List of Southeastern Conference champions

The Southeastern Conference (SEC) sponsors nine men's sports and twelve women's sports. This is a list of conference champions for each sport. Also see the list of SEC national champions.

Current members

 * Alabama
 * Arkansas
 * Auburn
 * Florida
 * Georgia
 * Kentucky
 * LSU
 * Mississippi
 * Mississippi State
 * Missouri
 * South Carolina
 * Tennessee
 * Texas A&M
 * Vanderbilt

Former members

 * Sewanee, 1933–1940
 * Georgia Tech, 1933–1964
 * Tulane, 1933–1966

Football
All 14 SEC schools play football.

Divisional champions
Since the SEC expanded in 1992 Divisional Champions have been crowned. Occasionally, a tie between two or more teams occurs, requiring a tie-break. All teams involved in the tie breaker are considered Co-Divisional Champions, and the winner of the tie-breaker is the division's representative to the Championship Game. Below is list of all Divisional Champions and Co-Champions; * denotes tie-break winner and subsequent division representative to the SEC Championship Game.

†In 1993 Auburn finished first in the West standings but was ineligible due to NCAA probation and postseason ban.

‡In 2002 Alabama finished first in the West standings but was ineligible due to NCAA probation and postseason ban.

Southern Conference Football Champions
The Southern Conference was an immediate predecessor to the SEC, with all charter SEC schools having been members before leaving to form the SEC after the 1932 season.

1922 - Georgia Tech, North Carolina, Vanderbilt 1923 - Vanderbilt, Washington & Lee 1924 - Alabama 1925 - Alabama, Tulane 1926 - Alabama 1927 - Georgia Tech, NC State, Tennessee 1928 - Georgia Tech 1929 - Tulane 1930 - Alabama, Tulane 1931 - Tulane 1932 - Auburn, LSU, Tennessee

Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association
The Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association (SIAA) was a predecessor to the Southern Conference, with every current and former member of the SEC except Arkansas and Missouri having been members.

1895 - North Carolina 1896 - Georgia, LSU 1897 - Vanderbilt 1898 - Sewanee 1899 - Sewanee 1900 - Auburn, Clemson 1901 - Vanderbilt 1902 - Clemson, LSU 1903 - Cumberland, Sewanee, Vanderbilt 1904 - Vanderbilt 1905 - Vanderbilt 1906 - Vanderbilt 1907 - Vanderbilt 1908 - LSU 1909 - Sewanee 1910 - Vanderbilt 1911 - Vanderbilt 1912 - Vanderbilt 1913 - Auburn 1914 - Tennessee 1915 - Vanderbilt 1916 - Georgia Tech 1917 - Georgia Tech 1918 - Georgia Tech 1919 - Auburn 1920 - Georgia, Georgia Tech, Tulane 1921 - Centre, Georgia Tech

Men's Basketball
All 14 SEC schools play men's basketball.

Although this article lists both regular-season and tournament champions, the SEC has awarded its official men's basketball championship based solely on regular-season record since the 1950–51 season, whether or not the tournament existed at a given time. The tournament, however, does determine the SEC's automatic berth in the NCAA tournament.

Champions
Official SEC champions in bold.

Division champions (1992–2011)
From 1992–2011 the Southeastern Conference played basketball with two separate divisions, East and West.

Women's Basketball
All 14 schools play women's basketball.

Although the SEC began sponsoring women's basketball competition in the 1979–80 season, it was not fully integrated into the conference until the 1982–83 season, which was the first in which each team played the same number of conference games. Also, although this article lists both regular-season and tournament champions, the SEC has officially awarded its conference title based solely on the regular-season standings since the 1985–86 season. From 1980 to 1985, the official SEC champion was the tournament winner, but the tournament now only determines the recipient of the SEC's automatic berth in the NCAA tournament.

Baseball
All 14 SEC schools play baseball.

The method to determine the SEC Champion has varied greatly:
 * 1933-1947: Determined by conference winning percentage.
 * 1948-1950: Division leaders met in best of 5 championship series.
 * 1951-1952: Determined by conference winning percentage.
 * 1953-1976: Division leaders met in best of 3 championship series.
 * 1977-1985: First SEC Tournament. Determined by top 2 teams from each division playing in double elimination tournament.
 * 1986:           Determined by top 4 teams overall playing in double elimination tournament.
 * 1987:           Determined by top 6 teams overall playing in double elimination tournament.
 * 1988-1991: Determined by conference winning percentage. Tournament played to award NCAA auto-bid.
 * 1992:           Determined by conference winning percentage.
 * 1993-1995: Determined by conference and tournament winning percentage. NCAA auto-bid is awarded to winner of divisional tournament that *has highest overall conference winning percentage.
 * 1996-1997: Determined by conference winning percentage. Tournament played with top 3 teams in each division plus 2 at-large teams based on conference winning percentage to award NCAA auto-bid.
 * 1998:           Determined as before but with division winners earning top 2 seeds in tournament.
 * 1999-2012: Determined as before but tournament consisted of top 2 teams in each division plus 4 at-large teams based on conference winning percentage.

