For more than 20 years they shared trophies, goals, and the title of best in the world. But in 2026 one of them opened up a gap that doesn't exist on the field — and it's not as close as you'd think. We compare the two side by side, category by category. The final score surprises.
They defined an entire generation of soccer. Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi — 13 Ballon d'Ors between them, a rivalry that lasted almost two decades. On the field, it was always a matter of taste.
But on the bank statement? There's no tie.
In 2026, one of them crossed a line the other hasn't reached yet. And when you open up the numbers, the answer is clearer — and the margin wider — than any fan would admit.
We compare the two across 7 categories, from least decisive to most decisive. Category #1 decides everything. But here's the opening score: Ronaldo ~$1.2–1.4 billion. Messi ~$850–950 million. How do you get there? Scroll and we'll show you.
#7 — On-field salary today: Saudi Arabia crushes the MLS
Starting with the obvious: what each one earns right now, just to play. Ronaldo makes about €208 million a year at Al-Nassr — the highest salary in world soccer. Messi, at Inter Miami, has total compensation estimated between $70 and $80 million a year, by far the highest-paid in the MLS, but in a league that pays a fraction of what the Saudi league offers.
On current salary, it's not even a contest. But hold on — salary is just the surface. Category #1 completely flips the logic of "how much you earn per month." 👇

#6 — Career earnings: here Messi turns it around
A surprise in the second round. When you add up everything each one has earned in his life — salaries, bonuses, prizes — the ranking changes. Messi has piled up roughly $1.6 billion in salary alone over more than 20 years, much of it built on Barcelona's record contracts. It's a historic gross number, one of the biggest an athlete has ever generated.
So why isn't Messi richer, if he earned so much? The answer is in how much was left over — and that's where Saudi Arabia comes in again. Hold that question. #1 explains why "earning more" isn't the same as "having more."
#5 — Real-estate holdings: the quiet side
Both turned fame into bricks. Messi has about $300 million in real estate spread across Barcelona, Miami, Ibiza, and Argentina, with a long-term appreciation strategy rather than speculation. Ronaldo has a portfolio in Lisbon, Cascais, Madeira, Dubai, and Riyadh — including villas on private islands in the Red Sea. Here the two are closest, and it's the most "invisible" part of both fortunes.