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How much does World Cup winner get? Explaining record

AI News July 18, 2026 03:43 PM
How much does World Cup winner get? Explaining record

How much does World Cup winner get? Explaining record-breaking prize money for 2026 originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Whoever lifts the trophy at MetLife Stadium on July 19 won't just be walking away with football's biggest prize, they'll be cashing the largest single payout in World Cup history. FIFA's 2026 prize pool is unlike anything the tournament has offered before, a direct result of expanding to 48 teams and the extra matches, broadcast revenue and sponsorship that come with it.

Here's how much is on the table, and how the money breaks down.2026 WORLD CUP HQ:Latest World Cup news | Full World Cup schedule | Buy World Cup tickets

How much does the World Cup winner get?

The champion will collect $50 million in performance-based prize money alone. Add in the guaranteed qualification and preparation funding every team receives, and the winner's total payout climbs past $60 million before any additional bonuses their federation might hand out on top.

That $50 million is $8 million more than Argentina earned for winning in Qatar in 2022, the largest jump between tournaments in World Cup history.

Odds, spread for Spain vs. Argentina World Cup final

World Cup prize money breakdown

World Cup 2026 total prize money pool

FIFA is distributing $871 million in total prize money at this World Cup, compared with $440 million at the 2022 tournament, an increase of roughly 65%.

Every one of the 48 teams that qualified is guaranteed at least $12.5 million regardless of results, made up of a $10 million qualification fee and $2.5 million in preparation funding. From there, how much more a team earns depends entirely on how far it goes.MORE: Lionel Messi, Argentina add to World Cup comeback history

World Cup 2026 prize money by stage

Performance based payouts rise sharply the deeper a team advances:

Teams eliminated in the group stage earn roughly $9 million in performance money on top of their guaranteed funding. Because this is the first 48-team tournament, there's now a round of 32 that didn't exist in the old 32-team format, worth around $12 million to teams knocked out at that stage. Reaching the round of 16 is worth about $14 million, the quarterfinals around $19-20 million, fourth place brings in about $28 million, and third place roughly $30 million. The runner-up takes home $33-34 million, before the champion's $50 million tops the list.

How 2026 compares to previous World Cups

The jump from 32 to 48 teams for this tournament is the biggest structural change behind the bigger numbers. More teams means more matches, more broadcast windows and more sponsorship inventory for FIFA to sell, and prize money has scaled up accordingly.

It also means this is now the most lucrative World Cup in history for every participating federation, not just the eventual champion. Even the teams that went out in the group stage this summer earned more in guaranteed and performance money than several past World Cup winners did for lifting the trophy outright.