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Thursday, June 11, 2026 · 48 days away
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FIFA World Cup 2026 Opening Match
Event overview
Estadio Azteca, Mexico City — first match of the 48-team expanded World Cup hosted across North America.
The 23rd FIFA World Cup kicks off on June 11, 2026 at Estadio Azteca in Mexico City, staging the first match of a tournament expanded to 48 national teams for the first time. Mexico plays the opener in the stadium that previously hosted the 1970 and 1986 finals — becoming the only venue ever to host matches in three separate World Cups. The 104-match tournament spans 16 host cities across the United States, Canada, and Mexico.
FIFA awarded the 2026 tournament to the "United" bid from Canada, Mexico, and the United States in June 2018, choosing it over Morocco by a 134–65 vote at the 68th FIFA Congress in Moscow. The expansion from 32 to 48 teams — approved by the FIFA Council in January 2017 — restructures the group stage into 12 groups of four, with the top two plus the eight best third-placed teams advancing to a 32-team knockout round. That lifts total matches from 64 to 104. Eleven US venues carry the bulk of fixtures, including AT&T Stadium (capacity 80,000), SoFi Stadium, Lincoln Financial Field, and MetLife Stadium. Mexico contributes Estadio Azteca (renamed Estadio Banorte under a recent sponsorship), Estadio BBVA in Monterrey, and Estadio Akron in Guadalajara; Canada hosts matches at BMO Field in Toronto and BC Place in Vancouver. FIFA projects total attendance above 6 million and a global broadcast audience that could surpass the 2022 Qatar tournament's 5 billion cumulative viewership. Gianni Infantino, FIFA president since 2016, has called the event the largest single-sport competition ever staged. Estadio Azteca itself seats approximately 87,000 after the 2023–2025 renovation that upgraded seating tiers, press facilities, and player tunnels to FIFA 2026 specifications. The opening ceremony will precede the first kickoff by roughly 30 minutes, with production handled by FIFA's in-house events team in partnership with Mexico's host committee.
June 11, 2026 opens the first three-nation men's World Cup and the first 48-team edition, ending a 24-year run of 32-team tournaments that began in France 1998. Mexico's presence as opening host resolves a long-standing tournament tradition — the host nation or defending champion opening the competition — after FIFA dropped the defending-champion opener following 2006. The date also triggers the start of group-stage windows that commercial broadcasters, betting markets, and sponsors have been planning against for more than two years, with US network Fox and Spanish-language Telemundo having pre-sold premium advertising inventory for the tournament opener.
The tournament climaxes with the FIFA World Cup 2026 Final at MetLife Stadium on July 19, bracketing Wimbledon 2026 and the US Semiquincentennial 2026 celebrations. Fans planning ahead for the next men's tournament cycle may also follow ICC Cricket World Cup 2027 Opening for the following summer's marquee global sports moment.
When exactly is FIFA World Cup 2026 Opening? Thursday, June 11, 2026, with kickoff scheduled at Estadio Azteca in Mexico City.
Is FIFA World Cup 2026 Opening confirmed or expected? Confirmed; FIFA published the match schedule in February 2024 and venues in June 2022.
Who is responsible for FIFA World Cup 2026 Opening? FIFA, organizing alongside the host nations' federations: US Soccer, the Canadian Soccer Association, and the Mexican Football Federation.
Where can I read the official announcement? The official tournament hub is https://www.fifa.com/en/tournaments/mens/worldcup/canadamexicousa2026.
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