NCAA Division I Women's Hockey conferences and teams


The following is a list of NCAA women's collegiate ice hockey teams, and conferences they compete in, that compete for berths in the annual NCAA Women's Ice Hockey Tournament. The championship has existed since the 2000–2001 season and conferences include the university teams of Divisions I and II of the NCAA.

Hockey East Association">Hockey East">Hockey East Association (HEA)

Hockey East is a college athletic conference which operates primarily in New England, and features men's and women's competition. While the men's side of the conference temporarily added Notre Dame, located in Indiana, from 2013-2017, the women's side has remained a New England-only organization. It has emerged as one of the top women’s ice hockey conferences in United States. Hockey East continues to send teams to the Frozen Four as well to the NCAA Tournament.
College Hockey America is a women’s college ice hockey conference. The conference began as a men's hockey conference in 1999, and added women's competition in 2002. After several of its member schools dropped the sport or moved to other conferences, the men's side of CHA folded after the 2009–10 season. CHA remains in operation as a women-only conference, currently with six teams — two from New York state; one from Missouri; and three from Pennsylvania:
The CHA conference champion receives an automatic bid to the NCAA Championship Tournament.

ECAC Hockey

Located in the northeastern United States, the ECAC Hockey has changed to meet the needs of the exploding collegiate sport as 24 teams have called ECAC Hockey home since the first regional championship was contested in 1984. Clarkson became the first non-WCHA team to win the national championship when it defeated the Minnesota Gophers in the 2014 Frozen Four, and has since won titles in 2017 and 2018.
It is the only NCAA Division I hockey conference whose members all field varsity men's and women's teams.

New England Women's Hockey Alliance (NEWHA)

The newest conference to receive NCAA Division I recognition in ice hockey is the New England Women's Hockey Alliance. The NEWHA formed in 2017 as a scheduling alliance between the sport's six then-existing National Collegiate independents, all located in New England. Of these schools, Sacred Heart was the only one that played at the National Collegiate level before 2017, having competed as an independent since 2003. The other five charter members, which all began National Collegiate play in 2017, consisted of one Division I member and four Division II members. Holy Cross left after the first NEWHA season of 2017–18 to join Hockey East. Shortly before the 2018–19 season, the remaining five members formally organized as a conference and began the process of gaining full NCAA recognition.
In the meantime, LIU Brooklyn had announced that it would add women's ice hockey effective in 2019–20, and would join the NEWHA at that time. Shortly after this announcement, the school's parent institution, Long Island University, announced that it would merge the athletic programs of its two main campuses into a single Division I program that would later be unveiled as the LIU Sharks.
With the conference membership returning to six for 2019–20, the NCAA officially approved the NEWHA as a Division I conference shortly before the start of that season. This action also meant that there would be no independent programs in that season, since the NEWHA membership included all of the previous National Collegiate independents. Assuming that the current conference membership remains intact, the NEWHA will receive its first automatic NCAA tournament berth in 2021–22—coinciding with the addition of Stonehill as the NEWHA's seventh member.
The Western Collegiate Hockey Association operates over a wide area of the Midwestern and Western United States. It participates in NCAA Division I as a hockey-only conference. Apart from the three titles won by Clarkson, every other National Collegiate women's title has been won by a WCHA team.
Although the men's side of the WCHA was heavily affected by conference realignment in 2013, the women's side of the conference remained intact. The women's side was also not affected by the joint announcement of seven of the 10 current WCHA men's members that they would leave the conference after the 2020–21 season.