Winning one of Europe's top five leagues would represent the highlight of many players' career.
Doing it in more than one league is a particularly impressive, and doing it in three is reserved for a very select crop of players.
We look at the 10 players to have won league titles in three of Europe's big five leagues.
Players sorted by number of titles, youngest players listed first.
Remarkably winning the league title in each of his first 11 seasons, Kingsley Coman technically was part of two title-winning teams in the same season.
Winning Ligue 1 with PSG, Coman moved to Juventus and won Serie A before moving to Bayern Munich, where his run of title-winning campaign was ended in the 2023/24 season.
Capturing Chelsea's attention from his spell at PSV, Arjen Robben was part of the Jose Mourinho revolution at Stamford Bridge, winning titles in his first two years before moving to Real Madrid.
Robben only spent two years in Spain before moving to Bayern Munich, where he'd win eight title in 10 years.
Although a series of muscle injuries blighted his career, he still managed to capture 11 titles in the top five leagues.
Winning the league pretty much everywhere he went, Zlatan Ibrahimovic was like a trophy-winning cheat code for much of his career.
After two titles in three years with Ajax, Ibrahimovic moved to Juventus, and while his time in Turin didn't result in a Serie A title, he won three on the bounce following his move to Inter. His success at the San Siro earned him a move to Barcelona, and while it wasn't a fruitful spell for the Swede, he did win another league title.
Ibrahimovic moved to Paris Saint-Germain in 2012, and won the title in all four seasons in France.
Playing for some of Europe's biggest clubs, Arturo VIdal has lifted countless pieces of silverware alongside nine league titles.
Making his name at Bayer Leverkusen, Vidal moved to Juventus in their dominant era before joining Bayern Munich in theirs.
The Chilean then moved to Barcelona to win an eighth consecutive league title, before claiming another Serie A crown with Inter.
One of the best right-backs of all time and one of the most decorated footballers of all time, Dani Alves enjoyed a glittering career that saw him win virtually everything on offer at club level.
Part of the great Barcelona sides of the 2010s, Alves won six league titles in eight years before moving to Juventus, winning Serie A in his only season in Italy, then winning two Ligue 1 crowns with PSG.
A part of Inter's dominant side of the late 2000s, Maxwell won Serie A in each of his three seasons at the San Siro, albeit leaving the summer before their Treble win of 2010.
The Brazilian did win the UEFA Champions League with Barcelona following his move there, as well as two La Liga titles, and added four more league crowns with PSG.
Predating the Pep Guardiola era, Thiago Motta was part of the Barcelona midfield that won two La Liga titles and the UEFA Champions League in the 2000s.
Motta then won a second European crown as well as three more domestic titles with Inter, before winning five more titles with PSG.
Coming through Manchester United's academy, David Beckham won the Treble in 1999 before joining Real Madrid as one of their Galacticos in 2003, winning the title in his fourth and final season.
After moving to LA Galaxy, Beckham won another league title following a loan spell at PSG.
One of only two players on this list not to win a league title with Bayern or PSG, Sami Khediragot his first taste of silverware with Stuttgart's Bundesliga win of 2007.
The midfielder then moved to Real Madrid where he spent five years, albeit winning just one title, before joining the formidable Juventus team, winning the league in each of his five years there.
Joining at the start of their three-year drought, Cristiano Ronaldo would be the biggest factor in Manchester United returning to the summit of English and European football, winning the Ballon d'Or in 2008. He'd sign for Real Madrid in a world record move, before making the switch to Italy to join Juventus, where he'd win a six and seventh domestic title.