The World Cup’s Best Young Player award has the best hit rate of any trophy in soccer: its winners list reads like a preview of the next decade, Thomas Müller before the Müller era, Paul Pogba before the nine-figure transfer, Kylian Mbappé the summer he arrived as a teenager and left as a world champion. In 2026 the award has a presumptive favorite so obvious the suspense is mostly about the ceremony: Lamine Yamal, who turns 19 mid-tournament with Spain alive in the bracket.
Here’s the complete history: every official winner, the retroactive legends FIFA later honored, how eligibility works, and the 2026 race.
The chart below covers every winner, the retro honorees, the rules, and this year’s watch. Take a look, then we’ll break it all down.
The Award That Predicts the Future
Created officially in 2006, the Best Young Player award has quietly become soccer’s most reliable forecasting instrument. Its inaugural class alone makes the case: Podolski (2006) became a German fixture for a decade; Thomas Müller (2010) paired the award with the Golden Boot as a complete unknown and then spent fifteen years as the sport’s most confusing great player; Pogba (2014) became the world’s most expensive footballer within two years; Mbappé (2018) delivered the benchmark edition, four goals at 19, a final goal that made him the first teenager to score in a World Cup final since Pelé himself, and the trophy, before graduating to the all-time scoring chase he currently occupies at this very tournament; and Enzo Fernández (2022) converted a month as Argentina’s surprise midfield anchor into a British-record transfer within weeks. When FIFA launched the award it also ran a retroactive fan poll crowning the best young player of each previous World Cup, a list that begins, inevitably, with Pelé’s 1958 (six goals at 17, two in the final, the origin story of tournament prodigies), and runs through Beckenbauer’s 1966 and Owen’s 1998. Official or retro, the award’s spirit is singular: it marks the tournament where the next era introduced itself.
The 2026 Race, and the Double No One Has Done
This edition’s race has a favorite so heavy the interesting questions are secondary ones. Lamine Yamal arrived as the most decorated teenager in the sport’s history, Euro 2024’s Young Player award already on the shelf from Spain’s title run, two Kopa Trophies, a Ballon d’Or runner-up finish at 18, and turns 19 on July 13 with Spain still alive in the quarterfinals. If the Technical Study Group confirms the obvious on July 19, he becomes the first player ever to win the young-player honors at both a Euros and a World Cup, a double unavailable to most legends simply because nobody has been this good this young across consecutive summers. The historical pattern is his main risk: four of five official winners came from quarterfinalists or better and two from champions, so Spain’s bracket fate matters, and a deep-run breakout from another under-21 star, this tournament has several on contending rosters, is the scenario that crashes a coronation. The award lands with the full honors suite after the MetLife final, alongside the Golden Ball Messi is chasing for a record third time and the Boot he currently co-leads: one ceremony, three of the best storylines the tournament has, and this page adds the winner within the hour.
Final Word
The World Cup Best Young Player award: official since 2006, with a winners list, Podolski, Müller, Pogba, Mbappé, Enzo Fernández, that doubles as a preview of each following decade, a retroactive honor roll beginning with Pelé’s 1958, an eligibility line around 21-and-under, and a 2026 edition with a towering favorite in Lamine Yamal, who can complete a Euro/World Cup young-player double no one has ever achieved, pending Spain’s run and any late bracket-crasher. Winner announced with the awards suite after the July 19 final; the new name is added here that day.
The senior honor is charted in the Golden Ball winners by year, the favorite’s full file is in Lamine Yamal: career stats and records, and the benchmark winner’s current chase is in Mbappé’s World Cup goals.