| SEC softball tournament | |
|---|---|
| Conference softball championship | |
|  SEC Softball Championship Tournament logo | |
| Sport | Softball | 
| Conference | Southeastern Conference | 
| Number of teams | 13 | 
| Format | Single-elimination tournament (2006-present) Double-elimination tournament (1997-2006) | 
| Current stadium | Jane B. Moore Field | 
| Current location | Auburn, Alabama | 
| Played | 1997-present | 
| Last contest | 2023 Southeastern Conference softball tournament | 
| Current champion | Tennessee Lady Volunteers | 
| Most championships | Alabama (6) | 
| TV partner(s) | SEC Network and ESPN | 
| Official website | SECSports.com Softball | 
The SEC softball tournament (sometimes known simply as the SEC tournament) is the conference championship tournament in college softball for the Southeastern Conference (SEC). It is a single-elimination (since 2006) tournament and seeding is based on regular season records. The winner receives the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Division I softball tournament.
Tournament
The SEC softball tournament is a single-elimination tournament held each year at various SEC-conference campus stadiums. Thirteen of the 14 teams in the SEC make the tournament each year (Vanderbilt does not sponsor a softball team).
History
The tournament has been held since 1997, when the SEC began sponsoring softball. In 1997 it was an eight-team, double-elimination tournament with byes for the top two seeds. From 1998 until 2005 it was an eight-team, double-elimination tournament with no byes. In 2006 it became an eight-team, single-elimination tournament. In 2013, with the addition of Missouri and Texas A&M into the SEC, the tournament moved to a ten-team, single-elimination tournament with the top 6 teams earning first round byes.
Champions
Year-by-year
By school
| School | Championships | Years | 
|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 6 | 1998, 2003, 2005, 2010, 2012, 2021 | 
| Florida | 5 | 2008, 2009, 2013, 2018, 2019 | 
| LSU | 5 | 1999, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2007 | 
| Tennessee | 3 | 2006, 2011, 2023 | 
| Auburn | 2 | 2015, 2016 | 
| South Carolina | 2 | 1997, 2000 | 
| Georgia | 1 | 2014 | 
| Ole Miss | 1 | 2017 | 
| Arkansas | 1 | 2022 | 
| Kentucky | 0 | |
| Mississippi State | 0 | |
| Missouri | 0 | |
| Texas A&M | 0 |