4.64 Million Fans, 215 Goals: FIFA World Cup 2026 Group Stage Rewrites the Record Books
The expanded FIFA World Cup 2026 has already become the biggest in history, with the group stage setting unprecedented records for attendance, goals, fan engagement and global reach across Canada, Mexico and the United States.
The first-ever 48-team FIFA World Cup has lived up to expectations, delivering drama on the pitch and record-breaking numbers off it. After just 17 days and 72 group-stage matches, the tournament has rewritten the history books with 4.64 million fans attending matches, a record 215 goals scored, and more than 5.5 million supporters visiting FIFA Fan Festivals.

Here's a look at the biggest numbers and milestones from the historic group stage.
Record attendance as nearly 4.65 million fans fill stadiums
The expanded tournament has already become the most attended group stage in FIFA World Cup history.
A total of 4,644,549 spectators watched the opening 72 matches, with stadiums operating at 99.7% capacity and averaging 64,508 fans per game.
Supporters from 210 countries and territories attended matches, comfortably surpassing the previous World Cup attendance record of 3.5 million set during USA 1994.
FIFA also registered its highest-ever single-day World Cup attendance, with 426,834 spectators entering stadiums on June 25.
Most goals ever scored in a World Cup group stage
The expanded format also produced a record number of goals.
A total of 215 goals were scored across 72 matches-an average of three goals per game-breaking the previous group-stage record. For comparison, the entire 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar produced 172 goals.
France, Germany and the Netherlands finished as the highest-scoring teams during the group stage with 10 goals each.
Meanwhile, 47 of the 48 participating nations found the net, with only Panama failing to score.
African football creates World Cup history
One of the biggest stories of the tournament has been the rise of African football.
For the first time ever, nine African teams reached the knockout stage, comfortably surpassing the previous record of two African qualifiers achieved in both 2014 and 2022.
Several nations also celebrated historic breakthroughs.
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cabo Verde, Canada, DR Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Egypt and South Africa all qualified for the World Cup knockout stage for the first time.
Among the debutants, Cabo Verde emerged as one of the tournament's biggest surprises, remaining unbeaten during the group stage despite having a population of only around 500,000.
Lionel Messi continues rewriting football history
Argentina captain Lionel Messi added several more milestones to his legendary career.
The 39-year-old became the first player in FIFA World Cup history to score in seven consecutive World Cup matches.
Messi also became the competition's all-time leading goalscorer with 19 goals while registering the oldest hat-trick in World Cup history, achieving the feat at 38 years and 357 days.
Cristiano Ronaldo also reached another landmark by becoming Portugal's all-time leading World Cup goalscorer with 10 goals, overtaking Eusébio.
Harry Kane similarly became England's highest-scoring player in World Cup history with 11 goals.
Canada, Senegal, Japan and USA set national records
Several nations enjoyed historic performances during the group stage.
Canada's emphatic 6-0 victory over Qatar became the first time a CONCACAF nation scored more than four goals in a World Cup match.
Senegal became the first African team ever to score five goals in a World Cup fixture, while Japan's 4-0 win over Tunisia represented the biggest victory by an AFC nation in tournament history.
Japan's victory also happened to be the 1,000th FIFA World Cup match ever played.
Meanwhile, the United States scored four goals in a World Cup match for the first time after defeating Paraguay 4-1.
Fan festivals attract more than 5.5 million supporters
Away from the stadiums, FIFA Fan Festivals proved equally popular.
More than 5.5 million fans attended official fan festivals across Canada, Mexico and the United States during the group stage.
Supporters consumed nearly 2 million soft drinks and water bottles, over 2 million alcoholic beverages, and thousands of local food items.
Kansas City's Fan Festival welcomed visitors from 157 different countries, while Mexico City's festival attracted a record 201,500 people in a single day.
Digital engagement reaches new heights
The tournament has also broken numerous digital records.
FIFA.com recorded 130 million unique visitors, representing a 26% increase compared to the same stage of the 2022 World Cup.
The official FIFA World Cup app attracted 30 million users, while FIFA gained 39 million new social media followers during the group stage alone.
Overall, tournament-related content generated 17 billion impressions, 11 billion video views, and one billion engagements across social media platforms.
Lionel Messi's goal against Algeria became the most-viewed FIFA World Cup TikTok clip so far with 53 million views.
Music, merchandise and food also hit record highs
The official FIFA World Cup soundtrack has enjoyed unprecedented popularity.
The tournament album accumulated 374 million streams, while Shakira and Burna Boy's official song Dai Dai climbed to No. 2 on Spotify's Global Top 50 chart.
Meanwhile, adidas reported over $1.13 billion in World Cup-related sales, with Mexico's national team jersey emerging as the best-selling shirt during the group stage.
Fans also purchased more than 2.8 million beers, nearly one million bottles of water, and over 300,000 hot dogs inside stadiums throughout the tournament.
Knockout stage promises even bigger spectacle
With the Round of 32 now underway, the record-breaking tournament shows no signs of slowing down.
The expanded format has already delivered historic firsts, surprise qualifiers, memorable performances and unprecedented global engagement.
If the group stage is any indication, FIFA World Cup 2026 is well on course to become the biggest and most successful edition of football's biggest tournament.


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