FIFA World Cup records and statistics

As of the 2022 FIFA World Cup, 80 national teams have competed at the finals of the men’s FIFA World Cup. Brazil is the only team to have appeared in all 22 tournaments to date, with Germany having participated in 20, Italy and Argentina in 18 and Mexico in 17. Eight nations have won the tournament. The inaugural winners in 1930 were Uruguay; the current champions are Argentina. The most successful nation is Brazil, which has won the cup on five occasions. Five teams have appeared in FIFA World Cup finals without winning, while twelve more have appeared in the semi-finals.

List of tournaments

Year Host Champions Winning coach Top scorer(s) Best player award Source
1930  Uruguay  Uruguay Alberto Suppici Guillermo Stábile (8) Not awarded
1934  Italy  Italy Vittorio Pozzo Oldřich Nejedlý (5)
1938  France  Italy Vittorio Pozzo Leônidas (7)
1950  Brazil  Uruguay Juan López Ademir (9)
1954   Switzerland  West Germany Sepp Herberger Sándor Kocsis (11)
1958  Sweden  Brazil Vicente Feola Just Fontaine (13)
1962  Chile  Brazil Aymoré Moreira Six players (4)
1966  England  England Alf Ramsey Eusébio (9)
1970  Mexico  Brazil Mário Zagallo Gerd Müller (10)
1974  West Germany  West Germany Helmut Schön Grzegorz Lato (7)
1978  Argentina  Argentina César Luis Menotti Mario Kempes (6) Mario Kempes
1982  Spain  Italy Enzo Bearzot Paolo Rossi (6) Paolo Rossi
1986  Mexico  Argentina Carlos Bilardo Gary Lineker (6) Diego Maradona
1990  Italy  West Germany Franz Beckenbauer Salvatore Schillaci (6) Salvatore Schillaci
1994  United States  Brazil Carlos Alberto Parreira Hristo Stoichkov (6)
Oleg Salenko (6)
Romário
1998  France  France Aimé Jacquet Davor Šuker (6) Ronaldo
2002  South Korea
 Japan
 Brazil Luiz Felipe Scolari Ronaldo (8) Oliver Kahn
2006  Germany  Italy Marcello Lippi Miroslav Klose (5) Zinedine Zidane
2010  South Africa  Spain Vicente del Bosque Four players (5) Diego Forlán
2014  Brazil  Germany Joachim Löw James Rodríguez (6) Lionel Messi
2018  Russia  France Didier Deschamps Harry Kane (6) Luka Modrić
2022  Qatar  Argentina Lionel Scaloni Kylian Mbappé (8) Lionel Messi

Overall team records

The system used in the World Cup up to 1990 was 2 points for a win. In this ranking 3 points are awarded for a win, 1 for a draw and 0 for a loss. As per statistical convention in football, matches decided in extra time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws. Teams are ranked by total points, then by goal difference, then by goals scored.

As of 2022 FIFA World Cup
Breakdown of successor team records
Team Part Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Czechoslovakia (1934–1990) 8 30 11 5 14 44 45 −1 38
 Czech Republic (2006–present) 1 3 1 0 2 3 4 −1 3
Team Part Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Germany (1934–1938) 2 6 3 1 2 14 13 +1 10
 West Germany (1950–1990) 10 62 36 14 12 131 77 +54 122
 Germany (1994–present) 8 44 29 6 9 87 40 +46 93
Team Part Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Soviet Union (1958–1990) 7 31 15 6 10 53 34 +19 51
 Russia (1994–present) 4 14 4 4 6 24 20 +4 16
Team Part Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Yugoslavia (1930–1990) 8 33 14 7 12 55 42 +13 49
 FR Yugoslavia (1998) 1 4 2 1 1 5 4 +1 7
 Serbia and Montenegro (2006) 1 3 0 0 3 2 10 −8 0
 Serbia (2010–present) 3 9 2 1 6 9 15 −6 7

Medal table of finalists

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Brazil5229
2 Germany44412
3 Italy4217
4 Argentina3306
5 France2226
6 Uruguay2002
7 England1001
 Spain1001
9 Netherlands0314
10 Czech Republic0202
 Hungary0202
12 Croatia0123
 Sweden0123
Totals (13 entries)22221458
Source:

Teams statistics

Note: In case there are teams with equal quantities, they will be mentioned in chronological order of tournament history (the teams that attained the quantity first, are listed first). If the quantity was attained by more than one team in the same tournament, the teams will be listed alphabetically.

