{{TitleHistorySpan|tournament in 1955 to determine first champion<ref>[http://www.fuegoenelring.com/hl_luchalibre_mexico.php Fuego en el Ring]</ref>}}
{{TitleHistorySpan|tournament in 1955 to determine first champion<ref>[http://www.fuegoenelring.com/hl_luchalibre_mexico.php Fuego en el Ring]</ref>}}
{{TitleHistoryLine|1|[[La Dama Enmascarada]]|?|[[1955]].?|[[Monterrey, Nuevo León]]}}
{{TitleHistoryLine|1|[[La Dama Enmascarada]]|?|[[1955]].?|[[Monterrey, Nuevo León]]}}
{{TitleHistoryLine|2<ref>[http://www.fuegoenelring.com/hl_luchalibre_mexico.php Fuego en el Ring], Lucha Libre 76</r19ef>|[[Irma Gonzalez]]|[[La Dama Enmascarada]]|[[1955]].[[02.28]]|[[Toreo de Cuatro Caminos]]}}
{{TitleHistoryLine|2<ref>[http://www.fuegoenelring.com/hl_luchalibre_mexico.php Fuego en el Ring], Lucha Libre 76</ref>|[[Irma Gonzalez]]|[[La Dama Enmascarada]]|[[1955]].[[02.28]]|[[Toreo de Cuatro Caminos]]}}
{{TitleDefenseIffy|-<ref>El Informador 1955-05-24; Gonzalez was schedule to defend against the winner of a tournament including [[La Coreana]], L[[a Enfermea Del Medico Asesino]], [[Laura Rosas]], [[Teresa Barragan]], [[Emma Garica]], [[Chabela Diaz]], [[Rose Williams]], [[Martha Elena]], [[Raquel Rios]]</ref>|?|[[1955]].[[05.24]]|[[Arena Canada Dry, Guadalajara, Jalisco]]}}
{{TitleDefenseIffy|-<ref>El Informador 1955-05-24; Gonzalez was schedule to defend against the winner of a tournament including [[La Coreana]], L[[a Enfermea Del Medico Asesino]], [[Laura Rosas]], [[Teresa Barragan]], [[Emma Garica]], [[Chabela Diaz]], [[Rose Williams]], [[Martha Elena]], [[Raquel Rios]]</ref>|?|[[1955]].[[05.24]]|[[Arena Canada Dry, Guadalajara, Jalisco]]}}
The national championships are managed by the Mexico City lucha libre commission, but the city itself prohibited women's wrestling from the 50s until 1986. Women's wrestling was legal in other parts of Mexico, including Estado de Mexico right outside of Mexico City, but it's unclear if this championship was sanctioned similar to the other championships. There are many missing gaps and likely irregularities in reigns and title changes. Reyna Gallegos' title win in 1987 should be considered the modern starting point for this belt, and reigns after are confirmed.
Lola Gonzalez has been credited in some sources as holding the championship in 1988 and defending it against La Marquesa on May 15, in Arena Naucalpan.
Lady Apache held the championship nearly exclusively thru 2002 on, apart for a short run from Tiffany. Apache continued to be champion despite switching between AAA and CMLL (and back, and back) in 2005 and 2006, as the title is still officially controlled by the box y lucha commission. Apache won the CMLL World Women's Championship on Christmas Day, 2006, and held both titles for four months before deciding to give up the lesser national title.
A 14 women cibernetico was held at Arena Mexico on April 27, 2006, with the final two survivors - ruda Princesa Sujei and tecnica Marcela meeting in a title match the next following week.
↑El Siglo de Torreon lists Dama as champion after this point
↑el Informador 1960-03-13; no champion is listed, but the El Informador 1960-01-13 lists Chabela as champion, so guessing this is while she's still champion
↑ Billed as National Champion. This could be at least her second reign
↑El Informador 1961-09-08; billed as Occidente championship, but there's no other mention of a women's title and it's unlikely she'd be defending a secondary title while she was national champion
↑Nefatli interview where she claims she was unaware this would be a title change; previously listed as Cuautla (and other Cuautla title matches may be Cuernavaca instead)