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The Best World Cup Songs — And the Ones You May Have Forgotten

From Shakira to Los Ramblers, here are the top World Cup anthems, including a few gems that have gotten lost to time

World Cup song singers

RON GALELLA/RON GALELLA COLLECTION/GETTY IMAGES; STUART FRANKLIN/GETTY IMAGES; JEAN CATUFFE/GETTY IMAGES

Over the years, the songs that provide a soundtrack to the World Cup have become a significant part of the tournament, almost as important as the games. Some anthems have reached far beyond the field to offer a true moment of unity (“Cup of Life,” anyone?).

As the 2026 games kick off, we surveyed all of the official FIFA songs and anthems (not soundtrack singles) since 1990, and highlighted the most inescapable bops, along with some that may have gotten lost to time. Check them out below.

‘Waka Waka (This Time for Africa),’ Shakira (2010)

If Ricky Martin created the World Cup global hit blueprint, Shakira elevated the formula with the unifying “Waka Waka (This Time for Africa),” which blends Afro-Colombian elements with South African music styles. The track was inescapable in 2010; you didn’t even have to tune into any matches to hear it. In 2024, it became the most streamed FIFA World Cup song and even earned a Guinness World Record. “It’s one of my biggest songs of all time,” Shakira said earlier this year. “But beyond what it did for my music and career … it turned me into my mother.” On the set of “Waka Waka,” the superstar met professional football player Gerard Piqué, the father of her two children. After all of these years, Shakira continues to honor the song by making it a staple of her concert setlists.

‘The Cup of Life,’Ricky Martin (1998)

Ricky Martin literally changed the game with this samba-infused anthem. “La Copa de la Vida,” or “The Cup of Life” was the first official FIFA-sponsored song to skyrocket in popularity and turned into a global pop mega-hit, reaching Number One in 30 countries. With the vivacious track and its celebratory video, the Puerto Rican singer and former boy band member rocketed into stardom. But the impact of “La Copa de la Vida” extends far beyond that year’s tournament. At the 1999 Grammys ceremony, Martin delivered a monumental performance of the song, effectively launching Latin pop’s late Nineties explosion into high-gear. In his 2010 memoir, Me, Martin recognized the pivotal moment, writing, “It was a unique opportunity to introduce the charms of Latin music to the rest of the world.”