For a detailed list of top four appearances, see FIFA World Cup results.

Most titles

  •  Brazil – 5 (1958, 1962, 1970, 1994, 2002)

Most finishes in the top two

  •  Germany/West Germany – 8 (1954, 1966, 1974, 1982, 1986 and 1990 as West Germany, 2002 and 2014 as Germany)

Most second-place finishes

  •  Germany/West Germany – 4 (1966, 1982, 1986 as West Germany, 2002 as Germany)

Most World Cup appearances

  •  Brazil – 22 (every tournament)

Most consecutive championships

  •  Italy – 2 (1934–1938)
  •  Brazil – 2 (1958–1962)

Most consecutive finishes in the top two

  •  West Germany – 3 (1982–1990)
  •  Brazil – 3 (1994–2002)

Longest gap between successive titles

  •  Italy – 44 years (nine editions, 1938–1982)

Longest gap between successive appearances in the top two

  •  Argentina – 48 years (10 editions, 1930–1978)

Longest gap between successive appearances at the FIFA World Cup

  •  Wales – 64 years (16 editions, 1958–2022)

Most consecutive failed qualification attempts

  •  Luxembourg – 22 (all 1934–2026)

Worst finish by defending champions

  • Group stage –  Italy (1950)
  • Group stage –  Brazil (1966)
  • Group stage –  France (2002)
  • Group stage –  Italy (2010)
  • Group stage –  Spain (2014)
  • Group stage –  Germany (2018)

Players

Most appearances

Players in bold text are still active with their national team as of the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

All-time top player appearances
Rank Player Team(s) Matches Tournaments
1 Lionel Messi  Argentina 26 5 (2006, 2010, 2014, 2018, 2022)
2 Lothar Matthäus  West Germany/Germany 25 5 (1982, 1986, 1990, 1994, 1998)
3 Miroslav Klose  Germany 24 4 (2002, 2006, 2010, 2014)
4 Paolo Maldini  Italy 23 4 (1990, 1994, 1998, 2002)
5 Cristiano Ronaldo  Portugal 22 5 (2006, 2010, 2014, 2018, 2022)

Most championships

  • Pelé – 3 ( Brazil, 1958, 1962 and 1970)

Most appearances in a World Cup final

  • Cafu – 3 ( Brazil; 1994, 1998, 2002)

Youngest player

  • Norman Whiteside – 17 years, 41 days (for  Northern Ireland vs.  Yugoslavia, 17 June 1982)

Youngest player in a final

  • Pelé – 17 years, 249 days (for  Brazil vs.  Sweden, 29 June 1958)

Oldest player

  • Essam El-Hadary – 45 years, 161 days (for  Egypt vs.  Saudi Arabia, 25 June 2018)

Oldest player in a final

  • Dino Zoff – 40 years, 133 days (for  Italy vs.  West Germany, 11 July 1982)

Goalscoring

Individual

Top goalscorers

Players in bold text are still active with their national team as of the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

All-time top scorers
Rank Player Team(s) Goals Matches Goals per game
1 Miroslav Klose  Germany 16 24 0.67
2 Ronaldo  Brazil 15 19 0.79
3 Gerd Müller  West Germany 14 13 1.08
4 Just Fontaine  France 13 6 2.17
Lionel Messi  Argentina 26 0.50

Most goals scored in a single tournament

  • Just Fontaine – 13 ( France, 1958)

Most goals scored in a match

  • Oleg Salenko – 5 (for  Russia vs.  Cameroon, 1994)

