Listed are all the Swedish players that have appeared at least once for a team in Italy's Serie A. In bold are the players still active in current season and their teams for this.
A
- Marcus Allbäck – Bari – 1997–98
- Pontus Almqvist – Lecce – 2023–
- Andreas Andersson – Milan – 1997–98
- Daniel Andersson – Bari, Venezia, Chievo, Ancona – 1998–2004
- Kennet Andersson – Bari, Bologna, Lazio – 1995–2000
- Kurt Andersson – Udinese, Varese – 1961–62, 1964–66
- Sune Andersson – Roma – 1950–51
- Mikael Antonsson – Bologna – 2011–14
- Samuel Armenteros – Benevento – 2017–18
- Jan Aronsson – Vicenza – 1956–58
B
- Pär Bengtsson – Torino – 1949–50
- Orvar Bergmark – Roma – 1962–63
- Joachim Björklund – Vicenza, Venezia – 1995–96, 2001–02
- Jesper Blomqvist – Milan, Parma – 1996–98
- Rune Börjesson – Palermo – 1961–63
- Tomas Brolin – Parma – 1990–95, 1996–97
C
- Mervan Celik – Pescara – 2012–13
- Dan Corneliusson – Como – 1984–89
- Jens Cajuste – Napoli – 2023–
D
- Martin Dahlin – Roma – 1996–97
E
- Ivar Eidefjäll – Legnano, Novara – 1951–52, 1953–56
- Albin Ekdal – Juventus, Siena, Bologna, Cagliari, Sampdoria, Spezia – 2008–15, 2018–23
- Dan Ekner – Fiorentina, Spal – 1951–54
- Emmanuel Ekong – Empoli – 2022–24[b ITA]
- Joel Ekstrand – Udinese – 2010–12
- Johnny Ekström – Empoli, Reggiana – 1986–88, 1993–94
- Sebastian Eriksson – Cagliari – 2011–14
F
- Alexander Farnerud – Torino – 2013–16
- Ramon Filippini – Legnano – 1951–52
- Erik Friberg – Bologna – 2013–14
G
- Riccardo Gagliolo – Carpi, Parma, Salernitana – 2015–16, 2018–22[b ITA]
- Gustav Gärd – Sampdoria – 1950–51
- Andreas Granqvist – Genoa – 2011–13
- Gunnar Gren – Milan, Fiorentina, Genoa – 1949–56
- Samuel Gustafson – Torino – 2016–18
- Bengt Gustavsson – Atalanta – 1956–58, 1959–61
H
- Melker Hallberg – Udinese – 2014–15
- Linus Hallenius – Genoa – 2012–13
- Kurt Hamrin – Juventus, Padova, Fiorentina, Milan, Napoli – 1956–71
- Magnus Hedman – Ancona – 2003–04
- Filip Helander – Verona, Bologna – 2015–19
- Isak Hien – Verona, Atalanta – 2022–
- Oscar Hiljemark – Palermo, Genoa – 2015–19
- Åke Hjalmarsson – Torino – 1949–50, 1951–52
- Emil Holm – Spezia, Atalanta – 2022–
- Hans Holmqvist – Cesena – 1988–90
- Glenn Hysén – Fiorentina – 1987–89
I

Zlatan Ibrahimović playing for Milan. He was the Serie A top scorer twice, once for Inter (2008–09) and the other for Milan (2011–12), and he also played for Juventus. He won the Serie A 7 times (5 officially), and scored 155 goals in the league.

Nils Liedholm in 1959. He played and coached Milan

Gunnar Nordahl with Milan. He is the foreign player who scored more goals in Serie A (225) and the 3rd best scorer in the history of the league.[1][2]
- Zlatan Ibrahimović – Juventus, Inter, Milan – 2004–09, 2010–12, 2019–23
- Klas Ingesson – Bari, Bologna, Lecce – 1995–96, 1997–2001
- Svante Ingelsson – Udinese – 2017–19
J
- Pontus Jansson – Torino – 2014–16
- Hans Jeppson – Atalanta, Napoli, Torino – 1951–57
- Torbjörn Jonsson – Fiorentina, Roma, Mantova – 1961–65, 1966–67
K
- Jesper Karlsson – Bologna – 2023–
- Emil Krafth – Bologna – 2015–18
- Dejan Kulusevski – Atalanta, Parma, Juventus – 2018–22[c MKD U16]
L
- Valentino Lai – Venezia – 2001–02[b ITA]
- Lars Larsson – Atalanta – 1984–85
- Nils Liedholm – Milan – 1949–61
- Anders Limpar – Cremonese – 1989–90
- Bengt Lindskog – Udinese, Inter, Lecco – 1956–62
- Sigvard Löfgren – Lazio, Spal – 1951–52, 1953–56
- Teddy Lučić – Bologna – 1998–2000
M
- Bror Mellberg – Genoa – 1950–51
- Olof Mellberg – Juventus – 2008–09
N
- Stellan Nilsson – Genoa – 1950–52
- Bertil Nordahl – Atalanta – 1948–51
- Gunnar Nordahl – Milan, Roma – 1948–58
- Knut Nordahl – Roma – 1950–51
O
- Joakim Olausson – Atalanta – 2013–14
- Robin Olsen – Roma, Cagliari – 2018–20
- Yksel Osmanovski – Bari, Torino – 1998–2003
P
- Karl-Erik Palmér – Legnano, Juventus – 1951–52, 1953–54, 1958–59
- Joakim Persson – Atalanta – 1996–97
- Robert Prytz – Atalanta, Verona – 1988–90, 1991–92
Q
- Robin Quaison – Palermo – 2014–17
R
- Mathias Ranégie – Udinese – 2012–14
- Marcus Rohdén – Crotone – 2016–18
- Kjell Rosén – Torino, Novara – 1950–53
S
- Nils-Åke Sandell – Spal – 1956–58
- Stefan Schwarz – Fiorentina – 1995–98
- Arne Selmosson – Udinese, Lazio, Roma – 1954–62
- Ken Sema – Udinese – 2019–20
- Aimar Sher – Spezia – 2021–22[b IRQ]
- Stefan Silva – Palermo – 2016–17
- Lennart Skoglund – Inter, Sampdoria, Palermo – 1950–63
- Glenn Strömberg – Atalanta – 1984–87, 1988–92
- Stig Sundqvist – Roma – 1950–53
- Mattias Svanberg – Bologna – 2018–22
T
- Borje Tapper – Genoa – 1950–51
- Jonas Thern – Napoli, Roma – 1992–97
V
- Joel Voelkerling Persson – Lecce – 2022–23
W
- Christian Wilhelmsson – Roma – 2006–07
See also
Notes
References
- ↑ "Chi ha fatto più gol in Serie A". Fox Sports. 9 November 2017. Retrieved 18 August 2018.
- ↑ "10 All Time Top Scorers of Serie A". Sporteology. 20 April 2018. Retrieved 18 August 2018.
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