England’s national team badge is a white shield with a thin blue outline, carrying three blue lions passant guardant arranged vertically, each with red tongue and claws, scattered among ten small red-and-white Tudor roses.
The three lions trace back to the royal arms of England, adopted in the 12th–13th centuries and associated with kings such as Richard the Lionheart, before being adapted by the Football Association for the team’s shirts in the 19th century. The ten Tudor roses were added when the FA received its official coat of arms in 1949, symbolising England’s national floral emblem and usually explained as representing the FA’s regional divisions, as well as evoking the Wars of the Roses heritage.
--
About England — England is the senior national football team competing under UEFA. This page provides the primary crest and social media icon (SVG & PNG) with transparent backgrounds for editorial/reference use. For official brand rules, consult the federation’s media assets. England crest and related marks are trademarks of their respective owners; high‑quality logo files are provided above on this page.