2026 World Cup’s most expensive squads revealed
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France leads the pack with a jaw-dropping squad value of £1.32 billion, eclipsing every other nation. Kylian Mbappé headlines the French roster with a tournament-high worth of £173 million, joined by rising stars Lamine Yamal and Erling Haaland.
By Tolulope Oke
As the countdown to the FIFA 2026 World Cup heats up, the latest squad valuations reveal the staggering financial firepower of the world’s elite national teams and some shocking disparities.
France leads the pack with a jaw-dropping squad value of £1.32 billion, eclipsing every other nation. Kylian Mbappe headlines the French roster with a tournament-high worth of £173 million, joined by rising stars Lamine Yamal and Erling Haaland.
England, despite boasting Jude Bellingham at £121 million, settle for second place with a squad worth £1.13 billion under Thomas Tuchel. Spain (£1.09 billion) are the only other billion-pound side, while last edition’s winners, Argentina, rank eighth at £707.76 million.
The figures, compiled by Transfermarkt, illustrate the huge gulf between Europe’s elite and the rest of the footballing world.
At the bottom, World Cup debutants Jordan register the tournament’s cheapest squad at £16.89 million, less than Bayern Munich’s Harry Kane earns individually. Qatar (£17.24 million) and Saudi Arabia (£32.09 million) also feature among the modestly valued sides.
The contrast extends to the hosts: the United States rank 18th at £327.03 million, while Mexico sit 27th at £168.27 million. Even combined, England’s Group L opponents Croatia, Ghana, and Panama — total only £563.27 million, barely over half the value of the Three Lions’ squad.
Europe and South America dominate the top eight, but the Ivory Coast (£459.07 million) leads outside the traditional powerhouses, boasting talents such as Amad Diallo and Liverpool target Yan Diomande. Asia’s most expensive side is Japan, valued at £241.16 million, who famously beat England 1-0 at Wembley in March.
Transfermarkt’s valuations, while not a definitive measure of quality, offer a revealing snapshot of the tournament’s financial landscape. Defensive squads with expiring contracts or emerging players naturally rank lower, while marquee talents skew values sky-high.
2026 World Cup Most expensive squads (£)
1)France – 1.32bn
2)England – 1.13bn
3)Spain – 1.09bn
4)Portugal – 880m
5)Germany – 862.97m
6)Brazil – 788.78m
7)Netherlands – 723.93m
8)Argentina – 707.76m
9)Norway – 519.68m
10)Belgium – 469.45m
11) Ivory Coast – £459.07m
12) Morocco – £422.15m
13) Senegal – £408.92m
14) Turkey – £408.74m
15) Sweden – £370.25m
16) Uruguay – £350.9m
17) Croatia – £333.51m
18) United States – £327.03m ($440.44m)
19) Ecuador – £325.3m
20) Switzerland – £288.46m
21) Colombia – £263.95m
22) Japan – £241.16m
23) Austria – £234.94m
24) Algeria – £222.75m
25) Ghana – £199.64m
26) Canada – £175.58m
27) Mexico – £168.27m
28) Czechia – £164.45m
29) Scotland – £152.39m
30) Paraguay – £135.89m
31) Bosnia & Herzegovina – £129.04m
32) DR Congo – £128.91m
33) South Korea – £123.07m
34) Egypt – £116.48m
35) Australia – £63.7m
36) Uzbekistan – £63.16m*
37) Tunisia – £60.06m
38) Cape Verde – £48.59m
39) Haiti – £48.09m
40) South Africa – £39.61m
41) Saudi Arabia – £32.09m
42) New Zealand – £30.57m
43) Panama – £30.12m
44 Iran – £28.24m
45) Curacao – £22.51m
46) Iraq – £18.21m
47) Qatar – £17.24m
48) Jordan – £16.89m
At the opposite end, teams like Jordan, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia illustrate the enormous disparities that make the World Cup not just a sporting spectacle, but a showcase of footballing wealth — and, in some cases, David vs. Goliath narratives.
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