I have always thought you can read the history of global pop music through one strange but reliable lens: the official FIFA World Cup anthem. Five years on this beat has only confirmed it. Every four years FIFA picks a song that, intentionally or not, captures the dominant sound and the dominant geography of pop in that exact moment. From the orchestral marches of 1962 to the Afrobeats fusion of 2026, the World Cup anthem is a 64-year-running barometer of which musical genre is global enough to soundtrack the world’s biggest sporting event.
Here is a complete decade-by-decade history of every official World Cup song, what it sounded like, and what it tells us about the world that produced it.
Every Official FIFA World Cup Anthem (1962–2026)
| Year | Host | Official Song | Artist(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1962 | Chile | "El Rock del Mundial" | Los Ramblers |
| 1966 | England | "World Cup Willie" | Lonnie Donegan |
| 1970 | Mexico | "Fut-Bol México 70" / various | Various Mexican artists |
| 1974 | West Germany | "Fußball ist unser Leben" | Maryla Rodowicz / German FA squad |
| 1978 | Argentina | "El Mundial" | Ennio Morricone (theme) |
| 1982 | Spain | "Mundial '82 (El Mundial)" | Plácido Domingo |
| 1986 | Mexico | "El Mundo Unido por un Balón" | Stephanie Lawrence / Various |
| 1990 | Italy | "Un'estate italiana" (Notti Magiche) | Edoardo Bennato & Gianna Nannini |
| 1994 | USA | "Gloryland" | Daryl Hall & Sounds of Blackness |
| 1998 | France | "La Copa de la Vida" (The Cup of Life) | Ricky Martin |
| 2002 | South Korea / Japan | "Boom" / "Anthem" | Anastacia ("Boom") / Vangelis (anthem) |
| 2006 | Germany | "The Time of Our Lives" | Il Divo & Toni Braxton |
| 2010 | South Africa | "Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)" | Shakira ft. Freshlyground |
| 2014 | Brazil | "We Are One (Ole Ola)" | Pitbull, J.Lo, Cláudia Leitte |
| 2018 | Russia | "Live It Up" | Nicky Jam, Will Smith, Era Istrefi |
| 2022 | Qatar | "Hayya Hayya (Better Together)" + album | Trinidad Cardona, Davido, Aisha + others |
| 2026 | USA / Mexico / Canada | "Dai Dai" + 4-song album | Shakira & Burna Boy + 4 collaborations |
The Pre-Pop Era (1962–1986)
The earliest World Cup songs were less “anthems” in the modern radio sense and more orchestral marches and novelty records. England’s 1966 “World Cup Willie” by Lonnie Donegan is the first World Cup song with a clear chart-pop sensibility — a skiffle / pop tune tied to a tournament mascot. Ennio Morricone composed the 1978 Argentina theme. Plácido Domingo headlined 1982 Spain. These were tournament identifiers more than crossover hits.
1990 Italy: The First Modern Pop Anthem
The shift toward what we now call a “World Cup anthem” really begins with Italia 90’s “Un’estate italiana (Notti Magiche)” by Edoardo Bennato & Gianna Nannini. It charted across Europe, became a long-running cultural touchstone, and established the template: bilingual chorus, stadium-sized hook, performable at the closing ceremony. Every subsequent World Cup song lives in the shadow of this one.
1998 France: Ricky Martin Changes Everything
Ricky Martin’s “La Copa de la Vida” for France 98 is the modern World Cup song’s real Year Zero. Latin pop and global English-language pop fused into one song that was simultaneously the World Cup anthem and the song that catapulted Martin from regional Spanish-language star to global megastar. The Grammys took notice; mainstream U.S. radio took notice; an entire Latin-pop explosion of the late 1990s and early 2000s can be traced to this single recording.
2010 South Africa: Waka Waka and the Streaming Era
Shakira’s “Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)” arrived at the exact moment YouTube became the global music distribution platform. The song’s music video became one of the most-watched YouTube clips of its era. Streaming numbers (still climbing) put it as the most-streamed FIFA song ever on Spotify. The 2010 anthem is the model every subsequent FIFA song has been measured against — commercially, none have matched it.
2014 Brazil: The Multi-Artist Era Begins
Brazil 2014’s “We Are One (Ole Ola)” with Pitbull, Jennifer Lopez, and Cláudia Leitte was FIFA’s first three-artist headline collaboration. The chart performance was solid but the cultural footprint was smaller than Waka Waka. This is also the tournament where Shakira returned with “La La La” on the closing-ceremony side, cementing the “anthem + closing song” double-track approach.
2018 & 2022: The Underperforming Era
Russia 2018’s “Live It Up” (Nicky Jam, Will Smith, Era Istrefi) and Qatar 2022’s “Hayya Hayya (Better Together)” both underperformed commercially against Waka Waka and Hips Don’t Lie. Qatar 2022 introduced the multi-song album format that FIFA has now continued for 2026.
2026: The Album-First Era
The FIFA World Cup 2026 Official Album — anchored by Shakira and Burna Boy’s “Dai Dai,” with four additional songs across country, cumbia, reggaeton, and Arabic-influenced R&B — represents FIFA fully committing to the album format. It is the first World Cup tournament to be co-hosted by three countries, and the album’s diversity reflects that.
Frequently Asked Questions
What was the first FIFA World Cup official song?
The first widely-recognized FIFA World Cup official song was “El Rock del Mundial” by Los Ramblers for the 1962 Chile tournament. Earlier tournaments did not have official commercial songs in the modern sense.
Which is the most successful FIFA World Cup song?
“Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)” by Shakira featuring Freshlyground for South Africa 2010 is the most commercially successful World Cup song of all time. It holds a Guinness World Record and is the most-streamed FIFA song on Spotify.
Who composed the 1998 World Cup anthem?
Ricky Martin performed “La Copa de la Vida” (The Cup of Life) for France 1998. The song was a worldwide hit and is widely credited with launching Martin’s global career and the late-90s Latin-pop boom.
What is the 2026 World Cup anthem?
The official 2026 FIFA World Cup anthem is “Dai Dai” by Shakira and Burna Boy, released on May 15, 2026. It is the lead single from a five-song official album.
How does FIFA pick the World Cup anthem?
FIFA works with the host country’s music industry partners and a lead label (often Sony Music Latin for the recent tournaments) to commission artists for each tournament. Artists are typically selected to reflect a mix of the host country’s music scene and globally bankable pop stars. Recent tournaments have moved toward multi-artist collaborations and full official albums.
For more World Cup music coverage, see our soundtrack news section.