How many times has each nation won the World Cup?
- 07-06-2026
- National
- Daniel Price
- Photo Credit: Freepik
The FIFA World Cup has been contested since 1930, and across 22 tournaments, only eight nations have ever won it. That's a remarkably small club given the scale of the competition, and it tells you something about how rare it is to actually go all the way.
Every four years, the same names dominate the World Cup 2026 odds - and with good reason. History has a habit of repeating itself at this tournament.
Going from 22 editions to a 23ʳᵈ in 2026 without a new name on the trophy would be no surprise. No nation outside that original eight has ever won it, and the gap between the established powers and the rest remains significant despite the expansion to 48 teams. If you want to map out which of the contenders could go deep this summer, the World Cup Predictor is worth a look before the group stage gets underway.
Here is a full breakdown of every World Cup winner and how many times they've lifted the trophy. For the complete history of the tournament, FIFA's official World Cup archive covers every edition in detail.
|
Nation |
Titles |
Years |
|
Brazil |
5 |
1958, 1962, 1970, 1994, 2002 |
|
Germany |
4 |
1954, 1974, 1990, 2014 |
|
Italy |
4 |
1934, 1938, 1982, 2006 |
|
Argentina |
3 |
1978, 1986, 2022 |
|
France |
2 |
1998, 2018 |
|
Uruguay |
2 |
1930, 1950 |
|
England |
1 |
1966 |
|
Spain |
1 |
2010 |
Brazil are the only nation to have won the World Cup five times, and no other country has come close to matching that record. Their 1970 side, which beat Italy 4-1 in the final in Mexico, is widely regarded as one of the greatest teams ever assembled. Their most recent title came in 2002, when they beat Germany 2-0 in the final in Japan. That's now over two decades without a winner's medal, and the pressure that brings into each new tournament is considerable. Brazil arrive at 2026 as one of the favourites, as they almost always do.
Germany and Italy
Germany and Italy share second place on four titles each, though both are waiting on a fifth. Italy's last win came in 2006, Germany's in 2014. Both are at the 2026 tournament and both carry the weight of long waits for another title. Germany, in particular, have been one of the most consistent nations in the competition's history, reaching at least the semi-finals in the majority of their appearances.
Argentina
Argentina lifted the trophy for a third time in Qatar in 2022, ending a 36-year wait since their second title in 1986. They arrive in North America as defending champions, the only nation at 2026 with a title won in the last four years. History suggests defending champions rarely go back-to-back, but Argentina's squad depth makes them one of the few sides capable of it.
England and the wait goes on
For a UK and Irish audience, England's position on this list is familiar and frustrating in equal measure. One title, won on home soil at Wembley in 1966, and nothing since. Spain's solitary win came in 2010 in South Africa, with Uruguay's two titles dating back to 1930 and 1950 respectively, both from an era when the competition looked very different.
Twenty-two tournaments, eight winners. The 2026 edition in North America is the latest opportunity to add to that list - though history suggests whoever lifts the trophy in New Jersey on 19th July will almost certainly be a nation that has done it before.







































