The FIFA Club World Cup is backed by a pretty serious sponsor crowd now. Not the tiny “logo on a board and move on” kind. More like banks, airlines, tech brands, drinks companies and big global names trying to sit close to football while everyone is watching.

For the 2025 expanded tournament, FIFA had its usual global partners involved, plus brands signed specifically for the Club World Cup. That matters. Because the new version of the tournament is bigger, longer and built to feel more like a proper world event instead of that short December thing many fans half-watched after the Champions League winner had already done the hard work.

The Big FIFA Partners Behind It

Some sponsors are not only Club World Cup sponsors. They’re FIFA partners. That means they sit across FIFA events more broadly, so they naturally show up around this tournament too.

You’ll usually see names like Adidas, Coca-Cola, Visa and Qatar Airways around FIFA properties. Adidas handles the football identity in a very visible way. Balls. Kits around the event. That whole familiar matchday look. Coca-Cola is the old-school FIFA sponsor that somehow still feels glued to big tournaments. Visa is payments. Qatar Airways is travel.

Then there are brands like Lenovo and Hyundai-Kia, depending on the FIFA partnership setup for that cycle. These aren’t random add-ons. They help FIFA sell the tournament as a global product, not just a bunch of matches in nice stadiums.

The Club World Cup-Specific Sponsors

This is where it gets more interesting. For the expanded FIFA Club World Cup, brands such as Bank of America, Hisense, AB InBev and PIF became part of the sponsorship picture. Hisense was a big one because it came in as an official partner and got strong visibility around VAR branding. That’s smart, honestly. Annoying for fans when VAR takes forever, but brilliant for a TV brand that wants its name on screens.

Bank of America’s role also makes sense because the 2025 tournament was in the United States. If you’re a huge bank and football is finally becoming a bigger American business story, you don’t sit outside the stadium looking in. You buy the good seats.

Beer, Screens and Money

AB InBev joined through beer brands like Budweiser and Michelob Ultra. That’s classic sports sponsorship. People watch football, people gather, people spend. Simple.

• Hisense got the useful screen-adjacent role, especially with VAR, which is a bit cheeky but very effective

• Bank of America gave the tournament a strong U.S. business feel, not just a football feel

• AB InBev fits because big matches and beer have been married for years, whether FIFA says it nicely or not

• PIF’s presence added money and attention, though some fans will always side-eye that kind of sponsor

Why These Brands Want In

The Club World Cup gives sponsors something most normal leagues can’t. It brings clubs from Europe, South America, Asia, Africa and everywhere else under one badge. And while the football quality isn’t always even, the audience mix is gold. A Real Madrid fan in Mumbai. A Flamengo fan in Rio. A Chelsea fan in London watching the same sponsor boards as someone in Los Angeles.

Raj noticed this while watching a late match with cold leftover pizza on his desk. He wasn’t even looking for sponsors. But after the third VAR check, Hisense was stuck in his head and he stopped reopening the same five tabs to check who the official partners were.

That’s the point. Sponsorship works when you stop noticing the selling and just accept the brand as part of the event furniture. It gets in quietly.

Some Sponsors Are Also Reputation Plays

PIF is the obvious example. Its sponsorship is not only about football fans buying something tomorrow morning. It’s about presence. It’s about being seen beside a world tournament, next to famous clubs and big broadcast moments. I don’t think we should pretend that’s only “supporting sport.” It’s image work too.

Same with major banks and airlines. They’re buying trust by standing near something people already care about. Fair enough. A little obvious, but it works.

So Who Sponsors It, Really?

The clean answer is this: the FIFA Club World Cup is sponsored by a mix of FIFA’s global partners and tournament-specific commercial partners. The names around the 2025 edition included Adidas, Coca-Cola, Visa, Qatar Airways, Lenovo, Bank of America, Hisense, AB InBev and PIF. Other suppliers and regional partners also joined the wider commercial setup, so the full board changes based on country and rights category.

The Sponsor Board Tells You the Ambition

FIFA wants the Club World Cup to feel massive. Sponsors tell you that before the football even does. If the same kind of brands that chase the World Cup are now chasing the Club World Cup, the message is clear. This tournament is being pushed hard.