Most goals scored in a final match

  • Geoff Hurst – 3 (for  England vs.  West Germany, 1966)
  • Kylian Mbappé – 3 (for  France vs.  Argentina, 2022)

Most goals scored in final matches (overall)

  • Kylian Mbappé – 4 ( France, 2018, 2022)

Most consecutive matches scored in

  • Just Fontaine – 6 ( France, 1958)
  • Jairzinho – 6 ( Brazil, 1970)

Most tournaments scored in

  • Cristiano Ronaldo – 5 ( Portugal, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018, 2022)

Milestone goals

  • Scorer of 1st goal – Lucien Laurent (for  France vs.  Mexico, 13 July 1930)
  • Scorer of 100th goal – Angelo Schiavio (for  Italy vs.  United States, 27 May 1934)
  • Scorer of 500th goal – Bobby Collins (for  Scotland vs.  Paraguay, 11 June 1958)
  • Scorer of 1,000th goal – Rob Rensenbrink (for  Netherlands vs.  Scotland, 11 June 1978)
  • Scorer of 2,000th goal – Marcus Allbäck (for  Sweden vs.  England, 20 June 2006)
  • Scorer of 2,500th goal – Fakhreddine Ben Youssef (for  Tunisia vs.  Panama, 28 June 2018)

Olympic goals

  • 1 – Marcos Coll (for  Colombia vs.  Soviet Union, 3 June 1962)

Youngest goalscorer

  • Pelé – 17 years, 239 days (for  Brazil vs.  Wales, 19 June 1958)

Youngest goalscorer in a final

  • Pelé – 17 years, 249 days (for  Brazil vs.  Sweden, 29 June 1958)

Oldest goalscorer

  • Roger Milla – 42 years, 39 days (for  Cameroon vs.  Russia, 28 June 1994)

Oldest goalscorer in a final

  • Nils Liedholm – 35 years, 264 days (for  Sweden vs.  Brazil, 29 June 1958)

Oldest goalscorer in a victorious final

  • Lionel Messi – 35 years, 177 days (for  Argentina vs.  France, 18 December 2022)

Oldest goalscorer at the knock-out round

  • Pepe – 39 years, 283 days (for  Portugal vs.   Switzerland, 6 December 2022)

Fastest goal

  • Hakan Şükür – 11 seconds (for  Turkey vs.  South Korea, 2002)

Fastest goal in a final

  • Johan Neeskens – 90 seconds (for  Netherlands vs.  West Germany, 1974)

Latest goal in regular time

  • Mehdi Taremi – 90+13th minute (for  Iran vs.  England, 2022)

Team

Biggest wins

Biggest margin of victory
Rank Date Venue Winning team Score Losing team
1 15 June 1982 Nuevo Estadio, Elche  Hungary 10–1  El Salvador
17 June 1954 Hardturm Stadium, Zürich  Hungary 9–0  South Korea
18 June 1974 Parkstadion, Gelsenkirchen  Yugoslavia 9–0  Zaire
4 12 June 1938 Stade du Fort Carré, Antibes  Sweden 8–0  Cuba
2 July 1950 Estádio Independência, Belo Horizonte  Uruguay 8–0  Bolivia
1 June 2002 Sapporo Dome, Sapporo  Germany 8–0  Saudi Arabia

Biggest win in a final

Biggest margin of victory in a final
Rank Date Venue Winning team Score Losing team
1 29 June 1958 Råsunda Stadium, Solna  Brazil 5–2  Sweden
21 June 1970 Estadio Azteca, Mexico City  Brazil 4–1  Italy
12 July 1998 Stade de France, Saint-Denis  France 3–0  Brazil

