Every remaining World Cup 2026 team's penalty shootout record

TOPSHOT - England's goalkeeper Jordan Pickford reacts after stopping the penalty kick of Colombia's forward Carlos Bacca (rear C) during the penalty shoot-out of the Russia 2018 World Cup round of 16 football match between Colombia and England at the Spartak Stadium in Moscow on July 3, 2018. (Photo by FRANCK FIFE / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - NO MOBILE PUSH ALERTS/DOWNLOADS (Photo credit should read FRANCK FIFE/AFP via Getty Images)
England goalkeeper Jordan Pickford celebrates a World Cup penalty save (Image credit: Getty Images)

There is nothing else in football like a World Cup penalty shootout. It's the ultimate all-or-nothing showdown betwixt outfielder and goalkeeper. Score or don't. In or out. Winner stays on.

The penalty shootout is a test of technique, mentality and preparation. It might not be a perfect tie-breaker but it's the fairest we have and its drama is unmatched. Teams that go beyond the group stage at the World Cup had better be ready even if they never truly can.

World Cup 2026 has already ruthlessly eliminated teams through shootouts, fancied teams included, but who's left in the competition and what are their penalty shootout records?

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Which remaining World Cup 2026 team has the best penalty shootout record?

FOXBOROUGH, MASSACHUSETTS - JUNE 29: Gustavo Gomez #15 of Paraguay celebrates with teammates after Jose Canale #13 scores the winning penalty in a penalty shootout during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round Of 32 match between Germany and Paraguay at Boston Stadium on June 29, 2026 in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Photo by Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)

Paraguay beat Germany on penalties in the round of 32 (Image credit: Getty Images)

Two of the first four matches in the new round of 32 were settled on penalties.

Paraguay took their World Cup record to two shootout wins from two by beating Germany 16 years after knocking out Japan. Hours later, Morocco defeated the Netherlands – they're also two for two at the World Cup.

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Team

Shootouts

Won

Lost

Win Percentage

Belgium

1

1

0

100.00%

Australia

5

4

1

80.00%

Argentina

19

13

6

68.42%

United States

9

6

3

66.67%

Bosnia and Herzegovina

3

2

1

66.67%

DR Congo

6

4

2

66.67%

Portugal

8

5

3

62.50%

Croatia

7

4

3

57.14%

Paraguay

9

5

4

55.56%

Morocco

9

5

4

55.56%

Mexico

13

7

6

53.85%

Spain

15

8

7

53.33%

Brazil

15

8

7

53.33%

France

10

5

5

50.00%

Sweden

2

1

1

50.00%

Senegal

8

4

4

50.00%

Colombia

10

5

5

50.00%

Egypt

13

6

7

46.15%

Ivory Coast

11

5

6

45.45%

Algeria

9

4

5

44.44%

England

11

4

7

36.36%

Canada

7

2

5

28.57%

Ghana

7

2

5

28.57%

Switzerland

6

1

5

16.67%

Ecuador

2

0

2

0.00%

Cape Verde

1

0

1

0.00%

Austria

0

0

0

-

Norway

0

0

0

-

Of the teams still standing at the World Cup, Belgium have the best win percentage thanks to victory in their only shootout. It's a small sample size but it was at the World Cup, against Spain, in 1986.

Australia and Argentina have won a lower percentage of their shootouts but have participated in many more. Argentina have won six out of seven at the World Cup including two shootouts (the quarter-final and final) at the last World Cup.

Switzerland have a dreadful record from the spot but only two of the remaining teams have lost every penalty shootout they've been involved in. Good luck, Ecuador and Cape Verde!

In the World Cup, France are carrying the millstone of two shootout defeats in the final and Spain have lost four out of five. In their four World Cup attempts, England have beaten only Colombia in 2018.

Croatia have been involved in four penalty shootouts at the World Cup and have won all four of them. We've crunched the numbers and it turns out that's good.

Italy's Roberto Baggio bows his head after missing a penalty in the shootout of the 1994 World Cup final as Brazil's players celebrate victory.

Even the greats... (Image credit: Getty Images)

Penalty shootouts are not lotteries. There's too much skill required and too many variables that are, ultimately, controlled by the two players involved.

Being reliable in such pressurised moments is a different skill to being able to stick the ball away at a purely mechanical level.

Doing it at the World Cup is as difficult as it gets and we've already seen this summer how the moment can break down the abilities of even the best players around.

Chris is a Warwickshire-based freelance football writer specialising in West Midlands football, the Premier League, the EFL and the J.League. He is the author of the High Protein Beef Paste football newsletter and owner of Aston Villa Review. He supports Coventry Sphinx.

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