Tony Wang11 min readThe TikTok World Cup: Who the Internet Actually Talks About
On TikTok, #messi (700B views) beats #ronaldo (580B) — and a 17-year-old outranks Haaland. We ranked the 2026 World Cup by hashtag hype, not followers.
Every World Cup now has two tournaments. One is played on grass. The other plays out on a billion phones, in fifteen-second clips, and it has its own table — one that does not always agree with the FIFA rankings or even with Instagram. We went to measure it: across the 48 qualified nations, which players and teams does TikTok actually talk about?
Not "who has the most followers" — that list is published every year and it is boring. We measured two things instead: how many views each player's and nation's hashtag has racked up (the size of the conversation), and how many of the platform's 3.33 million catalogued creators reference each one in their bio (the depth of the fandom). The gap between those two is where the story lives.
The players TikTok can't stop posting about
Ranked by hashtag views, the top of the board is a Messi–Ronaldo–Neymar wall — and then a teenager:
Two things jump out. First, a 17-year-old (Lamine Yamal) sits fifth — ahead of Haaland, Bellingham, Salah and Modrić combined-adjacent — and he is, separately, the most-followed footballer on TikTok at 38.3M, ahead of both Ronaldo and Messi. The platform's centre of gravity is visibly young. Second, this is not the Instagram order: there, Ronaldo (665M followers) towers over everyone, Salah and Bellingham rank high on followers, and a teenager would not be fifth.
Messi beats Ronaldo — the one place he does
The Ronaldo-vs-Messi debate has a clean, surprising answer on TikTok, and it is the opposite of the Instagram answer:
TikTok hashtag views
TikTok hashtag views
It fits everything else about the platform. Ronaldo's dominance is built on followers — an audience that subscribes to him and his lifestyle empire. Messi's TikTok lead is built on being made about — the 2022 trophy lift, the Miami move, the GOAT edits, the memes. TikTok rewards the second thing, and it is why the #messi tag, fragmented as it is across #messi and #leomessi (another 72B), runs ahead.
The nations: Argentina runs the table
Among football-specific national tags, the reigning champions lead — and the order again ignores the bookmakers:
Argentina (631B) sits clear at the top, fittingly for the holders, with Morocco (163B) the standout overperformer — the Global-South wave from its 2022 semi-final run still moves on TikTok, level with Saudi Arabia and ahead of Croatia and the Netherlands. Brazil and England, two of the loudest football cultures on earth, land mid-table on the nation tag precisely because their TikTok energy flows through players (Neymar, Vini, Bellingham) rather than the country hashtag.
The social graph: who gets talked about together
We mapped which players creators name together in their bios — the fan-identity network. It has one overwhelming feature:
The graph is a solar system. Messi and Ronaldo are the twin suns — 161 creators build their identity around both, the GOAT debate made flesh. Neymar is the third body (63 links to Messi, 21 to Ronaldo), and Mbappé and Haaland orbit the edges. Two more patterns:
- Players fuse with their nation. The cleanest one-way ties are Messi → Argentina (52 creators name both), Neymar → Brazil (27) and Ronaldo → Portugal (5). Fans don't just love the player — they wear the flag with him.
- The viral newcomers aren't in the graph yet. Lamine Yamal pulls 147.5B views but only ~6 co-mention links and 32 bio-identity accounts; Vinícius, Endrick and Haaland are near-isolates. They're watched, not yet woven in — devotion lags reach by a generation.
Viral isn't the same as beloved
That last point is the whole study in one line. Put the two metrics side by side and they diverge hard. Messi has 700.7B views and 1,705 creators who put him in their bio — reach and devotion. Lamine Yamal has nearly a sixth of Messi's views (147.5B) but 32 identity accounts. Ronaldo: 1,112. Neymar: 911. The legends own the deep fandom; the new stars own the feed.
Full table — players by TikTok views and creator devotion
| Player | Nation | TikTok views | Videos | Creators naming them |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lionel Messi | Argentina | 700.7B | 24.1M | 1,705 |
| Cristiano Ronaldo | Portugal | 580.6B | 21.4M | 1,112 |
| Neymar Jr | Brazil | 401.6B | 16.7M | 911 |
| Kylian Mbappé | France | 269.0B | 6.2M | 102 |
| Lamine Yamal | Spain | 147.5B | 4.4M | 32 |
| Erling Haaland | Norway | 59.4B | 1.2M | 51 |
| Vinícius Jr | Brazil | 54.4B | 1.4M | 158 |
| Jude Bellingham | England | 51.2B | 1.3M | 42 |
| Mohamed Salah | Egypt | 37.0B | 1.7M | 316 |
| Ousmane Dembélé | France | 23.8B | 0.6M | 6 |
| Endrick | Brazil | 15.6B | 0.3M | 3 |
| Antoine Griezmann | France | 12.7B | 0.3M | 20 |
Why TikTok's football map looks nothing like Instagram's
The order keeps surprising because TikTok is a fundamentally different machine. On Instagram, reach follows the follower graph — big accounts get seen, so Ronaldo's 665M compounds. On TikTok, follower count isn't a ranking factor at all; the algorithm serves clips by engagement, so an unknown's celebration can out-travel a superstar's polished post. That is why the platform's leaderboard skews young, Brazilian and meme-friendly — Yamal's "everyday moments", Vini's touchline dances remixed into multilingual edits, Neymar's everything-at-once persona — rather than toward stature.