Highest scoring matches

Most goals scored in a match
Rank Date Venue Total goals Team Score Team
1 26 June 1954 Stade Olympique de la Pontaise, Lausanne 12  Austria 7–5   Switzerland
2 5 June 1938 Stade de la Meinau, Strasbourg 11  Brazil 6–5  Poland
20 June 1954 St. Jakob Stadium, Basel  Hungary 8–3  West Germany
15 June 1982 Nuevo Estadio, Elche  Hungary 10–1  El Salvador
5 8 June 1958 Idrottsparken, Norrköping 10  France 7–3  Paraguay

Most goals in a tournament

  •  Hungary – 27 (1954)

Top scoring teams by tournament

Period Top scorers Goals scored Source
1930  Argentina 18
1934  Italy 12
1938  Hungary 15
1950  Brazil 22
1954  Hungary 27
1958  France 23
1962  Brazil 14
1966  Portugal 17
1970  Brazil 19
1974  Poland 16
1978  Argentina 15
 Netherlands
1982  France 16
1986  Argentina 14
1990  West Germany 15
1994  Sweden 15
1998  France 15
2002  Brazil 18
2006  Germany 14
2010  Germany 16
2014  Germany 18
2018  Belgium 16
2022  France 16

Teams listed in bold won the tournament. Fewer than half of all World Cup tournaments have been won by the highest-scoring team.

Tournament

Most goals scored in a tournament

  • 172 goals – 2022

Fewest goals scored in a tournament

  • 70 goals – 1930, 1934

Most goals per match in a tournament

  • 5.38 goals per match – 1954

Fewest goals per match in a tournament

  • 2.21 goals per match – 1990

Own goals

Assists

Most assists

  • Pelé – 10 ( Brazil, 1958–1970)

Most assists in a tournament

  • Raymond Kopa – 9 ( France, 1958)

Most tournaments assisted in

  • Lionel Messi – 5 ( Argentina, 2006, 2010, 2014, 2018, 2022)

Most assists provided in a match

  • Giovanni Ferrari – 4 (for  Italy vs.  United States, 1934)
  • Robert Gadocha – 4 (for  Poland vs.  Haiti, 1974)

Most assists provided in final matches

  • Pelé – 3 ( Brazil, 1 in 1958, 2 in 1970)

Most assists in the knockout rounds

  • Fritz Walter – 6 ( West Germany 1954, 1958)
  • Lionel Messi – 6 ( Argentina 2010, 2014, 2018, 2022)

Goal contributions

Most goal contributions

  • Pelé – 21, 12 goals and 9 assists ( Brazil, 1958–1970)
  • Lionel Messi – 21, 13 goals and 8 assists ( Argentina, 2006–2022)

Penalty shoot-outs

Goalkeeping

Most clean sheets

  • Peter Shilton – 10 ( England, 1982–1990)
  • Fabien Barthez – 10 ( France, 1998–2006)

Most consecutive minutes without conceding a goal

  • Walter Zenga – 517 mins, 5 consecutive clean sheets ( Italy, 1990)

Most goals conceded

  • Antonio Carbajal – 25 ( Mexico, 1950–1966)
  • Mohamed Al-Deayea – 25 ( Saudi Arabia, 1994–2006)

Most goals conceded in a tournament

Fewest goals conceded in a tournament

  • Pascal Zuberbühler – 0 (  Switzerland, 2006)

Fewest goals conceded in a tournament for the eventual winners

  • Fabien Barthez – 2 ( France, 1998)
  • Gianluigi Buffon – 2 ( Italy, 2006)
  • Iker Casillas – 2 ( Spain, 2010)

Most saves in one match

  • Tim Howard – 16 (for  United States vs.  Belgium, 2014)

Most penalties saved (excluding penalty shoot-outs)

  • Jan Tomaszewski – 2 ( Poland, both in 1974)
  • Brad Friedel – 2 ( United States, both in 2002)
  • Iker Casillas – 2 ( Spain, 2002, 2010)
  • Wojciech Szczęsny – 2 ( Poland, both in 2022)

Most penalties saved in one penalty shoot-out

  • Ricardo – 3 (for  Portugal vs.  England, 2006)
  • Danijel Subašić – 3 (for  Croatia vs.  Denmark, 2018)
  • Dominik Livaković – 3 (for  Croatia vs.  Japan, 2022)

