Guide

Most Rugby Championship Titles in History

The Rugby Championship is a four-nation international rugby union tournament played between Argentina, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. This is a breakdown of the most Rugby Championship titles.

Kaylan Geekie
Kaylan Geekie

Last Updated: 2024-08-12

Louis Hobbs

8 minutes read

New Zealand players perform the haka

The Rugby Championship is a four-nation international rugby union tournament played by the best countries in the Southern Hemisphere. The Tri-Nations began in 1996. It was a three-team competition between Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa, which ushered in the professional era of rugby union after more than a century and a half of amateurism.

 SANZAAR (South Africa, New Zealand, Australia, and Argentina Rugby), previously known as SANZAR, expanded the Tri-Nations to four teams in 2012. The new iteration of the tournament was renamed ‘The Rugby Championship’ after Argentina joined. Due to Covid-19, South Africa did not participate in The Rugby Championship in 2020. SportsBoom scrolled through the history books for the best country in The Rugby Championship.

Tri Nations South Africa versus New Zealand, 2006.jpg

Image for Tri Nations: South Africa versus New Zealand, 2006//Getty

A History of The Rugby Championship

New Zealand has won the most Rugby Championship titles. The All Blacks have won twenty Southern Hemisphere championships, ten Tri-Nations and ten Rugby Championship titles. South Africa and Australia share four titles across both iterations of the competition. The Wallabies have won two Tri-Nations and two Rugby Championships. The Springboks won three Tri-Nations and one Rugby Championship. 

The All Blacks won the first Tri-Nations in 1996, and the Aussies claimed the last tournament in 2011. The Kiwis took the first Rugby Championship title the following season. They are the current defending champions, winning the last four tournaments and seven of the previous eight. New Zealand is historically the best team in the Southern Hemisphere.  

Most Rugby Championship Titles

RankCountryTri-Nations / The Rugby ChampionshipWooden Spoon
1New Zealand202
=2South Africa411
=2Australia46
4Argentina09
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The Springboks have, however, won four Rugby World Cups, including the last two tournaments. South Africa thrashed England 32-12 in Yokohama, Japan in 2019. Four years later, in 2019, the Boks claimed an unprecedented fourth World Cup when they edged the All Blacks 12-11 at the Stade de France in Paris.

Since 2012, New Zealand has won ten of the twelve tournaments. Australia (2015) and South Africa (2019) have one title. Argentina’s best finish was second in 2020; however, the Springboks did not participate. Los Pumas’ best four-team finish is third (2015 & 2023). The South Americans have claimed the ‘Wooden Spoon’ nine times in twelve years, the most of any nation. 

Argentina versus New Zealand.jpg

Image for Argentina versus New Zealand//Getty

FAQs

Who has scored the most points in Rugby Championship history?

Dan Carter is the top scorer in The Rugby Championship. The New Zealand flyhalf scored 544 points. 

Who scored the most tries in Rugby Championship history?

Bryan Habana is the top try scorer in The Rugby Championship. The South African wing scored 21 tries in Tri-Nations/Rugby Championship Test matches. 

Who won the first Rugby Championship in 2012?

New Zealand triumphed in the first Rugby Championship. 

How many Rugby World Cup titles have the Southern Hemisphere teams won?

The Southern Hemisphere countries have won eleven Rugby World Cups between them. South Africa has won four, the most in the world. New Zealand has three titles, and Australia has two. 

Who was the top scorer in the 2023 Rugby Championship?

Richie Mo’unga top-scored for New Zealand. The flyhalf scored 28 points, nine more than Manie Libbok of South Africa. 

Who was the top try scorer in the 2023 Rugby Championship?

Kurt-Lee Arendse scored the most tries in the tournament. The wing dotted down three times for South Africa.

Kaylan Geekie
Kaylan Geekie Sports Writer

Kaylan Geekie is a sports fanatic. He attended Durban High School before moving to Scotland, where he lived for 15 years. During his time in the United Kingdom, Kaylan graduated with a first-class BA Honours Degree in Sports Journalism at the University of the West of Scotland. Kaylan worked for nine years as the Match-Day Editor of SuperXV.com, reporting on Super Rugby, The Rugby Championship, the 2015 Men's Rugby World Cup and the 2017 British & Irish Lions series for the website.