Records are the memory of the tournament. They tell us not just who won, but how dominant a side really was, how brutal a goal drought felt, and how rare a feat like a final hat-trick truly is. This desk keeps that memory organised — and updated as the 2026 World Cup writes its own entries.
All-time top scorers
The leading marksmen of World Cup history span eras and continents. The benchmark for a generation was set in 1958 and pushed higher in 2006, when the all-time record moved into double figures and beyond. Modern forwards from Germany, Brazil and Argentina have all added their names to the upper reaches of the list.
| # | Player | Nation | Goals | Tournaments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Miroslav Klose | Germany | 16 | 4 |
| 2 | Ronaldo | Brazil | 15 | 3 |
| 3 | Gerd Müller | Germany | 14 | 2 |
| 4 | Just Fontaine | France | 13 | 1 |
| 5 | Pelé | Brazil | 12 | 4 |
| 6 | Sándor Kocsis | Hungary | 11 | 1 |
| 7 | Gary Lineker | England | 10 | 2 |
Tip: tap a column header to re-sort the table.
Most matches played
Longevity is its own record. Reaching four or five tournaments demands fitness, form and a country good enough to keep qualifying. The appearance leaders are spread across Germany, Italy, Argentina and Mexico — nations whose pipelines rarely miss a World Cup.
| # | Player | Nation | Matches | Tournaments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lionel Messi | Argentina | 26 | 5 |
| 2 | Lothar Matthäus | Germany | 25 | 5 |
| 3 | Paolo Maldini | Italy | 23 | 4 |
| 4 | Diego Maradona | Argentina | 21 | 4 |
| 5 | Uwe Seeler | Germany | 21 | 4 |
Team milestones
Beyond individuals, the team record book is where dynasties are measured. Brazil's five titles remain the high-water mark, with Germany and Italy close behind. But the database is just as interested in the extremes: the biggest margins, the longest unbeaten runs and the rare clean-sheet tournaments that win trophies.
Records still standing into 2026
Some marks have survived for generations. The 13-goal haul set by France's Just Fontaine in a single tournament has held since 1958 — a relic of a different, more open era of football. With 48 teams and more matches than ever, the 2026 World Cup gives the modern game its best statistical chance to threaten records once thought untouchable.
- Most goals in one tournament (13): a single-edition feat unbeaten for over six decades.
- Youngest goalscorer: a teenage strike that still tops the age charts.
- Longest clean-sheet streak by a goalkeeper: a defensive record that defines knockout football.
- Most tournaments won as a player: a Brazilian benchmark from the Pelé era.
A record only feels permanent until the moment it falls. The expansion to 48 teams means more matches, more sample, and a real chance that something here is rewritten in North America.
For a fuller statistical story of how these numbers were built across a hundred years, read our flagship essay in The Long Read, or test contenders' current form in the interactive tables.