It is also why this is the World Cup that institutionalised it: FIFA named TikTok its official video content partner for 2026, with a 30-creator correspondent programme and in-app match hubs. The conversation we measured isn't a sideshow to the tournament — increasingly, for a billion young fans, it is the tournament.
What it tells us
- Fans & journalists: 'the most popular footballer' depends entirely on the platform. Ronaldo wins Instagram followers; Messi wins TikTok views; Lamine Yamal wins TikTok followers. There is no single leaderboard — there are three, and they disagree.
- The generation has turned. A 17-year-old out-hashtags every veteran except the four all-time giants, and is the most-followed footballer on the app. Watch the gap between his reach (huge) and his fan-identity depth (still tiny) close over the next few years.
- Nations live through their players. Brazil and England under-index on the country tag because their TikTok energy is carried by Neymar, Vini and Bellingham. Argentina and Morocco over-index because the nation itself became the story (2022 title; 2022 semi-final run).
- Data buyers: 'who's followed' and 'who's talked about' are different products. Follower counts are a vanity census; hashtag views and creator co-mentions measure cultural footprint — which is what actually predicts a viral tournament moment.
When the first ball is kicked in June 2026, the grass tournament and the phone tournament will run in parallel — and they will crown different winners. On the pitch, anyone can win. On TikTok, the table is already drawn: Messi on top, a teenager rising fast, and a billion creators arguing about both.
Sources
Pull TikTok hashtag and creator data yourself
The endpoints behind this study — TikTok hashtag stats, creator search, video and profile data — as documented JSON APIs. 2,000 free credits a month, no card.
Frequently asked questions
Who is the most popular footballer on TikTok in 2026?
It depends what you measure. By hashtag views, #messi leads with 700.7 billion, ahead of #ronaldo (580.6B) and #neymar (401.6B). By follower count, the most-followed footballer on TikTok is 17-year-old Lamine Yamal (38.3M), ahead of both Ronaldo and Messi. And on Instagram, Ronaldo dominates with about 665 million followers. There is no single leaderboard — the three platforms and metrics crown different winners.
Does Messi or Ronaldo dominate TikTok?
Messi, by the size of the conversation. The #messi hashtag has roughly 700.7 billion views to #ronaldo's 580.6 billion — about 120 billion more — even though Ronaldo has more Instagram followers (665M vs 506M). TikTok talks more about Messi; Instagram follows more of Ronaldo.
Which World Cup nation is biggest on TikTok?
Among football-specific national hashtags, #argentina leads with about 631 billion views (fitting for the reigning champions), ahead of France (576B), and well ahead of Brazil and England (~197B each). Morocco overperforms at 163B, a lingering effect of its 2022 semi-final run. We exclude #mexico (1.06 trillion) and #japan (355B) because those tags are dominated by non-football culture.
How popular is Lamine Yamal on TikTok?
Very — disproportionately so for his age. At 17, #lamineyamal has 147.5 billion hashtag views, fifth among all footballers and ahead of Haaland, Bellingham, Salah and Modrić, and he is the single most-followed footballer on TikTok at 38.3 million. But his fan-identity depth is still small: only about 32 creators name him in their bio, versus 1,705 for Messi — he is watched, not yet woven in.
How was the TikTok World Cup study measured?
Two ways. TikTok hashtag view and video counts came live from Crawlora's tiktok_challenge endpoint (platform-wide, cumulative) for a curated football-specific tag per player and nation. The creator-mention affinity and the co-mention social graph came from Crawlora's creators_search dataset of 3.33 million creators (a bio is present on 92.5%), counting how many name each entity and how often two are named together. Figures are aggregate-only and the dataset is open and reproducible.
Why is TikTok's football ranking so different from Instagram's?
Because TikTok's algorithm serves clips by engagement, not by follower count — follower count is not a ranking factor — so an unknown's celebration can out-travel a superstar's polished post. That structurally favours young, flair, meme-friendly players (Lamine Yamal, Neymar, Vinícius) over all-platform giants, which is why TikTok's leaderboard looks nothing like Instagram's follower order.