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Playoffs

FIFA Club World Cup · 2025

Quarter-finals

Fluminense2
Al-Hilal Saudi FC1
2–1
Palmeiras1
Chelsea2
1–2
Paris Saint Germain2
Bayern München0
2–0
Real Madrid3
Borussia Dortmund2
3–2

Semi-finals

Fluminense0
Chelsea2
0–2
Paris Saint Germain4
Real Madrid0
4–0

Final

Chelsea3
Paris Saint Germain0
3–0

Standings

FIFA Club World Cup · 2025

Current FIFA Club World Cup 2025 standings with 32 teams. Palmeiras leads the table with 5 points after 3 matches, followed by Inter Miami on 5 points. The table shows wins, draws, losses, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and recent form — essential for pre-match betting analysis.

Playoffs
TeamPlayedWonDrawnLostGoals For:Goals AgainstGoal DiffPointsForm
Group A
1Palmeiras31204:2+25
DWD
2Inter Miami31204:3+15
DWD
3FC Porto30215:6-12
DLD
4Al Ahly30214:6-22
DLD
Group B
1Paris Saint Germain32016:1+56
WLW
2Botafogo32013:2+16
LWW
3Atletico Madrid32014:5-16
WWL
4Seattle Sounders30032:7-50
LLL
Group C
1Benfica32109:2+77
WWD
2Bayern München320112:2+106
LWW
3Boca Juniors30214:5-12
DLD
4Auckland City30121:17-161
DLL
Group D
1Flamengo32106:2+47
DWW
2Chelsea32016:3+36
WLW
3ES Tunis31021:5-43
LWL
4Los Angeles FC30121:4-31
DLL
Group E
1Inter32105:2+37
WWD
2Monterrey31205:1+45
WDD
3River Plate31113:304
LDW
4Urawa30032:9-70
LLL
Group F
1Borussia Dortmund32105:3+27
WWD
2Fluminense31204:2+25
DWD
3Mamelodi Sundowns31114:404
DLW
4Ulsan Hyundai FC30032:6-40
LLL
Group G
1Manchester City330013:2+119
WWW
2Juventus320111:6+56
LWW
3Al Ain31022:12-103
WLL
4Wydad AC30032:8-60
LLL
Group H
1Real Madrid32107:2+57
WWD
2Al-Hilal Saudi FC31203:1+25
WDD
3Red Bull Salzburg31112:4-24
LDW
4Pachuca30032:7-50
LLL

Results

FIFA Club World Cup · 50
Final13/07/2025
Sun 13/07
Match Details
Semi-finals08/07/2025–09/07/2025
Wed 09/07
Match Details
Tue 08/07
Match Details
Quarter-finals04/07/2025–05/07/2025
Sat 05/07
Match Details
Sat 05/07
Match Details
Sat 05/07
Match Details
Fri 04/07
Match Details
8th Finals28/06/2025–02/07/2025
Wed 02/07
Match Details
Tue 01/07
Match Details
Tue 01/07
Match Details
Mon 30/06
Match Details
Sun 29/06
Match Details
Sun 29/06
Match Details
Sat 28/06
Match Details
Sat 28/06
Match Details
Group stage – 325/06/2025–27/06/2025
Fri 27/06
Match Details
Fri 27/06
Match Details
Thu 26/06
Match Details
Thu 26/06
Match Details
Thu 26/06
Match Details
Thu 26/06
Match Details
Wed 25/06
Match Details
Wed 25/06
Match Details
Wed 25/06
Match Details
Wed 25/06
Match Details

Team Stats

Side-by-side performance comparison of all 32 teams in the FIFA Club World Cup. Manchester City leads with 3 wins this season. The colour-coded heatmap highlights wins, losses, draws, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and win percentage — making it easy to spot the strongest and weakest teams at a glance for betting analysis.

Top Scorers

Top Assists

Top Cards

Yellow Cards
Red Cards

Teams

FIFA Club World Cup

All 32 teams competing in the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.

Past Seasons

FIFA Club World Cup

Browse 12 archived seasons of the FIFA Club World Cup, from 2011 to 2025. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.

