FIFA is planning to nearly double the size of its relaunched Club World Cup, expanding the competition from 32 teams to 48 for the 2029 edition.

The announcement lands just as the dust is settling on the first edition of the revamped tournament, which ran in the United States from June 14 to July 13, 2025. Chelsea won the whole thing, beating Paris Saint-Germain 3-0 in the final. PSG’s chairman, Nasser al-Khelaifi, watched his club lose the final and then turned around and became a central figure in shaping the next one.

FIFA and European clubs are now officially in business together

On June 25, 2026, FIFA announced a joint venture with the European Football Clubs lobby group, known as the EFC. The EFC represents over 700 clubs across the continent and is chaired by al-Khelaifi himself.

The EFC’s involvement is also expected to unlock changes to the current tournament structure, including a possible relaxation of the cap on how many clubs from a single country can qualify. Right now, UEFA holds 12 slots in the 32-team format. Under the proposed 48-team expansion, that allocation could rise to 16.