11 Cities • 11 Stadiums • 78 Matches • One Nation, One Dream
June 12 – July 19, 2026 | Group D: USA, Paraguay, Australia, Türkiye
America’s Biggest Football Moment Since 1994
The United States is back at the center of world football. For the first time since 1994 — when the Americans hosted a tournament that shattered attendance records and introduced the beautiful game to tens of millions of new fans — the US is a World Cup host nation. This time, it shares the honour with Canada and Mexico, but make no mistake: the USA is carrying the heaviest load, hosting 11 of the 16 venues and staging 78 of the 104 total matches, including every game from the quarter-finals through to the Final.
Whether you’re a devoted football supporter, a first-time fan swept up in the excitement, or a traveller planning the trip of a lifetime, this complete guide covers everything you need to know about the USA’s role in FIFA World Cup 2026 — the host cities, the stadiums, the USMNT’s campaign, fan experience tips, and travel essentials.
USA at World Cup 2026: At a Glance
| Host Role | Primary host — 11 cities, 11 stadiums, 78 of 104 matches |
| USA First Match | June 12, 2026 — USMNT vs. Paraguay, SoFi Stadium, Los Angeles |
| USA Group | Group D — United States, Paraguay, Australia, Türkiye |
| Coach | Mauricio Pochettino |
| Star Player | Christian Pulisic (AC Milan) — 84 caps, 32 goals |
| USA FIFA Ranking | No. 16 (highest in Group D at time of draw) |
| Host Cities | New York/NJ, Los Angeles, Dallas, Atlanta, Seattle, San Francisco, Miami, Kansas City, Philadelphia, Houston, Boston |
| The Final | July 19, MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey |
| Semifinals | July 14 — Dallas | July 15 — Atlanta |
| Last Home WC | 1994 (USA hosted alone; reached Round of 16) |
| How to Watch | FOX (English) / Telemundo (Spanish) |
Why the USA? The Story Behind the Host Selection
The United Bid — filed jointly by the US Soccer Federation, Canada Soccer, and Federacion Mexicana de Futbol — was awarded hosting rights by FIFA on June 13, 2018 in Moscow, defeating a rival bid from Morocco by 134 votes to 65. It was a dominant victory that reflected North America’s unmatched infrastructure: world-class NFL stadiums already built to the required capacity, established tourism industries across three major economies, and a combined fanbase that FIFA estimated could generate over $14 billion in economic impact.
For the United States specifically, the pitch was straightforward: no country on earth has more pre-built, high-capacity, climate-adapted sports venues. The NFL’s 30+ stadiums, many with retractable roofs and natural or convertible grass surfaces, offer FIFA-standard facilities without the need for expensive, purpose-built construction. The US also benefits from an established network of international airports, world-class hotels, and a sports media ecosystem — led by Fox Sports and Telemundo — capable of broadcasting the tournament to hundreds of millions of American viewers.
Thirty-two years after the 1994 tournament transformed American soccer, the 2026 World Cup arrives in a country where the game has fundamentally changed: MLS has expanded from 10 to 30 clubs, youth participation is at an all-time high, and a generation of elite American players — Pulisic, McKennie, Reyna, Robinson — compete at the highest level of European club football. The timing has never been better.
The 11 USA Stadiums: Complete Venue Guide
The United States hosts matches across 11 iconic venues — from the steel-and-glass wonder of SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles to the historic MetLife in New Jersey, which stages the most-watched sporting event on earth: the Final. Here is your complete guide to every American venue.
EASTERN ZONE
| MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey | Capacity: 82,500 | Matches: 8 matches incl. THE FINAL (July 19)Home of NY Giants & NY Jets. Just 10 miles from Manhattan. The largest World Cup Final crowd ever. |
MetLife Stadium is the crown jewel of the 2026 World Cup. Sitting just across the Hudson River from New York City, the stadium’s 82,500-seat capacity makes it the largest venue in the tournament and ensures the July 19 Final will be witnessed by the biggest crowd in World Cup Final history. Built in 2010 at a cost of $1.6 billion, MetLife has been retrofitted with a natural grass pitch specifically for the tournament. FIFA has designated this as the New York New Jersey venue to give the world’s media capital maximum association with the most-watched sporting event on earth. Group stage matches here include Argentina vs. Austria and Jordan vs. Argentina, meaning the defending champions and Messi will grace this stage before the Final itself.
Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Capacity: 69,796 | Matches: 5 matches incl. Round of 16 (July 4)Home of the Philadelphia Eagles. Historic July 4 knockout match on US Independence Day. |
Lincoln Financial Field — affectionately known as ‘The Linc’ by Eagles faithful — is one of the most atmospherically charged venues in American sport. Philadelphia’s significance in 2026 extends beyond football: the city is hosting a Round of 16 match on July 4, 2026, perfectly timed to coincide with the United States Semiquincentennial — the 250th anniversary of American independence. A World Cup knockout match on the Fourth of July, in the birthplace of American democracy, with fireworks planned across the city: it doesn’t get more uniquely American than that.
| Gillette Stadium, Foxborough, Massachusetts (Boston) | Capacity: 65,878 | Matches: 6 matches incl. Quarter-FinalHome of the New England Patriots & New England Revolution. Boston area host. |
Gillette Stadium sits in Foxborough, roughly 25 miles south of downtown Boston — one of America’s most historically and culturally rich cities. The stadium is home to the New England Patriots (NFL) and New England Revolution (MLS), making it one of the few venues with deep ties to both American football and soccer. Boston’s passionate sporting culture and large international population ensure this will be one of the liveliest fan environments in the tournament.
| Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, Florida | Capacity: 65,326 | Matches: 6 matches incl. Third Place Play-Off (July 18)Home of the Miami Dolphins. Latin America’s gateway city in the tournament. |
Miami is, in many ways, the most naturally football-ready city in the United States. With a population that is over 70% Hispanic or Latino, Miami speaks football as a first language. Hard Rock Stadium, home of the Miami Dolphins and Inter Miami CF, hosts six matches, including the Third Place Play-Off on July 18. The proximity to Latin America — and the massive fanbase that will travel from South America, Central America, and the Caribbean — makes Miami one of the tournament’s most vibrant and colourful host cities.
CENTRAL ZONE
| AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas (Dallas) | Capacity: 80,000 | Matches: 9 matches incl. SEMI-FINAL 1 (July 14)Home of the Dallas Cowboys. Most matches of any US venue. One of the world’s largest domed stadiums. |
AT&T Stadium — known as ‘Jerry World’ by NFL fans — is the single busiest venue at the 2026 World Cup, hosting nine matches in total, including the first semi-final on July 14. With a capacity of 80,000 and a retractable roof that provides climate control for the notoriously hot Texas summer, it represents the pinnacle of American sports engineering. The stadium’s colossal video board — among the largest in the world — will broadcast every moment of those nine matches to fans inside with cinematic clarity. Dallas, sitting centrally in the continent, is one of the most accessible host cities for fans travelling from across the Americas.
Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, Missouri | Capacity: 76,416 | Matches: 5 matches incl. Quarter-FinalConsistently voted the loudest stadium in the NFL. Kansas City’s football passion at full volume. |
Arrowhead Stadium is one of the most legendary venues in American sport — consistently measured as the loudest outdoor stadium in the NFL. Kansas City’s fanbase is notoriously passionate, and the stadium’s steep, enclosed design creates a wall of sound that visiting teams and players routinely describe as overwhelming. Its intimate atmosphere will be extraordinary for World Cup matches, giving the tournament some of its most electric group-stage and knockout moments.
| NRG StadiumHouston, Texas | Capacity: 72,220 | Matches: 5 matches incl. Round of 16Home of Houston Texans. One of four retractable-roof venues; essential for Texas summer heat. |
Houston is the most diverse city in the United States by multiple measures, and its passion for football — driven by its enormous Latino population — makes NRG Stadium one of the most anticipated venues. The retractable roof keeps players and fans cool in Houston’s oppressive summer heat, while the city itself serves as a hub for fans travelling from Mexico and Central America. Houston’s location makes it the perfect gateway city between the US and Mexico legs of the tournament.
| Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta, Georgia | Capacity: 75,000 | Matches: 9 matches incl. SEMI-FINAL 2 (July 15)Home of Atlanta United (MLS) & Atlanta Falcons (NFL). Retractable roof. Future Super Bowl LXII host. |
Mercedes-Benz Stadium in downtown Atlanta is a masterpiece of modern stadium design — a retractable-roof venue with a distinctive oculus opening that floods the field with natural light when conditions allow. Alongside AT&T Stadium, it is the joint-busiest American venue with nine matches, and it hosts the second semi-final on July 15. Atlanta United FC, one of MLS’s most successful and best-supported clubs, means this city already has a deep and educated football culture. The stadium will also host Super Bowl LXII in 2028, cementing its status as one of America’s premier sporting venues.