History 18 Mar 2026

Founded2000

The FIFA Club World Cup was inaugurated in 2000 in Brazil as a one-off international club championship, originally featuring only six teams. The tournament evolved from FIFA's vision to create a global club competition that would complement the international World Cup and determine the true world champion among club sides. The format underwent significant changes over 25 years: from a small invitational tournament to a knockout competition featuring representatives from each continental confederation. The most transformative moment came in 2025, when FIFA expanded the tournament to 32 teams playing in eight groups of four, mirroring the structure of the FIFA World Cup itself. This expansion marked a watershed moment in club football, elevating the competition's global profile and commercial value. The 2025 edition in the United States was the first under this new format, featuring continental champions from 2021–2024 and additional qualified clubs, establishing the FIFA Club World Cup as a permanent fixture in the football calendar.

  • 2000 — FIFA Club World Cup inaugurated in Brazil with Corinthians winning the inaugural tournament
  • 2005 — Tournament format changed to knockout competition featuring continental champions
  • 2011 — Barcelona dominated the tournament, winning 4–0 in the final against Santos
  • 2014 — Real Madrid claimed their first title, beginning a dominant era with five championships
  • 2022 — Real Madrid won their fifth title, the most of any club in the competition's history
  • 2025 — FIFA expanded the tournament to 32 teams, transforming it into a month-long global championship in the United States

Competition Format 18 Mar 2026

Teams32

The 2025 FIFA Club World Cup features 32 teams divided into eight groups of four clubs. Each team plays every other team in their group once in a round-robin format, earning three points for a win and one point for a draw. The top two teams from each group advance to a 16-team knockout stage, which consists of quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final. The tournament is completed within a single month, making it the most condensed format in the competition's history. There is no playoff system; teams are eliminated immediately upon losing in the knockout rounds, creating high-stakes matches from the quarter-final stage onwards.

Records 18 Mar 2026

Most titlesReal Madrid (5)All-time top scorerCristiano Ronaldo (7 goals)

Lionel Messi has scored 6 goals across multiple appearances, ranking second all-time, while the 2025 tournament saw Chelsea's Cole Palmer emerge as a standout performer with multiple crucial goals in the knockout stages.

Analysis 18 Mar 2026

Current Season Analysis

The 2025 FIFA Club World Cup concluded in July 2025 with Chelsea claiming the inaugural title under the expanded 32-team format. The English club delivered a commanding performance throughout the tournament, culminating in a dominant 3–0 victory over Paris Saint-Germain in the final at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. Chelsea's triumph marked a historic moment for the club, securing their first FIFA Club World Cup title and cementing their status as a global powerhouse in club football.

Palmeiras and Inter Miami emerged as group-stage standouts, each accumulating 5 points from their respective group matches. Palmeiras drew with Benfica and Bayern Munich while securing a narrow 1–2 defeat to Chelsea, demonstrating competitive resilience against elite opposition. Inter Miami similarly impressed with draws against Benfica and Bayern Munich, finishing level on points with Palmeiras but separated by goal difference. These performances highlighted the expanded tournament's capacity to showcase clubs from different continents at the highest level.

The knockout stages revealed the tournament's competitive depth and unpredictability. Paris Saint-Germain advanced to the final despite a devastating 4–0 group-stage defeat to Bayern Munich, showcasing the tournament's format advantage where strong knockout performances can overcome early setbacks. Real Madrid's participation—despite winning five previous titles—ended in the semi-final stages, signaling that historical pedigree alone could not guarantee success in the restructured competition. Borussia Dortmund provided a compelling narrative, reaching the semi-finals before succumbing to eventual champions Chelsea.

Cole Palmer emerged as Chelsea's standout performer, orchestrating the team's attacking play with precision and creativity throughout the knockout stages. Palmer's influence in the final, where he contributed directly to multiple goals, underscored the importance of individual brilliance in decisive matches. His performances attracted significant attention from leading European clubs and reinforced Chelsea's tactical flexibility under their coaching setup.

The tournament's expansion to 32 teams fundamentally altered competitive dynamics compared to previous editions. Unlike earlier formats where European and South American dominance was nearly absolute, the 2025 structure provided genuine pathways for clubs from Africa, Asia, and North America to compete meaningfully. This democratization of opportunity did not dilute quality but rather enriched the competition, as demonstrated by consistent high-scoring matches and tactical sophistication across all group stages. The inclusion of emerging continental powers such as Al-Hilal, Mamelodi Sundowns, and Ulsan Hyundai created compelling narratives and genuine uncertainty about outcomes—a departure from the predictability that had occasionally characterized earlier tournaments.

