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Club World Cup 2025 in USA: Confirmed teams, format, dates, venues for FIFA tournament with expanded field

The FIFA Club World Cup will look very different in 2025, with the first edition of the new competition to be contested in the United States in the summer of 2025.

The competition, which has been contested annually since 2000, moves to a four-year cycle to be played the year before the FIFA World Cup. As such, the Club World Cup has been expanded to a larger field to accommodate continental champions from the entirety of the previous four years, plus a few additional participants.

In its place on an annual basis will be the new FIFA Intercontinental Cup, which will keep the semblance of the Club World Cup’s old format with a few tweaks. The name is taken from the defunct annual match played between the champions of Europe and South America, which was played for the last time in 2004.

The Sporting News has all the details on changes to the FIFA tournaments as the world governing body hopes to craft a club competition with the gravity and weight of its international sister tournament.

MORE: All the matchups, dates, and venues for the 2024 Copa America in the United States

When is the 2025 Club World Cup? Schedule for tournament

The 2025 Club World Cup features a 32-team list with teams from around the globe, contested from June 15, 2025 to July 13, 2025.

The dates were worked around the international match calendar, allowing time between the end of the competition and the beginning of European domestic club seasons.

However, with North and South American leagues playing a calendar-year schedule, clubs in CONCACAF and CONMEBOL will have to sort out how to fit the competition into their regular season calendar.

Teams in 2025 Club World Cup

All but two confederations were awarded four slots. UEFA were given 12 spots, with CONMEBOL granted six and OFC given one. Additionally, the host nation were granted one additional participant slot, which has been filled by Inter Miami: after winning the 2024 MLS Supporters’ Shield, FIFA granted Lionel Messi the chance to compete in the event.

Club Leon were initially in the draw, but FIFA announced in March 2025 that it was removing the Mexican side from the tournament for breaching rules on multi-club ownership. A replacement has yet to be confirmed.

Clubs qualify for the tournament by winning a continental title within each four-year cycle. Should a club win multiple continental crowns, the runners-up from that year will also qualify.

To begin the new format in the 2025 tournament, FIFA is back-dating its qualifying method, which sees some clubs qualify despite having already secured past Club World Cup berths.

Club Confederation Nation Qualified Via
Al Hilal AFC Saudi Arabia 2021 AFC Champions League winners
Urawa Red Diamonds AFC Japan 2022 AFC Champions League winners
Al Ain AFC UAE 2023/24 AFC Champions League winners
Ulsan HD AFC South Korea Highest-ranking unqualified AFC club*
Al Ahly CAF Egypt 2021/22 CAF Champions League winners
Wydad Casablanca CAF Morocco 2021/22 CAF Champions League winners
Esperance de Tunis CAF Tunisia Highest-ranking unqualified CAF club**
Mamelodi Sundowns CAF South Africa 2nd highest-ranking unqualified CAF club**
Monterrey CONCACAF Mexico 2021 CONCACAF Champions League winners
Seattle Sounders CONCACAF USA 2022 CONCACAF Champions League winners
Club Leon CONCACAF Mexico 2023 CONCACAF Champions League winners
Pachuca CONCACAF Mexico 2024 CONCACAF Champions League winners
Inter Miami CONCACAF USA Host/MLS Supporters’ Shield winner
Palmeiras CONMEBOL Brazil 2021 Copa Libertadores winners
Flamengo CONMEBOL Brazil 2022 Copa Libertadores winners
Fluminense CONMEBOL Brazil 2023 Copa Libertadores winners
Botafogo CONMEBOL Brazil 2024 Copa Libertadores winners
River Plate CONMEBOL Argentina Highest-ranking unqualified CONMEBOL club
Boca Juniors CONMEBOL Argentina 2nd highest-ranking unqualified CONMEBOL club
Auckland City OFC New Zealand Highest-ranking OFC club across four-year period
Chelsea UEFA England 2020/21 UEFA Champions League winners
Real Madrid UEFA Spain 2021/22 & 2023/24 UEFA Champions League winners
Man City UEFA England 2022/23 UEFA Champions League winners
Bayern Munich UEFA Germany Highest-ranking unqualified UEFA club
PSG UEFA France 2nd highest-ranking unqualified UEFA club
Inter Milan UEFA Italy 3rd highest-ranking unqualified UEFA club
Porto UEFA Portugal 4th highest-ranking unqualified UEFA club
Benfica UEFA Portugal 5th highest-ranking unqualified UEFA club
Borussia Dortmund UEFA Germany 6th highest-ranking unqualified UEFA club
Juventus UEFA Italy 7th highest-ranking unqualified UEFA club
Atletico Madrid UEFA Spain 8th highest-ranking unqualified UEFA club
Red Bull Salzburg UEFA Austria 9th highest-ranking unqualified UEFA club***

* Because the AFC moved its continental tournament from a calendar-year schedule to a European-league schedule, there are only three title winners in this four-year cycle. Thus, an additional qualifier was awarded via the confederation’s club ranking.
** Because Al Ahly won the CAF Champions League three times in the four-year cycle (2021/22, 2022/23, 2023/24), two additional qualifiers were awarded via the confederation’s club ranking.
*** Because Real Madrid won the UEFA Champions League two times in the four-year cycle, an additional qualifier was awarded via the confederation’s club ranking.