Most penalties saved overall in penalty shoot-outs

  • Harald Schumacher – 4 ( West Germany, 1982–1986)
  • Sergio Goycochea – 4 ( Argentina, 1990)
  • Danijel Subašić – 4 ( Croatia, 2018)
  • Dominik Livaković – 4 ( Croatia, 2022)

Coaching

Most matches coached

  • Helmut Schön – 25 ( West Germany, 1966–1978)

Most matches won

  • Helmut Schön – 16 ( West Germany, 1966–1978)

Most tournaments won

  • Vittorio Pozzo – 2 ( Italy, 1934–1938)

Most tournaments as a coach

  • Carlos Alberto Parreira – 6 (1982, 1990, 1994, 1998, 2006, 2010)

Most different nations coached

  • Bora Milutinović – 5 ( Mexico in 1986,  Costa Rica in 1990,  United States in 1994,  Nigeria in 1998 and  China in 2002)
  • Carlos Alberto Parreira – 5 ( Kuwait in 1982,  United Arab Emirates in 1990,  Brazil in 1994 and 2006,  Saudi Arabia in 1998 and  South Africa in 2010)

Most consecutive tournaments as a coach

  • Bora Milutinović – 5 (1986–2002)

Most consecutive tournaments as a coach with the same team

  • Walter Winterbottom – 4 ( England, 1950–1962)
  • Helmut Schön – 4 ( West Germany, 1966–1978)

Youngest coach

  • Juan José Tramutola – 27 years, 267 days ( Argentina, 1930)

Youngest coach of a World Cup winning team

  • Alberto Suppici – 31 years, 252 days ( Uruguay, 1930)

Oldest coach

  • Otto Rehhagel – 71 years, 317 days ( Greece, 2010)

Oldest coach of a World Cup winning team

  • Vicente del Bosque – 59 years, 200 days ( Spain, 2010)

Refereeing

Most tournaments

  • John Langenus – 3 (Belgium, 1930–1938)
  • Ivan Eklind – 3 (Sweden, 1934–1950)
  • Sandy Griffiths – 3 (Wales, 1950–1958)
  • Arthur Edward Ellis – 3 (England, 1950–1958)
  • Juan Gardeazábal – 3 (Spain, 1958–1966)
  • Erik Fredriksson – 3 (Sweden, 1982–1990)
  • Jamal Al Sharif – 3 (Syria, 1986–1994)
  • Joël Quiniou – 3 (France, 1986–1994)
  • Ali Bujsaim – 3 (United Arab Emirates, 1994–2002)
  • Óscar Ruiz – 3 (Colombia, 2002–2010)
  • Carlos Eugênio Simon – 3 (Brazil, 2002–2010)
  • Marco Antonio Rodríguez – 3 (Mexico, 2006–2014)
  • Joel Aguilar – 3 (El Salvador, 2010–2018)
  • Ravshan Irmatov – 3 (Uzbekistan, 2010–2018)
  • Alireza Faghani – 3 (Iran, 2014–2022)
  • Bakary Gassama – 3 (Gambia, 2014–2022)

Most matches refereed, overall

  • Ravshan Irmatov – 11 (Uzbekistan, 2010–2018)

Youngest referee

  • Juan Gardeazábal – 24 years and 193 days (Spain, 1958)

Oldest referee

  • George Reader – 53 years and 236 days (England, 1950)

Discipline

Fastest caution

  • Jesús Gallardo – 11 seconds (for  Mexico vs.  Sweden, 2018)

Fastest sending off

  • José Batista – 56 seconds (for  Uruguay vs.  Scotland, 1986)

Fastest sending off, qualification

Latest caution

  • Emiliano Martínez – During penalty shoot-out (for  Argentina vs.  France, 2022)

Latest sending off

  • Leandro Cufré – After penalty shoot-out (for  Argentina vs.  Germany, 2006)
  • Denzel Dumfries – After penalty shoot-out (for  Netherlands vs.  Argentina, 2022)

