Kylian Mbappé has a World Cup winner’s medal and a World Cup final hat-trick. What he doesn’t have – yet – is the second one. The 2026 FIFA World Cup is his chance to fix that.
At 27 years old, Mbappé arrives in North America as France captain, carrying the armband and the ambition of a man who knows exactly what it means to fall agonisingly short at football’s biggest event. He has been the most prolific striker in world football for the better part of a decade. North America is where he finally finishes the job – or so France believe.
Who Is Kylian Mbappé?
Kylian Mbappé was born on 20 December 1998 in Paris and grew up in Bondy, one of the working-class suburbs north of the city. His father Wilfried, of Cameroonian descent, was his first football coach. His mother Fayza Lamari manages his business affairs to this day.
He came through the Monaco academy and announced himself to the football world with a stunning 2016/17 Champions League campaign, still a teenager. Paris Saint-Germain paid what was then a world-record loan fee – later made permanent for around €180m – to bring him to the capital.
In eight years at PSG, Mbappé scored 256 goals in 308 appearances. He left as a free agent in the summer of 2024 to join Real Madrid, where he has continued scoring at a relentless rate: 86 goals in 103 matches across his first two seasons at the Bernabéu, finishing as La Liga’s top scorer in both campaigns.
He is one of the fastest players the game has ever seen, explosive over short distances and with the technical quality to match his athleticism – a combination that makes him almost impossible to defend against in one-versus-one situations.
Mbappé’s World Cup History
The 2026 tournament is Mbappé’s third World Cup, and the weight of what has happened at the previous two gives this one its context.
2018 – Winner. Mbappé was 19 years old when France lifted the trophy in Russia. He scored four goals in the tournament, including a strike in the 4-2 final victory over Croatia, becoming only the second teenager in history – after Pelé – to score in a World Cup final. He donated his entire €400,000 tournament bonus to charity.
2022 – Final heartbreak. If 2018 announced him, 2022 devastated him. France reached the final in Qatar against Argentina, trailing 2-0 with 15 minutes to go. Mbappé scored twice in as many minutes to draw level. He scored again in extra time and from the penalty spot in the shootout, finishing with 8 goals – the Golden Boot – and becoming the first player in history to score four career goals in World Cup finals. France lost 4-2 on penalties. He was the best player on the losing side in a final for the ages.
He enters 2026 with 13 World Cup goals across two tournaments, making him one of the highest-scoring players in World Cup history before his third appearance. He will almost certainly become France’s all-time leading scorer during the group stage, needing just two goals to surpass Olivier Giroud’s record.
France’s 2026 World Cup Campaign
France are drawn in Group I alongside Norway, Iraq, and one qualifier. They are among the top favourites for the tournament alongside Argentina, Spain, and Brazil.
Mbappé enters in strong form. He scored 43 goals across all competitions in the 2025/26 season at Real Madrid. With 56 goals in 96 appearances for France, he is one of the most lethal forwards in international football history at the age of 27 – still arguably at the peak of his powers.
The France squad around him is formidable. Tchouaméni and Camavinga provide midfield steel, Griezmann continues to operate in between the lines, and the depth of talent Didier Deschamps or his successor can call upon is the envy of most nations.
The World Cup He Was Made For
There is a theory in football that some players are built specifically for tournaments – for the knockout pressure, the short turnarounds, the weight of a nation. Mbappé is the clearest modern example. He elevates in big games. He produced arguably the greatest individual final performance of any player on the losing side in 2022. Imagine what he does when France win.
At 27, he is at the perfect age for a World Cup: old enough to carry the psychological burden of captaincy and expectation, young enough to still have the athletic edge that makes him impossible to handle at pace.
If France go deep – and the squad suggests they should – Mbappé’s goals will be the reason. The 2026 World Cup could be the moment Kylian Mbappé stops being described as the heir to Messi and Ronaldo and simply becomes the definitive player of his era.
Kylian Mbappé Quick Facts
- Full name: Kylian Mbappé Lottin
- Date of birth: 20 December 1998
- Age at 2026 World Cup: 27
- Club: Real Madrid
- Position: Centre forward / left winger
- World Cup goals: 13 (in 2 tournaments)
- International caps / goals: 96 appearances / 56 goals
- Major honours: World Cup 2018, UEFA Nations League 2021, Ligue 1 (x7 with PSG)
- Records: First player to score 4 World Cup final goals; 2022 Golden Boot
Frequently Asked Questions
How many World Cup goals has Mbappé scored?
Mbappé has scored 13 World Cup goals across two tournaments – 4 in 2018 (including one in the final) and 8 in 2022 (winning the Golden Boot). He is the first player in history to score four goals in World Cup finals.
What group is France in at the 2026 World Cup?
France are in Group I at the 2026 FIFA World Cup alongside Norway, Iraq, and one additional qualifier. They are considered one of the heavy favourites to win the tournament.
Is Mbappé the captain of France at the 2026 World Cup?
Yes. Kylian Mbappé is the captain of the France national team heading into the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
Could Mbappé win the Golden Boot at the 2026 World Cup?
Mbappé is one of the leading candidates for the Golden Boot at the 2026 World Cup. He won it in 2022 with 8 goals and enters this tournament as the bookmakers’ joint-favourite to top the scoring charts again.
How many goals does Mbappé need to become France’s all-time top scorer?
Heading into the 2026 World Cup, Mbappé has 56 goals in 96 appearances for France. He is one goal behind Olivier Giroud’s all-time record of 57 goals and is expected to break it during the tournament’s group stage.
