The biggest World Cup in history will be played in North America in 2026. Three host nations, a record number of venues, and 48 teams are the most any World Cup has ever seen and the USA, Canada, and Mexico will bring it all to life. FIFA confirmed back in 2018 that the FIFA World Cup 2026 would be played across North America, with 80 matches spread across the continent's three largest nations.
The tri-national North American bid beat out the competing bid from Morocco, earning 134 votes to Morocco's 65. The 2026 World Cup will be the second jointly-hosted men's tournament, and the first since 2002 when South Korea and Japan joined forces to bring the event to Asia.
The Sportz Point brings you all the details regarding the 2026 FIFA World Cup in the United States, Canada, and Mexico.
Where is FIFA World Cup 2026?
The 2026 FIFA World Cup will be played across three North American nations: the United States, Canada, and Mexico.
Of the 80 games to be contested in the tournament, 60 will be played in the USA, with 10 in Canada and 10 in Mexico.
The United States and Mexico have both previously hosted men's World Cups, with Mexico set to become the first country to host three men's tournaments (1970, 1986, and 2026).
After hosting in 1994, the United States will soon join the list of countries to have hosted multiple men's World Cups, alongside Mexico, Brazil, Italy, France, and Germany.
Canada has hosted a FIFA Women's World Cup (2015) and a FIFA men's Under-20 World Cup (2007), making it experienced to welcome the world again on the occasion of a senior men's tournament.
World Cup 2026 host cities:
The specific venues and cities to host matches were announced by FIFA on June 16, 2022 at an event held in New York City and broadcast around the world live. There are 16 total venues which were selected by FIFA amongst 23 cities chosen by the United Bid to bidding for 2026 World Cup matches.
The host venues will be spread across the three countries, with 11 venues in the United States, three in Mexico, and two in Canada.
Two of the stadiums, Estadio Azteca in Mexico City and the Rose Bowl in Los Angeles, have previously hosted World Cup finals. As it stands, the Estadio Azteca remains one of only two venues in the world to have hosted two men's World Cup finals, alongside the Maracana in Brazil.
Confirmed venues to host 2026 World Cup matches:
Market | State | Country | Venue | Capacity |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mexico City | Mexico | Estadio Azteca | 87,523 | |
New York City | NY/NJ | USA | MetLife Stadium | 82,500 |
Dallas | TX | USA | AT&T Stadium | 80,000 |
Kansas City | KS | USA | Arrowhead Stadium | 76,416 |
Houston | TX | USA | NRG Stadium | 71,795 |
Atlanta | GA | USA | Mercedes-Benz Stadium | 71,000 |
Los Angeles | CA | USA | SoFi Stadium | 70,240 |
Philadelphia | PA | USA | Lincoln Financial Field | 69,176 |
Seattle | WA | USA | Lumen Field | 69,000 |
San Francisco | CA | USA | Levi's Stadium | 68,500 |
Boston | MA | USA | Gillette Stadium | 65,878 |
Miami | FL | USA | Hard Rock Stadium | 64,767 |
Vancouver | BC | Canada | BC Place | 54,000 |
Monterrey | NL | Mexico | Estadio BBVA | 53,500 |
Guadalajara | JAL | Mexico | Estadio Akron | 46,232 |
Toronto | ON | Canada | BMO Field | 45,500* |
How many teams at World Cup 2026?
FIFA announced back in 2017 that the 2026 World Cup would be the first to feature an expanded format from the 32-team format used since the 1998 edition in France.
The tournament field will grow by 50 percent to a 48-nation tournament. This will see an additional 16 teams participate in the event, creating an increase in global interest as well as more games across the tournament.
However, FIFA confirmed that the new format would not increase the maximum number of games any team would play, with the cap at seven matches for each finalist.
In the new format for the 2026 World Cup, the group stage will consist of 16 groups of three teams. The top two teams in each group will then advance to an expanded 32-team knockout stage sure to create chaos and intrigue.