Sent off from the bench

  • Claudio Caniggia (for  Argentina vs.  Sweden, 2002)

Most cards (all-time, player)

  • Javier Mascherano – 7 ( Argentina, 2006–2018)

Most cautions (all-time, player)

  • Javier Mascherano – 7 ( Argentina, 2006–2018)

Most sendings off (all-time, player)

  • Rigobert Song – 2 ( Cameroon, 1994 and 1998)
  • Zinedine Zidane – 2 ( France, 1998 and 2006)

Most sendings off (tournament)

  • 2006 – 28 (in 64 games)

Most sendings off (all-time, team)

  •  Brazil – 11 (in 97 games)

Most sendings off (match, both teams)

  • 2 each for  Portugal and  Netherlands – 4 (2006)

Most sendings off (final match)

  • 2 for  Argentina vs.  West Germany, 1990

Most cautions (tournament)

  • 2006 – 345 (in 64 matches)

Most cautions (match, one team)

  •  Argentina – 10 (2022, vs.  Netherlands)

Most cautions (match, both teams)

  • 8 for  Netherlands and 10 for  Argentina – 18 (2022)

Most cautions (match, player)

  • Josip Šimunić – 3 (61', 90', 93') (for  Croatia vs.  Australia, 2006) (referee: Graham Poll)

Most cautions (final match, both teams)

  • 9 for  Netherlands and 5 for  Spain – 14 (2010)

Most suspensions (tournament, player)

  • André Kana-Biyik – 2 ( Cameroon, 1990)

Teams: Matches played/goals scored

All time

Most matches played

  •  Brazil – 114

Most wins

  •  Brazil – 76

Most losses

  •  Mexico – 28

Most draws

  •  England – 22

Most goals scored

  •  Brazil – 237

Most goalscorers

  •  Brazil – 85

Most goals conceded

  •  Germany – 130

Fewest goals scored

Highest goal difference

  •  Brazil – +129

In one tournament

Most goals scored

  •  Hungary – 27 (1954)

Fewest goals conceded

  •   Switzerland – 0 (2006)

Most goals conceded

Most matches gone into extra time

  •  Belgium – 3 (1986)
  •  England – 3 (1990)
  •  Argentina – 3 (2014)
  •  Croatia – 3 (2018)

Most minutes without conceding a goal

  •  Italy – 517 mins (1990)

Highest goal difference in a tournament

  •  Hungary – +17 (1954)

Highest goal difference, champions

  •  Brazil – +14 (2002)
  •  Germany – +14 (2014)

Lowest goal difference

Lowest goal difference, champions

  •  Italy /  Italy – +6 (1938 and 1982)
  •  Spain – +6 (2010)

Highest average of goals scored per match

  •  Hungary – 5.40 (1954)

Highest average goal difference per match

  •  Hungary – +3.2 (1954)

Most goals scored, champions

  •  West Germany – 25 (1954)

Fewest goals scored, champions

  •  Spain – 8 (2010)

Fewest goals scored, finalists

  •  Argentina – 5 (1990)

Fewest goals conceded, champions

  •  France – 2 (1998)
  •  Italy – 2 (2006)
  •  Spain – 2 (2010)

Most goals conceded, champions

  •  West Germany – 14 (1954)

Lowest average of goals scored per match, champions

  •  Spain – 1.14 (2010)

Most penalties scored (excluding shoot-outs)

  •  Portugal – 4 (1966)
  •  Netherlands – 4 (1978)
  •  Argentina – 4 (2022)

Most penalties awarded (excluding shoot-outs)

  •  Argentina – 5 (2022)

