World Cup 2026 is historic because it is the first men's World Cup with 48 teams and 104 matches. It also returns the tournament to North America after USA 1994 set a famous attendance benchmark.
All-time top scorers
Miroslav Klose leads the all-time World Cup scoring list with 16 goals. Ronaldo of Brazil is next with 15, while Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe are among the active-era names fans watch when discussing records.
Why 2026 can change the record book
More teams and more matches create more opportunities for goals, appearances, debutants and attendance milestones. The new round of 32 also means the champion must survive one extra knockout stage compared with Qatar 2022.
Why records matter in 2026
The expanded tournament gives players more possible matches and gives teams from more regions a bigger platform. That can affect scoring records, appearance records, debutant stories and attendance totals across the full event.
Record categories to watch
- All-time goals and single-tournament goals.
- Youngest and oldest player milestones.
- Total tournament attendance.
- First-time team achievements.
- Host-country records across Canada, Mexico and the United States.