Connect with us

Soccer

Which cities will host World Cup 2026? List of 16 stadiums chosen by FIFA in USA, Canada and Mexico

Which cities will host World Cup 2026? List of 16 stadiums chosen by FIFA in USA, Canada and Mexico

The 2026 FIFA World Cup is the biggest ever edition of global soccer’s flagship international tournament.

An expanded format features 48 teams for the first time, up from the 32-team model that has been in place for the past seven tournaments since France ’98.

This increased scope meant the combined North American bid put forward by the United States, Canada and Mexico had an obvious appeal when it came before FIFA delegates.

There was ample capacity across the three sports-mad nations to find 16 host stadiums. Indeed, there are still some notable absences from the list of host cities.

MORE: How Cristiano Ronaldo avoided being banned for the World Cup start

Which cities will host World Cup 2026?

The majority of matches will take place in the United States, which is hosting the World Cup for the first time since 1994. New York/New Jersey, Dallas (Arlington), Houston​​​​​, Kansas City, Atlanta, Los Angeles (Inglewood), Philadelphia, Seattle, San Francisco (Santa Clara), Boston (Foxborough) and Miami (Miami Gardens) are the host cities.

Mexico has staged the World Cup twice previously as a sole host in 1970 and 1986. Mexico City, Monterrey and Guadalajara will stage matches this time around.

It will be the first time any World Cup matches have taken place in Canada. Vancouver and Toronto are the locations in the spotlight.

List of World Cup 2026 stadiums

Stadium Capacity City Country World Cup games
BC Place 54,000 Vancouver (BC) Canada 5x group matches; 1x RO32
BMO Field 45,500 Toronto (ON) Canada 5x group matches; 1x RO32; 1x RO16
Estadio Azteca 87,523 Mexico City Mexico 3x group matches; 1x RO32; 1x RO16
Estadio BBVA 53,500 Monterrey Mexico 3x group matches; 1x RO32
Estadio Akron 46,232 Guadalajara Mexico 4x group matches
MetLife Stadium 82,500 East Rutherford (NJ) United States 5x group matches; 1x RO32; 1x RO16; final
AT&T Stadium 80,000 Arlington (TX) United States 5x group matches; 2x RO32; 1x RO16; 1x semifinal
Arrowhead Stadium 76,416 Kansas City (MO) United States 4x group matches; 1x RO32; 1x quarterfinal
NRG Stadium 72,220 Houston (TX) United States 5x group matches; 1x RO32; 1x RO16
Mercedes-Benz Stadium 71,000 Atlanta (GA) United States 5x group matches; 1x RO32; 1x RO16; 1x semifinal
SoFi Stadium 70,240 Inglewood (CA) United States 5x group matches; 2x RO32; 1x quarterfinal
Lincoln Financial Field 69,796 Philadelphia (PA) United States 5x group matches; 1x RO16
Lumen Field 69,000 Seattle (WA) United States 4x group matches; 1x RO32; 1x RO16
Levi’s Stadium 68,500 Santa Clara (CA) United States 5x group matches; 1x RO32
Gillette Stadium 65,878 Boston (MA) United States 5x group matches; 1x RO32; 1x quarterfinal
Hard Rock Stadium 64,767 Miami Gardens (FL) United States 4x group matches; 1x RO32; 1x quarterfinal; bronze-medal match

Which cities missed out on hosting games?

That substantial list of host venues has been significantly reduced. In August 2017, the United Bid Committee published a list of 49 stadiums from 44 metropolitan areas across the three countries. 

Five venues opted against submitting a bid to be included in the World Cup plans, while others were rejected during the first and second rounds of bidding.

During the process, some venues withdrew voluntarily, while seven were excluded from the final list in June 2022 — including the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Los Angeles, which hosted the 1994 World Cup final.

Venues in the initial 49 that did not submit a bid

Stadium Capacity City Country
McMahon Stadium 35,400 Calgary (AB) Canada
Saputo Stadium 20,801 Montreal (QC) Canada
Rogers Centre 54,000 Toronto (ON) Canada
Lambeau Field 81,441 Green Bay (WI) United States
Qualcomm Stadium 70,561 San Diego (CA) United States

Venues rejected in the 1st round

Stadium Capacity City Country
TD Place Stadium 24,000 Ottawa (ON) Canada
Mosaic Stadium 33,350 Regina (SK) Canada
Legion Field 71,594 Birmingham (AL) United States
Huntington Bank Field 67,895 Cleveland (OH) United States
Lucas Oil Stadium 62,421 Indianapolis (IN) United States
EverBank Field 69,132 Jacksonville (FL) United States
Caesars Superdome 73,208 New Orleans (LA) United States
Acrisure Stadium 69,690 Pittsburgh (PA) United States
Alamodome 64,000 San Antonio (TX) United States

Venues rejected in the 2nd round

Stadium Capacity City Country
Bank of America Stadium 75,525 Charlotte (NC) United States
Cotton Bowl 92,100 Dallas (TX) United States
Ford Field 65,000 Detroit (MI) United States
Allegiant Stadium 72,000 Las Vegas (NV) United States
Memorial Coliseum 93,607 Los Angeles (CA) United States
State Farm Stadium 63,400 Glendale (AZ) United States
Rice-Eccles Stadium 53,609 Salt Lake City (UT) United States
Raymond James Stadium 65,890 Tampa (FL) United States

Venues that withdrew voluntarily

Stadium Capacity City Country
Olympic Stadium 54,000 Montreal (QC) Canada
U.S. Bank Stadium 66,655 Minneapolis (MN) United States
Soldier Field 61,500 Chicago (IL) United States
Northwest Stadium 62,000 Landover (MD) United States

Venues excluded from the final list

Stadium Capacity City Country
Commonwealth Stadium 56,302 Edmonton (AL) Canada
M&T Bank Stadium 71,006 Baltimore (MD) United States
Paycor Stadium 65,515 Cincinnati (OH) United States
Empower Field at Mile High 76,125 Denver (CO) United States
Rose Bowl 92,000 Pasadena (CA) United States
Nissan Stadium 69,143 Nashville (TN) United States
Camping World Stadium 60,219 Orlando (FL) United States
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Must See

More in Soccer