Hat-tricks

Attendance

Highest attendance

Rank Date Venue Match Attendance Source
1 16 July 1950 Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro Uruguay v Brazil 173,850
2 13 July 1950 Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro Brazil v Spain 152,772
3 1 July 1950 Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro Brazil v Yugoslavia 142,409
4 9 July 1950 Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro Brazil v Sweden 138,886
5 7 June 1986 Estadio Azteca, Mexico City Mexico v Paraguay 114,600
29 June 1986 Estadio Azteca, Mexico City Argentina v West Germany 114,600

Lowest attendance

  •  Romania vs.  Peru – 300 (14 July 1930, Estadio Pocitos, Montevideo)

Highest average of attendance

  • 68,991 per match – 1994

Highest aggregated attendance

  • 3,587,538 – 1994

Lowest average of attendance

  • 21,059 per match – 1934

Lowest aggregated attendance

  • 358,000 – 1934

Statistics per tournament

Year Hosts Venues/
Cities
Total
attendance †
Matches Average
attendance
Highest attendances ‡
Number Venue Game(s)
1930 Uruguay 3/1 434,500 18 24,139 79,867 Estadio Centenario, Montevideo Uruguay 6–1 Yugoslavia, semi-final
1934 Italy 8/8 358,000 17 21,059 55,000 Stadio Nazionale PNF, Rome Italy 2–1 Czechoslovakia, final
1938 France 10/9 376,000 18 20,889 58,455 Olympique de Colombes, Paris France 1–3 Italy, quarter-final
1950 Brazil 6/6 1,043,500 22 47,432 173,850 Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro Brazil 1–2 Uruguay, deciding match
1954  Switzerland 6/6 889,500 26 34,212 62,500 Wankdorf Stadium, Bern West Germany 3–2 Hungary, final
1958 Sweden 12/12 919,580 35 26,274 50,928 Ullevi Stadium, Gothenburg Brazil 2–0 Soviet Union, group stage
1962 Chile 4/4 899,074 32 28,096 76,594 Estadio Nacional, Santiago Brazil 4–2 Chile, semi-final
1966 England 8/7 1,635,000 32 51,094 98,270 Wembley Stadium, London England 2–0 France, group stage
1970 Mexico 5/5 1,603,975 32 50,124 108,192 Estadio Azteca, Mexico City Mexico 1–0 Belgium, group stage
1974 West Germany 9/9 1,768,152 38 50,124 83,168 Olympiastadion, Munich West Germany 1–0 Chile, group stage
1978 Argentina 6/5 1,546,151 38 40,688 71,712 Estadio Monumental, Buenos Aires Italy 1–0 Argentina, group stage
1982 Spain 17/14 2,109,723 52 40,572 95,500 Camp Nou, Barcelona Argentina 0–1 Belgium, Opening match
1986 Mexico 12/11 2,393,331 52 46,026 114,600 Estadio Azteca, Mexico City Two matches, including the final, all at Estadio Azteca
1990 Italy 12/12 2,516,348 52 48,391 74,765 San Siro, Milan West Germany 4–1 Yugoslavia, group stage
1994 United States 9/9 3,587,538 52 68,991 94,194 Rose Bowl, Pasadena, California Brazil 0–0 (3–2p) Italy, final
1998 France 10/10 2,785,100 64 43,517 80,000 Stade de France, Saint-Denis Four matches, including the final, all at Stade de France
2002 South Korea
Japan
20/20 2,705,197 64 42,269 69,029 International Stadium, Yokohama, Japan Brazil 2–0 Germany, final
2006 Germany 12/12 3,359,439 64 52,491 72,000 Olympiastadion, Berlin Five matches, all at Olympiastadion
2010 South Africa 10/9 3,178,856 64 49,670 84,490 Soccer City, Johannesburg Two matches, including the final, all at Soccer City
2014 Brazil 12/12 3,429,873 64 53,592 74,738 Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro Germany 1–0 Argentina, final
2018 Russia 12/11 3,031,768 64 47,371 78,011 Luzhniki Stadium, Moscow Seven matches, including the final, all at Luzhniki Stadium
2022 Qatar 8/5 3,404,252 64 53,191 88,966 Lusail Stadium, Lusail Three matches, including the final, all at Lusail Stadium
2026 Canada
Mexico
United States
16/16 104 align=left align=left|
2030 Morocco
Portugal
Spain
20/20 104 align=left align=left|
2034 Saudi Arabia 15/5 104 align=left align=left|
Overall 43,936,730 964 45,577 173,850 Maracanã Stadium, Rio de Janeiro (1950)

† Source: FIFA

‡ The best-attended single match has been the final in 11 of the 21 World Cups as of 2018. Another match or matches drew more attendance than the final in 1930, 1938, 1958, 1962, 1970–1982, 1990, and 2006.