Champions
Official SEC champions in bold.

Softball
All SEC schools except Vanderbilt play softball.

Tournament Runners-Up
1997 - Florida 1998 - Mississippi State 1999 - Arkansas 2000 - LSU 2001 - South Carolina 2002 - Georgia 2003 - LSU 2004 - Georgia 2005 - Georgia 2006 - LSU 2007 - Florida 2008 - Alabama 2009 - Alabama 2010 - LSU 2011 - Georgia 2012 - Florida 2013 - Missouri

Other Division Winners
1997 - LSU (West) 1998 - LSU (West) 1999 - Tennessee, South Carolina (East) 2000 - Kentucky (East) 2001 - South Carolina (East) 2002 - South Carolina (East) 2003 - Alabama (West) 2004 - Tennessee (East) 2005 - Georgia (East) 2006 - Georgia (East) 2007 - LSU (West) 2007 - Alabama (West) 2008 - Alabama (West) 2009 - Alabama (West) 2010 - Florida (East) 2011 - Florida (East) 2012 - Tennessee (East) 2013 - LSU (West)

Swimming and Diving
Ten SEC schools participate in men's swimming and diving: Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Missouri, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas A&M.

Twelve SEC schools participate in women's swimming and diving: Alabama, Auburn, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, Missouri, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas A&M, and Vanderbilt. Only the two Mississippi schools do not sponsor the sport.

Men's Tennis
All SEC schools play men's tennis except for Missouri.

From 1953-1989, the SEC Champion was determined by the accumulation of points in an individual flighted tournament (there was not a separate team tournament champion).

In 1990, a team dual match format was instituted for the conference tournament which provided the SEC Tournament Champion.

From 1990-98, the SEC Champion was determined by a total aggregate points accumulated at the conclusion of the conference tournament: one full point was awarded for each regular-season conference win, one-half point for wins in the first two rounds of the conference tournament, one-half point for receiving a first-round bye in the conference tournament and one full point for a win in the conference tournament semifinals and finals.

For the 1999 season, the same points system was in place with a couple of changes: one full point for first-round bye in the conference tournament and one full point for a win in any round of the conference tournament.

In 2000, the SEC changed the determination of its tennis regular season champion to the team with the best winning percentage in conference regular-season dual matches.

Tournament Runners-Up
1990 - Georgia 1991 - Mississippi State 1992 - LSU 1993 - Mississippi State 1994 - Mississippi State 1995 - LSU 1996 - Georgia 1997 - Georgia 1998 - Georgia 1999 - Georgia 2000 - Georgia 2001 - Tennessee 2002 - Auburn 2003 - Florida 2004 - Ole Miss 2005 - Tennessee 2006 - Ole Miss 2007 - Ole Miss 2008 - Florida 2009 - Tennessee 2010 - Florida 2011 - Kentucky 2012 - Kentucky

Other Division Winners
2002 - Ole Miss (West) 2003 - Ole Miss (West) 2004 - Florida (East) 2005 - Florida (East), Ole Miss (West) 2006 - Ole Miss (West) 2007 - Ole Miss (West) 2008 - Ole Miss (West) 2009 - Georgia (East) 2010 - Ole Miss (West) 2011 - Mississippi State (West) 2012 - Mississippi State (West) 2013 - Texas A&M, Ole Miss (West)

Women's Tennis
All 14 SEC schools play women's tennis.

In 2000, the SEC changed the determination of its tennis champions to the team with the best winning percentage in conference regular-season dual matches (11 matches). Before this, a points system was used in which full- or half-points were awarded for wins during the season as well as during the conference tournament.

