The 2026 global football tournament hasn’t kicked off yet, but the social media competition is already underway.
Across X, Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube, fans are debating squads, reliving iconic moments, reacting to kit launches, and discussing host cities, generating nearly 1 million online mentions ahead of the tournament.
Using Emplifi’s Social Listening and Unified Analytics platforms, we analyzed the global digital conversation surrounding the 2026 global football tournament to uncover:
This is the first in a weekly series tracking how the tournament unfolds across social media throughout the summer.
Over the past 30 days, Emplifi tracked nearly 1 million public mentions related to the tournament across X, Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube.
Together, those conversations generated an estimated +220 billion potential impressions globally, highlighting the scale of anticipation surrounding the event before a single match had been played.
The discussion spans everything from squad announcements and jersey reveals to debates around tournament logistics, infrastructure, and host cities.
For marketers, the takeaway is clear: global sporting events now begin long before kickoff. The digital conversation starts months earlier, creating opportunities for brands, teams, and sponsors to engage audiences well ahead of the live event itself.
Our analysis shows that each platform plays a distinct role in shaping football conversation online.
National team YouTube channels collectively generated more than 121 million video views in 2026 alone, reinforcing the continued importance of video content in sports marketing strategies.

Two major themes currently dominate the online conversation.
1. Excitement around the tournament experience
Fans are actively discussing opening ceremonies, stadiums, travel plans, match expectations, and tournament atmosphere.
At the same time, concerns around infrastructure, logistics, and hosting decisions are contributing to elevated negative sentiment in some regions.
This balance between excitement and criticism is common during major global sporting events, and social listening provides a real-time view into how audience perception evolves leading into kickoff.
2. Players remain the center of attention
Football’s biggest stars continue to drive engagement across every platform.
Fans are revisiting historic tournament moments while debating which players could define this year’s competition. Established stars like Messi, Mbappé, and Neymar remain central to the conversation, while emerging talent is beginning to generate momentum across younger audiences.
For brands and media teams, player-driven storytelling continues to be one of the strongest engagement drivers across sports social media.
Sentiment analysis across tracked mentions shows:

While neutral and critical discussion dominates overall volume, positive content significantly outperforms when it comes to reach and amplification.
Positive posts generated nearly twice the potential impressions of negative content during the reporting period.
The implication for marketers is important: emotionally positive content, celebration, excitement, nostalgia, and fan identity continue to outperform controversy-driven engagement when scaled across social platforms.
The largest share of tournament conversation currently comes from:

The United States leading overall conversation volume reflects both the tournament’s North American footprint and the continued growth of football culture across the country.
Brazil, the UK, and France remain among the sport’s most digitally engaged fan bases globally, while Mexico continues to demonstrate exceptionally high engagement relative to population size.
Within Spanish-speaking Latin America, Mexico leads regional conversation volume by a wide margin, followed by Argentina and Colombia.
Major sports publishers, including TV Azteca Deportes, TyC Sports, and Diario Olé, are among the most influential accounts amplifying tournament discussion across the region.
Beyond social listening, Emplifi’s Unified Analytics platform allows us to compare the official social media performance of participating national teams across Facebook, Instagram, X, and YouTube.
Here’s what stands out so far:
Facebook: France leads engagement, while Germany leads audience size
Germany currently maintains one of the largest football audiences on Facebook among participating national teams.
However, France is emerging as one of the strongest overall performers on the platform, leading in both audience growth and average interactions per post.
One key insight from the data: large audiences do not automatically translate into high engagement.
For example, the United States ranks among the larger football communities on Facebook by follower count, but engagement per post remains comparatively low.
For sports marketers, this reinforces an important principle: audience size matters less than audience participation.
Instagram: Brazil dominates the tournament conversation
Instagram is currently the most competitive platform for football engagement, and Brazil stands out as the clear leader.
The Brazilian national team added more than 1.2 million Instagram followers in 2026 alone, the highest growth of any participating team.
Brazil also leads in average engagement per post, alongside France and Portugal.
One of the strongest trends across all national team accounts is the continued dominance of short-form video:
The takeaway is straightforward: short-form video is now the primary engagement format heading into major live events.
Another notable trend is Morocco’s rapid Instagram growth, reflecting the country’s expanding global football profile and highly engaged younger audience.
X and YouTube continue to play distinct roles
Across tracked national team accounts, X communities collectively exceed 61 million followers.
Engagement spikes throughout early 2026 aligned closely with squad announcements and international friendlies, an early preview of the real-time conversation peaks expected during the tournament itself.
Meanwhile, YouTube continues to grow steadily as a long-form storytelling platform.
National team channels collectively surpassed 121 million video views this year, while subscriber growth across tracked accounts increased by more than 13% year over year.
For federations, sponsors, and publishers, the platform remains critical for deeper fan engagement beyond real-time match coverage.
Several clear trends are already emerging ahead of the tournament:
1. The conversation starts long before the event
Fans are engaging months ahead of kickoff, creating extended opportunities for brands to participate in cultural conversation earlier than ever before.
2. Positive storytelling drives the strongest amplification
Celebration, identity, nostalgia, and emotional storytelling consistently outperform negative discussion in reach and engagement.
3. Short-form video is the dominant engagement format
Instagram Reels continue to outperform every other major content type across national team accounts.
4. Engagement matters more than audience size
Follower growth alone is not a reliable indicator of community strength. The teams generating the strongest engagement are combining audience scale with culturally relevant content.
5. The competition now exists on two fronts
While teams prepare tactically on the pitch, digital teams are simultaneously competing for fan attention, engagement, and audience growth across every major social platform.
The insights in this report are powered by Emplifi’s Social Listening and Unified Analytics platforms.
Our analysis tracks public social media conversations across X, Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube using queries built around:
Combined with cross-platform analytics tracking, this provides a real-time view into:
Stay tuned to Emplifi’s blog and social channels as we continue tracking the biggest stories, trends, and audience shifts throughout the tournament.
The data referenced in this report reflects public social media conversations collected between April 13 and May 13, 2026, alongside national team social profile performance data from January 1 to May 13, 2026. Platform coverage includes X, Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube.
Emplifi is an independent analytics provider. This content is not affiliated with or endorsed by any tournament organizer or official sponsor.