McDonald's is using its 30-year FIFA World Cup sponsorship to turn tournament buzz into restaurant traffic, pairing event marketing with value menu and beverage expansion across more than 100 markets.
McDonald's Corp. reported first-quarter global comparable sales growth of 3.8% and systemwide sales growth of 6% in constant currency, gaining market share across nearly all of its top 10 markets. The company is now leaning into the 2026 FIFA World Cup — the first edition hosted across the US, Canada and Mexico — to deepen customer engagement during a period of weak consumer sentiment and elevated gas prices.
"The results validate our value-led strategy," the company said, pointing to its enhanced McValue platform featuring under-$3 menu items and expanded meal deals, alongside the nationwide rollout of a new McCafe beverage platform.
The World Cup activation marks the first time McDonald's has changed the color of its iconic red fries packaging, introducing a limited-edition gold carton as part of a global collectibles range designed by agency tms. The range includes nine collectible cups featuring soccer stars Christian Pulisic, David Beckham, Ronaldinho, Thierry Henry, Son Heung-min and Lamine Yamal, along with 23 Squishmallows Happy Meal toys. Empty gold fries cartons have appeared on eBay for $36, and a Lamine Yamal cup has sold for about 30 pounds, reflecting the campaign's viral reach across social media.
The tournament has generated 146.8 billion views of World Cup-related content across YouTube, TikTok, Instagram and Facebook, according to Tubular Labs data cited by Front Office Sports. Fox drew 30 million viewers for the US team's match against Belgium, a figure that would rank among the 20 most-watched US telecasts of 2025. The expanded 48-team format and hydration breaks have created additional ad inventory, with the World Cup accounting for 13% of live national linear programming TV ad reach since the tournament began, up from 2.77% during the 2022 Qatar edition.
Valuation and earnings outlook
McDonald's shares have fallen 2.8% over the past year, outperforming the broader restaurant industry's 4.3% decline but trailing Starbucks Corp., which gained 12%, and Dutch Bros Inc., which lost 2.1%. The stock trades at a forward price-to-sales multiple of 6.75, more than double the industry average of 3.38 and above Starbucks' 2.98 and Dutch Bros' 4.88.
The Zacks Consensus Estimate for McDonald's 2026 earnings per share has declined to $12.93 from $13.07 over the past 60 days. The company is projected to report a 6% year-over-year increase in 2026 earnings, compared with expected growth of 12.7% for Starbucks and 22.4% for Dutch Bros. McDonald's currently carries a Zacks Rank #4 (Sell).
The World Cup campaign complements a broader strategy that includes the McValue platform and McCafe rollout, which together broaden consumption occasions beyond traditional meal times. If McDonald's successfully converts event-driven engagement into incremental visits, the tournament could help sustain sales momentum through the remainder of 2026. The company's next catalyst will be its second-quarter earnings report, where investors will assess whether the World Cup activation has translated into measurable traffic gains.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.