The FIFA Club World Cup is now played every four years. That’s the current format, and it’s a pretty big change from how the tournament worked for most of its history.
For years, fans got used to seeing the event every year. The champions from different continents would meet, play a short tournament, and a winner would be crowned before most people had fully settled into the schedule.
The Old Version Was Annual
Until recently, the FIFA Club World Cup took place once a year. It was a compact competition. A handful of clubs qualified by winning their continental championships, then gathered for a tournament that usually lasted just a couple of weeks.
Real Madrid, Barcelona, and other major clubs became familiar faces because European teams often arrived as favorites. Sometimes there were surprises. Usually there weren’t.
The format felt quick. You’d hear about it, watch a few matches, and then it was over.
Why FIFA Changed It
FIFA wanted something bigger. Not just a short event squeezed into the calendar. The goal was to create a competition that looked more like a major international tournament, with more clubs involved and more matches worth following.
So the organization redesigned it. The expanded Club World Cup now features dozens of teams from around the world and takes place every four years instead of annually.
I think that makes sense. A larger event feels more important when it isn’t showing up every season. Scarcity matters. People pay attention when something feels like an occasion.
What Happens Between Tournaments?
Clubs don’t simply wait around for four years hoping for another chance. They still compete in their regional competitions. That’s how qualification happens.
A club generally earns a place through strong performances in tournaments such as the UEFA Champions League or equivalent competitions in other regions. The exact qualification rules can vary, but success over several seasons is usually the path in.
• Four-year cycle, which gives clubs time to qualify through results that actually mean something
• Some teams earn spots because they win major continental titles, and that carries more weight than a single good month
• More clubs involved now, so fans get matchups that rarely happen otherwise
• The schedule is longer than before. That gives the tournament room to breathe a little.
• And yes, there are debates about fixture congestion. Coaches bring that up constantly.
A Small Example of Why People Notice the Change
My friend Raj follows club football closely, though not obsessively. Last year he kept reopening the same five tabs every morning looking for updates on qualification spots because the new format had made the race more interesting than he expected. That’s the effect of a larger tournament. The discussion starts much earlier.