Aruba national football team

Aruba
AssociationArubaanse Voetbal Bond (AVB)
ConfederationCONCACAF (North America)
Sub-confederationCFU (Caribbean)
Head coachMarvic Bermúdez
CaptainFernando Lewis
Most capsNickenson Paul (36)
Top scorerRovien Ostiana (8)
Home stadiumTrinidad Stadium
FIFA codeARU
First colours
Second colours
FIFA ranking
Current 191 (19 January 2026)
Highest112 (November 2015)
Lowest205 (April 2021)
First international
Aruba 0–4 Curaçao 
(Aruba; 6 April 1924)
as modern Aruba
 Trinidad and Tobago 7–0 Aruba 
(Netherlands Antilles; 31 March 1989)
Biggest win
Aruba 8–1 Suriname
(Surinam; 6 June 1946)
as modern Aruba
 Aruba 7–0 British Virgin Islands 
(Oranjestad, Aruba; 1 June 2014)
Biggest defeat
Aruba 0–9  Hungary
(Netherlands Antilles; 12 December 1982)
as modern Aruba
 Trinidad and Tobago 11–0 Aruba 
(Arima, Trinidad and Tobago; 23 April 1989)
CCCF Championship
Appearances1 (first in 1955)
Best resultFifth place (1955)

The Aruba national football team (Dutch: Arubaans voetbalelftal; Papiamento: Seleccion Arubano di futbol) represents Aruba (constituent country of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in the Dutch Caribbean) in men's international football, which is governed by the Arubaanse Voetbal Bond (English: Aruba Football Federation) founded in 1932. It has been a member of FIFA and CONCACAF since 1988. Regionally, it is a member of CFU in the Caribbean Zone.

Aruba has never qualified for the FIFA World Cup, but has participated twice in League B and twice in League C of the CONCACAF Nations League.

Aruba's debut in international competitions was in the 1955 CCCF Championship. Their first appearance in World Cup qualifiers was in the 1998 CONCACAF qualification. The team achieved its first victory in 1938, defeating Suriname 5–0. After its separation of the Netherlands Antilles in 1986, the modern Aruba achieved its first victory in 1997, defeating Netherlands Antilles 2–1.