How does FIFA rank clubs for Club World Cup qualification?

FIFA approved its newest club ranking system in 2023, which is heavily utilised for qualification to the Club World Cup.

Starting from the group stage of the confederation’s relevant premier club competition, teams will earn three points for a group-stage win and one point for a draw, plus three points for progression to each successive knockout stage.

However, there is one exception. For this competition only, UEFA will use its current co-efficient ranking system. As per that, European clubs will earn two points for a group-stage win and one point for a draw, plus four points for qualification from the group stage, five points for qualification from the Round of 16, and one point for progress to each stage of the competition thereafter.

2025 Club World Cup host cities

The host cities for the 2025 Club World Cup were announced in September.

Notably, the host cities are nearly all east of the Mississippi River, which was done purposely. Because the 2025 CONCACAF Gold Cup will be contested in the United States at the same time, to keep travel minimized, the two competitions were collaboratively split.

With just two exceptions, the Club World Cup was largely kept to east coast venues, while Gold Cup matches were arranged throughout the western half of the country.

2025 Club World Cup venues are as follows:

Venue Location Capacity
Rose Bowl Pasadena, CA 88,500
MetLife Stadium East Rutherford, NJ 82,500
Bank of America Stadium Charlotte, NC 75,000
Mercedes-Benz Stadium Atlanta, GA 75,000
Lincoln Financial Field Philadelphia, PA 69,000
Lumen Field Seattle, WA 69,000
Hard Rock Stadium Miami, FL 65,000
Camping World Stadium Orlando, FL 65,000
GEODIS Park Nashville, TN 30,000
TQL Stadium Cincinnati, OH 26,000
Inter&Co Stadium Orlando, FL 25,000
Audi Field Washington, DC 20,000

2025 Club World Cup format

Every four years, the 32-team FIFA Club World Cup is contested over the course of a month, and formatted with a group stage and a knockout stage that is familiar to many football fans, as it has been utilised in both the FIFA World Cup and the UEFA Champions League in the past (although both systems are set to be altered in the coming edition of those competitions).

The 32 teams will be drawn into a group stage, featuring eight groups of four, with the top two advancing to the knockout stage.

From there, 16 teams contest the single-elimination knockout stages, progressing from the Round of 16 through to the final. Notably, there will be no third-place playoff in this tournament.

What is the FIFA Intercontinental Cup?

With the Club World Cup moving to a four-year cycle, just like the international World Cup, FIFA crafted a new tournament — based on an old one — to be played annually.

The FIFA Intercontinental Cup appeared in 2024 and is similar (but not an exact replica) of the current, soon-to-be replaced Club World Cup.

The name is taken from the defunct showpiece match played between the champions of Europe and South America, which ran from 1960 until 2004.

In the Intercontinental Cup, the global continental champions play through a single-elimination knockout tournament. Unlike the current Club World Cup, where the CONMEBOL and UEFA champions are given byes to the semifinals, the UEFA champion is immediately awarded a place in the Intercontinental Cup final, against the qualifier who emerges from the earlier rounds.

The competition is formatted as follows:

Round 1:

  • Sep. 22: Al Ain (2023/24 AFC Champions League winner) 6-2 Auckland City (2024 OFC Champions League winner)

Round 2: 

  • Oct. 29: Al Ain 0-3 Al Ahly (2023/24 CAF Champions League winner)
  • Dec. 11: Pachuca (2023/24 CONCACAF Champions Cup winner) vs. Botafogo (2024 CONMEBOL Copa Libertadores winner)

Playoff (December 14, 2024):

  • Al Ahly 0-0 Pachuca (5-6 on penalties)

Final (December 18, 2024):

  • Pachuca 0-3 Real Madrid (2023/24 UEFA Champions League winner)

*The AFC Champions League winner and CAF Champions League winner will rotate Round 1 and Round 2 qualification on an annual basis, with an initial draw determining that 2024 would see AFC into Round 1 and CAF into Round 2.

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