Goal-scoring records have been tumbling at the 2026 World Cup – and the world's most prolific strikers have another milestone in sight. Usually a subplot, the race for the World Cup Golden Boot is one of the main talking points at this year's tournament as the top marksmen set a blistering pace. The overall record has already been broken by Argentine superstar Lionel Messi, who now has 18 goals over six World Cups after adding five in two games in the United States. But he is being chased hard by Kylian Mbappé and Erling Haaland – who have four goals apiece – with Cristiano Ronaldo and Harry Kane also in the mix. Read moreWorld Cup 2026: Mbappé becomes France's record scorer The long-standing single-tournament record of 13 goals set in 1958 by France's Just Fontaine appears vulnerable. German great Gerd Muller was the last man to hit double figures, at the 1970 tournament in Mexico, when he scored 10 goals.
Lionel Messi celebrates after scoring the opener against Algeria on his 200th appearance for Argentina. © Claudia Greco, Reuters
Since then, at all but three tournaments, the leading scorer has hit six goals or fewer. Messi, who turns 39 on Wednesday, has been the standout performer so far at the tournament in Canada, Mexico and the United States. He struck a memorable hat-trick against Algeria before scoring twice in a 2-0 victory over Austria, accounting for all five of the defending champions' goals so far. Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni said it was "hard to explain" the genius of the veteran forward after their opening match in Kansas City. "We are amazed with him still, although we get to see him on a daily basis and he's been the best for 20 years," he said. "He still pulls it off every single match." Messi's most likely challenger, based on the prospect of a deep run in the tournament, is Mbappé, who scored eight goals four years ago in Qatar to win the Golden Boot. The 27-year-old, now France's record goalscorer, is just two goals behind Messi's career total.