Tournament Runners-Up
1990 - Georgia 1991 - Georgia 1992 - Georgia 1993 - Georgia 1994 - Florida 1995 - Georgia 1996 - Vanderbilt 1997 - Georgia 1998 - Georgia 1999 - Florida 2000 - Georgia 2001 - Tennessee 2002 - South Carolina 2003 - Georgia 2004 - Vanderbilt 2005 - Kentucky 2006 - Kentucky 2007 - Florida 2008 - Florida 2009 - Tennessee 2010 - Tennessee 2011 - Tennessee 2012 - Georgia

Other Division Winners
2002 - Auburn (West) 2003 - Alabama (West) 2004 - LSU (West) 2005 - Mississippi State, Ole Miss (West) 2006 - Alabama (West) 2007 - LSU, Auburn (West) 2008 - Arkansas (West) 2009 - Arkansas (West) 2010 - Ole Miss (West) 2011 - Alabama (West) 2012 - Alabama (West) 2013 - Florida, Georgia (East), Texas A&M (West)

Women's Gymnastics
Eight SEC schools participate in woman's gymnastics: Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, LSU, and Missouri.

Soccer
All 14 schools play women's soccer. While only women's soccer is sponsored by the SEC, Kentucky and South Carolina both have men's soccer teams in Conference USA.

Tournament Runners-Up
1993 - Arkansas 1994 - Auburn 1995 - Alabama 1996 - Arkansas 1997 - Vanderbilt 1998 - Vanderbilt 1999 - Mississippi 2000 - Georgia 2001 - Auburn 2002 - Florida 2003 - Florida 2004 - Tennessee 2005 - Auburn 2006 - Florida 2007 - Georgia 2008 - Georgia 2009 - LSU 2010 - South Carolina 2011 - Florida 2012 - Auburn

Other Division Winners
1995 - Alabama (West) 1996 - Arkansas (West) 1997 - Alabama (West) 1998 - Alabama (West) 1999 - Mississippi (West) 2000 - Mississippi (West) 2001 - Mississippi State, Auburn (West) 2002 - Tennessee (East) 2003 - Auburn (West) 2004 - Auburn (West) 2005 - Mississippi (West) 2006 - Auburn (West) 2007 - LSU (West) 2008 - Auburn, LSU (West) 2009 - LSU (West) 2010 - Auburn (West) 2011 - LSU (West) 2012 - Texas A&M (West)

Volleyball
Thirteen SEC schools play women's volleyball; Vanderbilt does not. The SEC does not currently sponsor men's volleyball.

The SEC Volleyball Tournament was suspended for three seasons after the 2005 season. It was not renewed, but, with the NCAA on the verge of officially adding sand volleyball to its Emerging Sports List, the conference's coaches instead sponsored a Commissioner's Cup tournament for that variation of the sport. The tournaments, which were held in mid-April between 2008–10, were won by Georgia, South Carolina, and LSU respectively.

Champions

 * - From 1979-82 regular season conference standings were not tabulated.

Tournament Runners-Up
1979 - Tennessee 1980 - Tennessee 1981 - Alabama 1982 - LSU 1983 - Tennessee 1984 - Kentucky 1985 - LSU 1986 - Georgia 1987 - Florida 1988 - Tennessee 1989 - Kentucky 1990 - Georgia 1991 - Florida 1992 - LSU 1993 - Georgia 1994 - Georgia 1995 - Arkansas 1996 - Arkansas 1997 - Florida 1998 - Arkansas 1999 - Arkansas 2000 - LSU 2001 - Arkansas 2002 - Arkansas 2003 - Arkansas 2004 - Florida 2005 - Alabama

Other Division Winners
1995 - Arkansas (West) 1996 - Arkansas (West) 1997 - Arkansas (West) 1998 - Arkansas (West) 1999 - Arkansas (West) 2000 - Alabama (West) 2001 - Arkansas (West) 2002 - Arkansas (West) 2003 - Arkansas (West) 2004 - Arkansas, Alabama (West) 2005 - LSU, Arkansas (West) 2006 - LSU (West) 2007 - LSU (West) 2008 - LSU (West) 2009 - Kentucky (East) 2010 - LSU (West) 2011 - LSU (West) 2012 - Texas A&M (West)

Indoor Track and Field
All 14 SEC schools participate in both men's and women's indoor track & field.

Outdoor Track and Field
All 14 SEC schools participate in women's outdoor track & field while 13 schools (excluding Vanderbilt) participate in men's outdoor track and field.

Cross Country
13 SEC schools participate in men's cross country, South Carolina does not. All 14 SEC schools participate in women's cross country.

Golf
All 14 SEC schools play both men's and women's golf.

Equestrian
Four SEC schools compete in Women's Equestrian: Auburn, Georgia, South Carolina and Texas A&M. The first conference championship was contested in 2013.