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World Cup 2026: the host cities and how to plan a trip

The 2026 World Cup is the biggest in history — 48 teams, 16 host cities across the United States, Canada and Mexico, running June 11 to July 19. That scale is the whole challenge: this isn't one country you can crisscross easily, it's a continent. The fans who have a great tournament are the ones who plan around the geography, not just the fixtures.

Here's how to think about it.

The 16 host cities, by region

The tournament is grouped into three broad regions, which is the key to not spending your trip on planes:

The single most important planning fact: distances between regions are huge — coast to coast is a five-hour flight. Following one team can mean criss-crossing the continent, so most fans pick a region and build around it.

Build the trip around a region, not the whole map

The realistic ways to do it:

A Western-region trip (Vancouver–Seattle–SF–LA) or an Eastern one (NY–Boston–Philly–Toronto) is far more manageable than chasing matches nationwide.

Tickets — only buy official

This is where fans get burned. Rules of thumb:

Accommodation and getting around

Practical checklist

Plan around the geography and a continent-sized World Cup becomes the trip of a lifetime instead of a logistics nightmare.


Before you go

A few practical bits worth sorting before you travel.

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