| Champions League | 11/21 17:45 | 8 |
[5] Fuchse Berlin v
Dinamo Bucuresti
[4]
|
W | 38-29 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 11/18 18:00 | 10 |
[13] HSV Hamburg
v
Fuchse Berlin [4]
|
D | 29-29 | |
| Germany DHB Pokal | 11/14 19:00 | 4 |
Rhein Neckar Lowen
v
Fuchse Berlin
|
L | 30-29 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 11/03 14:00 | 9 |
[4] Fuchse Berlin v
THW Kiel
[5]
|
W | 35-26 | |
| Champions League | 10/31 17:45 | 7 |
[4] Dinamo Bucuresti
v
Fuchse Berlin [5]
|
L | 38-31 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 10/27 15:30 | 8 |
[13] SG BBM Bietigheim
v
Fuchse Berlin [7]
|
W | 24-38 | |
| Champions League | 10/24 16:45 | 6 |
[5] Fuchse Berlin v
PSG Handball
[4]
|
L | 38-40 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 10/19 17:00 | 7 |
[2] MT Melsungen
v
Fuchse Berlin [1]
|
L | 33-31 | |
| Champions League | 10/17 18:45 | 5 |
[2] Sporting CP
v
Fuchse Berlin [3]
|
L | 35-33 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 10/13 13:00 | 6 |
[3] Fuchse Berlin v
Rhein Neckar Lowen
[4]
|
W | 34-27 | |
| Champions League | 10/10 16:45 | 4 |
[4] Fuchse Berlin v
Wisla Plock
[7]
|
W | 25-24 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 10/06 14:30 | 5 |
[13] HSG Wetzlar
v
Fuchse Berlin [5]
|
W | 25-34 | |
| Germany DHB Pokal | 10/02 17:00 | 8 |
Fuchse Berlin v
Frisch Auf Goppingen
|
W | 37-36 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 09/29 14:30 | 4 |
[7] Fuchse Berlin v
HC Erlangen
[17]
|
W | 30-27 | |
| Champions League | 09/26 16:45 | 3 |
[8] Fredericia HK
v
Fuchse Berlin [4]
|
W | 32-38 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 09/22 13:00 | 3 |
[9] TSV Hannover Burgdorf
v
Fuchse Berlin [4]
|
L | 38-35 | |
| Champions League | 09/18 18:45 | 2 |
[6] HC Eurofarm Pelister
v
Fuchse Berlin [5]
|
W | 22-30 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 09/15 16:00 | 2 |
[6] Fuchse Berlin v
SC DHFK Leipzig
[5]
|
W | 37-32 | |
| Champions League | 09/12 18:45 | 1 |
[4] Fuchse Berlin v
Veszprem
[4]
|
L | 31-32 | |
| Germany Bundesliga | 09/07 18:00 | 1 |
[8] ThSV Eisenach
v
Fuchse Berlin [8]
|
W | 35-41 | |
| Germany Super Cup | 08/31 16:30 | 1 |
SC Magdeburg
v
Fuchse Berlin
|
W | 30-32 | |
| Club Friendlies | 08/25 10:30 | - |
Nantes
v
Fuchse Berlin
|
W | 37-38 | |
| Club Friendlies | 08/24 14:00 | - |
Fuchse Berlin v
Veszprem
|
L | 32-41 | |
| Club Friendlies | 08/17 13:00 | - |
Bjerringbro-Silkeborg
v
Fuchse Berlin
|
L | 32-30 | |
| Club Friendlies | 08/15 16:00 | - |
1. Vfl Potsdam
v
Fuchse Berlin
|
W | 30-37 | |
| Club Friendlies | 08/10 12:00 | - |
Mtg Wangen
v
Fuchse Berlin
|
W | 22-43 | |
| Club Friendlies | 08/09 16:00 | - |
Kokulewski/Zawisza
v
Fuchse Berlin
|
W | 32-37 | |
| Club Friendlies | 08/02 16:00 | - |
TSG Lubbenau
v
Fuchse Berlin
|
W | 27-49 | |
| Club Friendlies | 07/27 14:30 | - |
VfL Blau-Weiss Neukloster
v
Fuchse Berlin
|
W | 33-52 | |
| Club Friendlies | 07/25 15:30 | - |
HC Vorpommern-Greifswald
v
Fuchse Berlin
|
W | 26-46 |
Füchse Berlin is a professional handball club from Berlin, Germany, that currently competes in the Handball-Bundesliga, the highest national league, and in EHF competitions.
Until 2005, the club was organized as handball department of Reinickendorfer Füchse. For the 2005–06 season, the branding was changed to Füchse Berlin, in an effort to establish the club as a leading sports team of Berlin alongside Hertha BSC (football), Eisbären Berlin (ice hockey) and Alba Berlin (basketball). This coincided with the move to Max-Schmeling-Halle (Berlin's second biggest indoor sports venue), which is dubbed Fuchsbau (burrow in English). In 2007, the Füchse secured the championship in the Zweite Handball-Bundeliga, the second highest German league, thus advancing to Handball-Bundesliga, which the club has stayed in ever since. In 2014 the team won the DHB-Pokal, its first major trophy by defeating SG Flensburg-Handewitt 22–21.
As German cup winners they qualified for the 2014–15 EHF Cup, which they won to gain their first international title. As winner of the EHF Cup the Füchse earned a wild card spot for the 2015 IHF Super Globe, which they also won.
In the 2024-25 season they won their first German championship ever. Their coach Jaron Siewert became the youngest coach ever to win the Bundesliga at 31 years.
Despite the previous season's success, the club decided to fire Jaron Siewert just two matches into the following season along with sporting director Stefan Kretzschmar after a public disagreement between them managing director Bob Hanning. To replace him, the club hired Danish coach Nicolej Krickau.