Brand Finance US 500 2026 report reveals that the US remains the world’s most valuable brand market, with a 10% brand value growth
US tops in national brand value, but Soft Power slips
Apple: Most valuable US brand at $607.6 billion
YouTube: Strongest US brand with 95.3/100 BSI score and AAA+ rating
Huntington: Fastest growing US brand, up 127% to $5.3 billion
WASHINGTON, March 24, 2026–(BUSINESS WIRE)–The U.S. remains the world’s most powerful brand market in 2026, with the nation’s top 500 brands valued at USD6.44 trillion, up 10% year-on-year, according to a recent report by Brand Finance.
Technology leaders Apple (brand value up 6% to USD607.6 billion), Microsoft (brand value up 23% to USD565.2 billion), and Google (brand value up 5% to USD433.1 billion) anchor the U.S.’ digital dominance.
However, the report points to a clear paradox: U.S. corporations continue to thrive worldwide, even as the nation’s brand perception weakens. In the Brand Finance Global Soft Power Index 2026, the U.S. remains the most influential nation brand but suffered a 4.6-point decline, the steepest among 193 countries. It still leads in familiarity and influence, reflecting American culture and tech reach. Credibility has declined across key metrics, with drops in reputation, People and Values, friendliness, international relations, and trustworthiness, signalling growing doubts about U.S. leadership, reliability, and cooperation despite its global brand strength.
YouTube (brand value up 32% to USD38.4 billion) is the strongest U.S. brand, achieving a Brand Strength Index (BSI) score of 95.3/100, while Microsoft ranks second (BSI score 94.7/100) and Google ranks third (BSI score 94.6/100). All three brands have an AAA+ rating, the highest accolade for brand strength awarded by Brand Finance.
Huntington is the fastest-growing American brand, with its value surging 127% to USD5.3 billion after acquiring Cadence Bank, expanding its reach, and strengthening its commercial banking, wealth management, and regional lending.
Booz Allen (brand value up 13% to USD3.8 billion), Lilly (brand value up 26% to USD10.1 billion), and Franklin Templeton (new entrant at USD1.7 billion) emerge as brands to watch. Booz Allen’s rise reflects demand for consulting and mission‑grade AI, Lilly’s breakthrough treatments fuel healthcare leadership, and Franklin Templeton debuts with a strong institutional reputation and global reach.
Laurence Newell, Executive Chairman, Brand Finance Americas, commented:
“America’s corporate brands remain unmatched, from Apple and Microsoft to Google and YouTube; they continue to set the global standard for innovation, influence, and consumer trust. Yet Soft Power ultimately runs on credibility. Right now, we’re seeing a growing disconnect between the extraordinary strength of US companies and how the country itself is perceived internationally. Economic power can command attention, but without stability and trust, sustaining long-term influence becomes far more challenging.”