See also

Footnotes

  1. Germany, officially the Federal Republic of Germany since 1949, has been represented by the same governing body, the Deutscher Fußball-Bund (DFB), since 1904. Following World War II and the division of Germany, the DFB was re-admitted to FIFA after the 1950 World Cup as West Germany. Saar competed in the 1954 World Cup qualifying before joining West Germany in 1956. East Germany fielded teams of their own from 1958 to 1990 before joining with West Germany and the DFB during the German reunification. FIFA officially attributes all international results of the DFB team since 1908 to Germany, including the results of West Germany from 1954–1990.
  2. The Soviet Union qualified seven times prior to its dissolution in 1991. The 15 former nations Soviet republics now compete separately. FIFA considers Russia as the successor team of the Soviet Union.
  3. The Yugoslavia national football team qualified eight times during eras of Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1930) and the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1950–1990). They qualified from 1930–1990 under the name Yugoslavia before its breakup in 1992 by the secession of many of its constituent republics. They qualified once in 1998 as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, then changed its name to Serbia and Montenegro in 2003, only qualifying under that name in 2006. All of these teams are considered the predecessors of the current Serbia team by FIFA, which first qualified under that name in 2010. The other national teams that resulted from the breakup of the SFR Yugoslavia in 1992 — Croatia, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and North Macedonia — are considered distinct entities from the Yugoslavia team of 1930–1990. Montenegro now also competes separately after independence in 2006 and Kosovo was recognized by FIFA in 2016.
  4. Czechoslovakia qualified eight times prior to being divided into Slovakia and the Czech Republic in 1993. FIFA considers both the Czech Republic and Slovakia the successor team of Czechoslovakia. The Czech Republic national team qualified for the World Cup for the first time as a separate nation in 2006, with Slovakia doing the same in 2010.
  5. Indonesia competed as the Dutch East Indies in 1938.
  6. The Democratic Republic of the Congo competed as Zaire in 1974.
  7. Uruguay (76 years) and England (60 years) have longer active streaks.
  8. Only played in first two matches; medal awarded retroactively by FIFA in 2007.
  9. Pelé, Lothar Matthäus, Pierre Littbarski and Ronaldo each appeared three times in the squads of the teams that reached the finals, but none of them played in all three games.
  10. Different sources give Pelé between 8 and 10 assists.
  11. Zuberbühler kept goal throughout every minute of Switzerland's four matches. Other keepers have kept clean sheets only playing part of their team's matches.
  12. Attended three tournaments but did not act as main referee in all of them. Instead, he was exclusively used as a fourth official in a minimum of one edition.
  13. Putting French players off.
  14. Cufré was red carded for kicking Per Mertesacker in an altercation following the match.
  15. Also known as Battle of Nuremberg.
  16. The players sent off were Pedro Monzón and Gustavo Dezotti.
  17. Šimunić was given three yellow cards in the match as the referee failed to send him off the pitch after the second yellow, and was only red carded after the third yellow.
  18. Biyik missed the team's second game after receiving a red card in the first, and then missed Cameroon's fifth game after yellow cards in the third and fourth. Others, including Zinedine Zidane in 2006, have earned a second suspension in their team's final match of the tournament, not servable during the tournament.
  19. Penalties awarded in a match count towards the team’s total, but penalties in a shootout do not.
  20. Opening three games hosts:
    Argentina
    Paraguay
    Uruguay

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