titles

Mar 7, 2026; Durham, North Carolina, USA;Duke Blue Devils guard Cayden Boozer (2) drives to the basket as North Carolina Tar Heels guard Seth Trimble (7) defends during the second half at Cameron Indoor Stadium. The Duke Blue Devils won 76-61. Mandatory Credit: Rob Kinnan-Imagn Images

Championships: 1991, 1992, 2001, 2010, 2015

Duke’s five titles are all attached to one name: Mike Krzyzewski. Coach K built the Blue Devils into the defining program of the modern era, winning back-to-back titles in 1991 and 1992 with Christian Laettner and Bobby Hurley, then adding three more over the following two decades. Duke’s rivalry with North Carolina, its pipeline of NBA talent, and its gravitational pull on top recruits have kept it in the championship conversation every single season.

5. Indiana Hoosiers — 5 titles

Mar 11, 2026; Chicago, IL, USA; Indiana Hoosiers guard Tayton Conerway (6) grabs a rebound against the Northwestern Wildcats during the second half at United Center. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images

Championships: 1940, 1953, 1976, 1981, 1987

Indiana’s five championships include one that may never be replicated: the 1976 title, won with a perfect 32-0 record under Bob Knight. No men’s team has gone undefeated through a full season since. Knight’s three championships define the program’s peak, though Indiana won titles before him too, in 1940 and 1953. The Hoosiers haven’t won since 1987, making them the program on this list most overdue for a return to the top.

4. UConn Huskies — 6 titles

Mar 20, 2026; Philadelphia, PA, USA; UConn Huskies forward Alex Karaban (11) reacts against the Furman Paladins in the second half during a first round game of the men’s 2026 NCAA Tournament at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

Championships: 1999, 2004, 2011, 2014, 2023, 2024

UConn is the only program on this list still actively stacking titles in real time. Dan Hurley’s Huskies won back-to-back championships in 2023 and 2024, becoming the third program since 1973 to go back-to-back. Their 2024 run produced a record-breaking plus-140 point differential across the tournament, the best ever in a single run. Six titles, all six championship games won, a 12-1 all-time Final Four record. UConn doesn’t just reach the mountaintop. It lives there.

3. North Carolina Tar Heels — 6 titles

Feb 28, 2026; Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA; North Carolina Tar Heels center Henri Veesaar (13) scores in the second half at Dean E. Smith Center. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-Imagn Images

Championships: 1957, 1982, 1993, 2005, 2009, 2017

North Carolina’s six championships span six decades, a testament to the depth of the program’s infrastructure rather than the brilliance of any single era. Dean Smith, Bill Guthridge, and Roy Williams all won titles in Chapel Hill. The 1982 championship featured a freshman named Michael Jordan hitting the go-ahead jumper. The 2017 title was won exactly one year after a buzzer-beater heartbreak against Villanova. UNC has the longest championship timeline of any program on this list.

​SEE ALSO: College basketball coaches with the longest active NCAA Tournament streaks

2. Kentucky Wildcats — 8 titles

Mar 20, 2026; St. Louis, MO, USA; Kentucky Wildcats guard Otega Oweh (00) celebrates with teammates after shooting a three point basket to tie the game against the Santa Clara Broncos as time expired in the second half of a first round game of the men’s 2026 NCAA Tournament at Enterprise Center. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Le-Imagn Images

Championships: 1948, 1949, 1951, 1958, 1978, 1996, 1998, 2012

Kentucky’s eight championships are spread across four different coaches and more than six decades of basketball. Adolph Rupp won four of them, including back-to-back titles in 1948 and 1949 with the legendary Fabulous Five. Rick Pitino brought two more in the 1990s, and John Calipari added the most recent in 2012 with a team built on one-and-done talent. In Lexington, basketball isn’t a sport, but a civic religion, and eight titles are the scripture.

1. UCLA Bruins — 11 titles

Mar 20, 2026; Philadelphia, PA, USA; UCLA Bruins guard Trent Perry (0) reacts with guard Eric Freeny (8) in the second half during a first round game of the men’s 2026 NCAA Tournament at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

Championships: 1964, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1995

Fun fact: 10 of UCLA’s 11 titles came in a 12-season window between 1964 and 1975, including seven consecutive from 1967 to 1973.

No program in college basketball history has dominated a single era the way UCLA dominated that stretch under John Wooden. Seven straight championships. An 88-game winning streak. Four perfect undefeated seasons. Wooden coached names like Lew Alcindor, who would become Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, and Bill Walton through that run, and the Bruins played a fast-break style that was merciless and unstoppable. The 1995 title under Jim Harrick added an 11th, keeping UCLA comfortably ahead of every other program in history. No one else is close.

The net never lies

Mar 7, 2026; Durham, North Carolina, USA;Duke Blue Devils guard Cayden Boozer (2) drives to the basket as North Carolina Tar Heels guard Seth Trimble (7) defends during the second half at Cameron Indoor Stadium. The Duke Blue Devils won 76-61. Mandatory Credit: Rob Kinnan-Imagn Images

Championships are won by teams, but they are built by programs. The schools on this list share something beyond talent pipelines and coaching trees. They have a standard, an expectation passed down from one generation of players to the next, that losing in March is simply not part of the plan. Some are chasing more. Some are waiting for their next window. All of them know exactly what it feels like to cut down the nets, and that feeling, once you have it, is the only thing worth chasing.

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