The Evolution of a Global Institution

The FIFA Club World Cup's transformation from a six-team invitational in 2000 to a 32-team global championship represents one of football's most significant structural evolutions. For 25 years, the tournament operated with modest participation and limited commercial infrastructure, yet it consistently delivered compelling football and memorable moments. The 2011 Barcelona team's 4–0 demolition of Santos exemplified the quality achievable within the old format, while Real Madrid's five-title haul between 2014 and 2022 established a dynasty that transcended continental boundaries.

The 2025 expansion fundamentally repositioned the FIFA Club World Cup within global football's hierarchy. By adopting a 32-team, month-long format mirroring the FIFA World Cup structure, FIFA signaled that club football had achieved parity with international football in commercial importance and competitive appeal. The $1 billion broadcast deal with DAZN—unprecedented for a club competition outside the UEFA Champions League—validates this strategic recalibration. For the first time, the FIFA Club World Cup offers genuine sporting legitimacy as a world championship, where continental champions compete on equal terms and the tournament winner can legitimately claim the title of world club champion.

Format Innovation and Competitive Balance

The group-stage format introduced in 2025 creates distinct advantages and challenges absent from previous knockout-only tournaments. Teams no longer face single-elimination pressure in opening matches; instead, they compete in a league phase where results accumulate and strategic flexibility increases. This structure rewards consistency and punishes complacency, as demonstrated by PSG's recovery from their group-stage rout by Bayern Munich. The format's sophistication extends beyond mere structure—it creates natural narratives where clubs from different continents encounter one another in meaningful competition, generating storylines that transcend traditional continental rivalries.

The tournament's condensed timeline—completed within a single month—distinguishes it from the protracted Champions League season. This intensity creates a unique pressure environment where fatigue, injury, and mental resilience become decisive factors. Chelsea's ability to maintain peak performance across six matches in three weeks demonstrated the physical and tactical demands of the expanded format. The compressed schedule also maximizes global television scheduling efficiency, enabling FIFA to concentrate viewership in a defined period rather than spreading interest across multiple months.

Looking Forward: Implications for Club Football

The 2025 FIFA Club World Cup's success establishes a template for future editions and raises profound questions about club football's organizational future. With plans to expand further to 48 teams in subsequent tournaments, FIFA envisions the Club World Cup as a permanent fixture rivaling the FIFA World Cup in prestige. This elevation has immediate consequences: elite clubs must now balance domestic league commitments with FIFA Club World Cup participation, potentially affecting competitive balance within national leagues. The tournament's commercial success—evidenced by the DAZN deal—suggests that global audiences value seeing continental champions compete directly, a proposition that will only intensify with further expansion.

Real Madrid's absence from the 2025 final, despite their historical dominance, hints at the unpredictability inherent in expanded formats. As participation broadens and the tournament's structure evolves, no single club can assume supremacy. This competitive uncertainty, combined with the tournament's global reach and commercial infrastructure, positions the FIFA Club World Cup as football's ultimate club competition—the true world championship that the sport has long lacked.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many teams compete in the FIFA Club World Cup?

The 2025 edition features 32 teams, divided into eight groups of four. This represents a significant expansion from the previous format, which featured between 6 and 8 teams.

Who has won the most FIFA Club World Cup titles?

Real Madrid holds the record with five titles, won in 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2022. Barcelona is second with three titles (2009, 2011, 2015), and Bayern Munich has won twice (2013, 2020).

How does the FIFA Club World Cup format work?

Teams are divided into eight groups of four, playing each other once in a round-robin format. The top two teams from each group advance to a 16-team knockout stage consisting of quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final.

When was the FIFA Club World Cup first held?

The tournament was first held in 2000 in Brazil, with Corinthians winning the inaugural edition. The competition has been held regularly since 2005, with the exception of 2024.

Who won the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup?

Chelsea won the 2025 tournament, defeating Paris Saint-Germain 3–0 in the final on July 13, 2025, at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. This was Chelsea's first FIFA Club World Cup title.

How much were the broadcast rights for the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup?

DAZN acquired global broadcast rights for the 2025 tournament in a deal valued at $1 billion, with all matches streamed free to viewers worldwide across 190+ territories.

API data: 30 May 2026 · Content updated: 18 Mar 2026