Chelsea won the last FIFA Club World Cup. They beat Paris Saint-Germain 3-0 in the 2025 final, which was played at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on July 13, 2025.

And honestly, it was not one of those finals where you sit there pretending the scoreline tells only half the story. Chelsea were sharper. Cleaner. More awake. PSG looked like a team that had walked into the wrong room and realised too late that everyone else had already started.

The Final Was Chelsea vs PSG

The last FIFA Club World Cup final had Chelsea on one side and PSG on the other. Big names. Big shirts. Big mood before kickoff. PSG came in with that heavy favourite feeling around them, because they had been smashing through serious teams and looked scary enough to make most fans quietly lower their expectations.

But football does this thing.

Chelsea didn’t wait around. Cole Palmer scored twice in the first half, and João Pedro added another before PSG had really settled into the game. By halftime, the final already felt tilted. Not officially finished, of course. But you know that feeling when a match still has 45 minutes left and somehow feels done? That.

Why Chelsea’s Win Felt So Big

This wasn’t the small old version of the Club World Cup. The 2025 tournament had a bigger format, with 32 clubs involved. So Chelsea were not just winning a quick mini-tournament after one or two matches. They had to work through a proper event.

That matters. I know some people still treat the Club World Cup like a shiny side quest, but I don’t buy that anymore. Once top clubs are playing knockout football in a proper global tournament, it counts. Maybe not like the Champions League. Fine. But it counts.

The Scoreline Was Brutal

A 3-0 final win sounds neat on paper. Watching it unfold was harsher. Chelsea pressed well, moved the ball with confidence, and kept finding the space PSG didn’t want to give them.

• Cole Palmer looked like the calmest person in the stadium, which is annoying if he’s playing against your team

• PSG had the names, but Chelsea had the timing, and timing wins finals more often than people admit

• The match was basically cracked open before halftime, so the second half had that strange “surely they can’t come back now” feeling

A Small Match-Day Story

Raj watched the final the next morning because the timing didn’t suit him in India. He made tea, opened his laptop at the dining table, and tried not to see the score first.

He failed in six minutes because one football page had already spoiled it in the headline. Still watched it. Still enjoyed Palmer acting like the whole final was a Sunday training drill.

Chelsea’s Second Club World Cup Title

This win gave Chelsea their second FIFA Club World Cup title. Their first came in 2021, when they beat Palmeiras. That one felt tense and sweaty. This one felt more like a statement, especially because PSG had arrived with so much noise around them.

And that is the part people will remember. Not just that Chelsea won. The way they won. They didn’t sneak it. They didn’t survive and pray. They slapped the game into shape early, then made PSG chase shadows for too long.

So Who Was the Last Winner?

Chelsea. Simple answer. But the fuller answer is better. Chelsea won the 2025 FIFA Club World Cup by beating PSG 3-0 in the final, with Cole Palmer taking the spotlight and João Pedro helping finish the job before halftime. It was the first champion of the expanded 32-team format, which gives the win a different weight.

The Bit That Sticks

I like finals where the winner makes the argument obvious. No long debate. No “but if that chance had gone in” nonsense. Chelsea were better on the day, and PSG had to wear it.