France arrives at the 2026 FIFA World Cup not just as contenders but as the most financially loaded squad in the tournament. Transfermarkt's latest valuations place Les Bleus at the top with a combined roster value of $1.76 billion across their 26-man squad. England ($1.51B) and Spain ($1.45B) follow behind, while reigning champions Argentina sit a surprising eighth, valued at just $944 million.How do the most valuable 2026 World Cup squads rank against each other?Kylian Mbappe is the anchor of France's enormous figure. Alongside Erling Haaland and Lamine Yamal, he shares the title of world's most valuable player at around $231 million each. But France's depth is what separates them from the rest. Michael Olise, after a standout season at Bayern Munich, climbed to fourth globally at $173 million. Desire Doue ($138M), Ousmane Dembele ($115M), and William Saliba ($104M) all crack the top 20. This is not just a Mbappe-dependent squad. It is a roster built with elite value from front to back.Portugal sit fourth at $1.17 billion, largely driven by a younger generation rather than Cristiano Ronaldo. Joao Neves and Vitinha both rank in the global top 10 at $161 million each. Ronaldo, at 40, is valued at just $13.87 million and ranks 386th among the 1,248 players at the tournament. His presence is symbolic now, his market value reflecting age more than impact.Argentina's placement is the real talking point here. Lionel Scaloni's defending champions rank eighth with a squad valued at $944 million. Enzo Fernandez and Julian Alvarez lead the group at $104 million each. Messi, turning 39 during the tournament, is valued at $17.3 million and sits 363rd overall. Market value rarely captures legacy, and nobody needs to tell Argentina fans that. But the gap between Argentina's valuation and France's is close to $820 million. That is a structural reality, not just a number.Norway ($694M) and Belgium ($626M) round out the top 10, both punching above their typical expectations on the global stage.Squad value does not win tournaments. Germany's $1.15 billion did not save them in 2018. Argentina were not the richest squad in Qatar either, and they lifted the trophy. But the valuations do tell a story about where world football's financial power is concentrated heading into North America.The 10 most valuable squads at the World CupFrance — $1.766 billionEngland — $1.513 billionSpain — $1.452 billionPortugal — $1.174 billionGermany — $1.153 billionBrazil — $1.054 billionNetherlands — $967 millionArgentina — $944 millionNorway — $694 millionBelgium — $626 million