2026 FIFA World Cup venues confirmed across USA, Canada and Mexico
The 2026 FIFA World Cup will be staged jointly by the United States, Canada and Mexico, marking the first tournament hosted by three nations. The opening match is set for June 11, 2026 at Mexico City's Azteca Stadium, while the final will be played on July 19 at New York's MetLife Stadium. The competition will expand to 48 teams and feature 104 matches.
Eleven of the sixteen host cities are in the United States, including New York (MetLife), Los Angeles (SoFi), Dallas (AT&T), Kansas City (Arrowhead), Houston (NRG), Atlanta (Mercedes‑Benz), Philadelphia (Lincoln Financial), Seattle (Lumen Field), San Francisco (Levi’s), Boston (Gillette) and Miami (Hard Rock). Canada will host games in Vancouver (BC Place) and Toronto (BMO Field), while Mexico will use the Azteca Stadium in Mexico City, the Estadio BBVA Bancomer in Monterrey and Estadio Akron in Guadalajara.
The joint bid, known as "United 2026," was awarded in June 2018. The tournament will return to a June‑July schedule, with matches spread across the three countries throughout the group stage and knockout rounds.