For decades, the World Cup sticker album has been part of the tournament experience for millions of fans. Long before the first match begins, collectors already have a different competition in mind: filling every empty space in the famous album.
That tradition did not begin recently. The official World Cup sticker album dates back more than five decades, when the Italian company Panini partnered with FIFA for the Mexico 1970 World Cup, creating what would become one of the most recognizable collectibles in sports.
At the time, the concept was simple. Fans bought small packs of stickers, opened them one by one, and slowly filled the album with players, team photos and tournament symbols. What few could imagine then was how much the scale and cost of that hobby would grow over time.
Mexico 1970: when the first World Cup album was surprisingly affordable
The 1970 World Cup album, released for the tournament held in Mexico, contained 288 stickers, a fraction of what modern collections include today. The album itself cost around 2 Mexican pesos, which was roughly $0.16 USD at the time.
Sticker packs were also extremely cheap. A packet with five stickers cost between 20 and 25 centavos, close to $0.02 USD per pack. For young fans, collecting them was part of daily life, often funded with small coins saved from allowance.
Completing the album depended heavily on luck and trading with friends, but estimates suggest that a determined collector could finish the entire collection with about $5 to $10 USD in total spending during that era.
Brazil 2014: the modern era of the Panini album
More than four decades later, the 2014 World Cup album for Brazil showed how much the hobby had evolved. The collection was significantly larger and the distribution was fully global, reaching millions of collectors in different markets.
In the United States, the softcover album was often distributed for free at promotional events, although its retail price was around $2.00 USD. Sticker packs contained five stickers and sold for $1.00 USD each.
With 640 stickers in the full collection, completing the album required buying at least 128 packs in a perfect scenario without duplicates, meaning a minimum investment of about $128 USD.
Of course, duplicates are part of the collecting experience. In reality, many fans ended up buying far more packs before filling every space, which pushed the total cost significantly higher.
The next World Cup album will be the biggest one yet
The upcoming album for the 2026 World Cup, which will be hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada, is expected to be the largest Panini World Cup collection ever produced.
The album will include 980 stickers across 112 pages, reflecting the expansion of the tournament to 48 national teams. Each pack will also contain seven stickers instead of the traditional five, an adjustment designed to help collectors manage the much larger collection.
While the album has not officially been released yet, early retail information suggests a price of $5.99 for the standard album, $25 for the hardcover version, and $2.99 per sticker pack.
Based on those prices, even a perfect scenario without duplicates would require purchasing roughly 140 packs, meaning a minimum investment of around $420 USD just to obtain enough stickers.
That number could easily rise once duplicates enter the equation, something that has always been part of the experience that defines the World Cup album tradition.
In other words, what started in 1970 as a hobby that could cost just a few dollars has gradually turned into a much larger collecting challenge, reflecting both the growth of the tournament and the global popularity of the Panini album itself.
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