DateRHjemme v Ude-
03/26 02:30 124 Utah kvinder v Gonzaga - kvinder 66-77
03/26 02:00 124 Kansas kvinder v USC kvinder 55-73
03/26 00:41 124 Creighton kvinder v UCLA kvinder 63-67
03/26 00:00 124 West Virginia kvinder v Iowa kvinder 54-64
03/25 22:30 124 Oklahoma kvinder v Indiana kvinder 68-75
03/25 22:00 124 Syracuse kvinder v Connecticut kvinder 64-72
03/25 20:00 124 Tennessee kvinder v NC State kvinder 72-79
03/25 18:00 124 Mississippi kvinder v Notre Dame kvinder 56-71
03/25 02:00 124 Iowa State kvinder v Stanford kvinder 81-87
03/25 00:00 124 Baylor kvinder v Virginia Tech kvinder 75-72
03/24 22:00 124 Alabama kvinder v Texas kvinder 54-65
03/24 20:00 124 Nebraska kvinder v Oregon State kvinder 51-61
03/24 19:00 124 Middle Tennessee kvinder v LSU kvinder 56-83
03/24 18:00 124 Colorado kvinder v Kansas State kvinder 63-50
03/24 17:00 124 North Carolina kvinder v South Carolina kvinder 41-88
03/24 16:10 124 Duke kvinder v Ohio State kvinder 75-63
03/24 02:00 122 South Dakota State kvinder v Utah kvinder 54-68
03/24 01:30 122 California Baptist kvinder v UCLA kvinder 55-84
03/23 23:40 122 UC Irvine kvinder v Gonzaga - kvinder 56-75
03/23 23:00 122 UNLV kvinder v Creighton kvinder 73-87
03/23 21:40 122 Princeton kvinder v West Virginia kvinder 53-63
03/23 20:45 122 Marquette kvinder v Mississippi kvinder 55-67
03/23 20:45 122 Texas A&M Corpus Christi kvinder v USC kvinder 55-87
03/23 20:00 122 Florida Gulf Coast kvinder v Oklahoma kvinder 70-73
03/23 19:35 122 Arizona kvinder v Syracuse kvinder 69-74
03/23 19:00 122 Holy Cross kvinder v Iowa kvinder 65-91
03/23 18:30 122 Chattanooga kvinder v NC State kvinder 45-64
03/23 18:15 122 Kent State kvinder v Notre Dame kvinder 67-81
03/23 18:00 122 Michigan kvinder v Kansas kvinder 72-81
03/23 17:30 122 Fairfield kvinder v Indiana kvinder 56-89

The NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament, sometimes referred to as Women's March Madness, is a single-elimination tournament played each spring in the United States, currently featuring 68 women's college basketball teams from the Division I level of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), to determine the national championship.

The tournament was preceded by the AIAW women's basketball tournament, which was organized by the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) from 1972 to 1982. Basketball was one of 12 women's sports added to the NCAA championship program for the 1981–82 school year, as the NCAA engaged in battle with the AIAW for sole governance of women's collegiate sports. The AIAW continued to conduct its established championship program in the same 12 (and other) sports; however, after a year of dual women's championships, the NCAA prevailed, while the AIAW disbanded.

As of 2022, the tournament follows the same format and selection process as its men's counterpart, with 32 automatic bids awarded to the champions of the Division I conferences, and 36 "at-large bids" extended by the NCAA Selection Committee, which are placed into four regional divisions and seeded from 1 to 16. The four lowest-seeded automatic bids, and the four lowest-seeded at-large bids, compete in the First Four games to advance to the 64-team bracket in the first round. The national semi-finals, branded as the Women's Final Four, are traditionally scheduled on the same weekend as the men's Final Four, but in a different host city. Presently, the Women's Final Four uses a Friday/Sunday scheduling, with its games occurring one day prior to the men's Final Four and championship, respectively.

Attendance and interest in the women's championship have grown over the years, especially from 2003 to 2016, when the final championship game was moved to the Tuesday following the Monday men's championship game. The tournament is often overshadowed by the more-prominent men's tournament; after a gender equality review following the 2021 tournament, the NCAA expanded it to the current 68-team format of the men's tournament, and extended the "March Madness" branding to the tournament as well. Still, the tournament receives a smaller amount of funding from broadcast rights (which are held by ESPN, and are pooled with those of other NCAA Division I championships besides golf and men's basketball) and sponsorship (which are sold by CBS and Turner Sports) than the men's tournament.

With 11 national titles, the UConn Huskies hold the record for the most NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Championships, which included four straight championships from 2013 through 2016. The team had also made the semi-finals for 14 consecutive tournaments.