The top of the USMNT’s all-time scoring chart is a dead heat: Clint Dempsey and Landon Donovan, teammates for a decade and the two faces of American soccer’s rise, are tied forever at 57 goals apiece. Officially, Dempsey is listed first on a superior goals-per-game rate; unofficially, the argument is a national pastime. Behind them, the list runs through every era of the program, from the striker who scored 42 and still owns third place by a mile, to the 1994 pioneer, to the current captain sitting fifth with the clock and a home World Cup on his side.
And right now the chart is unusually alive. Christian Pulisic, 27, enters the knockout rounds tracking toward the record on pure math. Folarin Balogun has three goals at this World Cup alone, within range of Donovan’s American record of five career World Cup goals, with the Belgium match, and his dramatic un-suspension, arriving Monday. Leaderboards like this usually move once a year; this one could move twice this week.
The chart below covers all of it: the complete all-time top 10, the stories behind the top five, the Pulisic chase in numbers, the World Cup-specific scoring records, and the oddities buried in the list. Take a look, then we’ll break it all down.
Contents
The tied throne: 57 and 57
American soccer’s scoring record belongs to two men at once. Clint Dempsey and Landon Donovan each finished with exactly 57 international goals, a tie so perfect it feels scripted, and the pair are inseparable in every other sense too: teammates through the program’s defining decade, co-authors of its biggest wins, and rivals only in barstool debates. The official list puts Dempsey first on goals per game, and his resume carries the distinction of being the first American to score at three World Cups (2006, 2010, 2014), the crooked-nosed improviser who “found ways to be dangerous” for thirteen years. Donovan’s counterargument is a single moment as much as a total: the 91st-minute goal against Algeria in 2010, the most replayed few seconds in USMNT history, atop a career that also holds the American record of five World Cup goals. Neither man ever led outright. The tie is the monument.
The chasers: Altidore, Wynalda, and the ladder
Third place is not close: Jozy Altidore’s 42 goals, accumulated as the program’s first-choice No. 9 from age 17 until 2019, sit eight clear of fourth and fifteen behind the throne, a gap that ended up defining his in-between generation. Fourth belongs to Eric Wynalda (34), the fiery forward who pioneered the American-in-Europe career path and whose free-kick rocket at the 1994 World Cup announced that the host nation could actually play. Below the top five, the list reads like a curriculum: Brian McBride’s blue-collar 30 (including the two against Portugal that launched the 2002 quarterfinal run), Joe-Max Moore’s steady 24, pre-modern pioneer Bruce Murray’s 21, Eddie Johnson’s 19 (eight of them in his first ten caps, a start nobody has matched), and a three-way tie at 17 among Michael Bradley, DaMarcus Beasley, the only American man to play four World Cups, and Earnie Stewart, who scored at the ’94 World Cup and returned decades later to run the federation.
The two live chases
What makes this leaderboard worth bookmarking in July 2026 is that it’s moving. Christian Pulisic, fifth all-time at 27, is the designated heir: he entered this World Cup already the USMNT’s all-time World Cup assists leader, and projections based on his career rate have him overtaking the 57 mark around his 151st cap, several seasons out, but plausible in a way no previous chaser’s math ever was. His tournament has been complicated, an injury in the record 4-1 opener against Paraguay and a goal drought stretching back to 2024, which is precisely why every knockout match doubles as a chance to restart the clock. The nearer-term chase belongs to Folarin Balogun: three goals at this World Cup alone, two shy of Donovan’s American career record of five, with the Belgium match, and however far the run extends on home soil, still to play. One list, two clocks, both ticking through this month.
Final Word
The USMNT’s all-time leading scorers: Dempsey and Donovan tied at 57 atop a top ten that runs Altidore (42), Wynalda (34), Pulisic (fifth and active), McBride (30), Moore, Murray, Johnson, and the 17-goal trio of Bradley, Beasley, and Stewart. The records in orbit are just as good, Donovan’s five World Cup goals, Dempsey’s three scoring tournaments, Patenaude’s first-ever World Cup hat trick, and the chart is live for the first time in a decade: Pulisic tracking the throne on math, Balogun tracking Donovan’s World Cup mark in real time. Whatever Monday brings against Belgium, keep this page handy. It’s going to need updating.
The tournament run these numbers feed into lives in the USA’s best World Cup finish, the Balogun ruling that kept the chase alive in overturned red cards, and the global marks above them all in World Cup records.