WESTERN ZONE
| SoFi Stadium, Inglewood, California (Los Angeles) | Capacity: 70,240 | Matches: 8 matches incl. Quarter-Final + 2x USMNT group matchesUSMNT home base. Ultra-modern. Home of LA Rams & LA Chargers. USA’s Hollywood backdrop. |
SoFi Stadium in Inglewood is America’s most technologically advanced sports venue and the USMNT’s home for their opening and closing group-stage matches. Opened in 2020 at a cost of $5.5 billion — the most expensive stadium ever built — SoFi features a translucent roof that shelters fans from the sun while allowing airflow, a 70,000 sq ft video board that forms a double-sided halo above the field, and a design that captures the glamour and ambition of Los Angeles itself. With the Pacific Ocean 10 miles to the west and the Hollywood Hills to the north, SoFi’s setting is as iconic as the matches it will host.
| Levi’s Stadium, Santa Clara, California (San Francisco Bay Area) | Capacity: 68,500 | Matches: 6 matches incl. Quarter-FinalSilicon Valley’s stadium. Home of SF 49ers. USMNT Round of 32 destination if finishing 1st in Group D. |
Levi’s Stadium sits in the heart of Silicon Valley and serves the broader San Francisco Bay Area — one of the world’s most culturally diverse and internationally connected metropolitan regions. The stadium is home to the San Francisco 49ers (NFL) and has hosted Super Bowl 50. San Francisco’s vast Asian and Latino communities mean the city will draw enormous supporter groups for teams from across Latin America and Asia-Pacific. If the USMNT finish top of Group D, Levi’s Stadium is where they play their Round of 32 match.
| Lumen Field, Seattle, Washington | | Capacity: 69,000 | Matches: 6 matches incl. USMNT vs. Australia (June 19) + Round of 16Home of Seattle Sounders (MLS) & Seahawks (NFL). Loudest open-air stadium in North America. |
Lumen Field in downtown Seattle is the home of Seattle Sounders FC — MLS’s most successful club by trophy count — which means it is already one of America’s most football-savvy venues. The stadium’s open design channels the notoriously passionate Sounders crowd into a deafening noise that has earned it a reputation as the loudest open-air stadium in North America. For the USMNT’s second group match (vs. Australia on June 19), Lumen Field will deliver an atmosphere unlike anything most international players have ever experienced. Seattle’s proximity to Canada and large Pacific Rim population adds further international flavour.
All 11 USA Venues: Quick Reference
| Stadium | City | Capacity | Matches | Notable Fixture |
| MetLife Stadium | New York / New Jersey | 82,500 | 8 | THE FINAL — July 19 |
| AT&T Stadium | Dallas, TX | 80,000 | 9 | SEMI-FINAL 1 — July 14 |
| Mercedes-Benz Stadium | Atlanta, GA | 75,000 | 9 | SEMI-FINAL 2 — July 15 |
| Arrowhead Stadium | Kansas City, MO | 76,416 | 5 | Quarter-Final |
| NRG Stadium | Houston, TX | 72,220 | 5 | Round of 16 |
| SoFi Stadium | Los Angeles, CA | 70,240 | 8 | USMNT opener + QF |
| Lumen Field | Seattle, WA | 69,000 | 6 | USMNT vs Australia |
| Levi’s Stadium | San Francisco, CA | 68,500 | 6 | Quarter-Final |
| Lincoln Financial Field | Philadelphia, PA | 69,796 | 5 | Round of 16 — July 4 |
| Gillette Stadium | Boston, MA | 65,878 | 6 | Quarter-Final |
| Hard Rock Stadium | Miami, FL | 65,326 | 6 | 3rd Place — July 18 |
Team USA at World Cup 2026: The Complete Guide
The United States Men’s National Team enters the 2026 World Cup as a host nation, an automatic qualifier, and a team with genuine ambitions to reach the quarter-finals and beyond. Under Argentinian coach Mauricio Pochettino — one of the world’s most highly respected tacticians, formerly of Tottenham Hotspur and PSG — the USMNT has been reshaped into a tactically mature, high-pressing unit. Pochettino’s record since taking charge includes a 5-1 demolition of Uruguay in 2025, and the team enters the tournament unbeaten in their last five matches.
Group D: The Path Through the Group Stage
| Group D Teams | United States (FIFA #16) | Türkiye (FIFA #22) | Australia (FIFA #27) | Paraguay (FIFA #40) |
| Match 1 | June 12 — USMNT vs. Paraguay | SoFi Stadium, Los Angeles | 9 PM ET (FOX/Telemundo) |
| Match 2 | June 19 — USMNT vs. Australia | Lumen Field, Seattle | 3 PM ET (FOX/Telemundo) |
| Match 3 | June 25 — USMNT vs. Türkiye | SoFi Stadium, Los Angeles | 10 PM ET (FOX/Telemundo) |
| If 1st in Group | Round of 32 — July 1, Levi’s Stadium, San Francisco (vs. 3rd-place team from Groups B/E/F/I/J) |
| If 2nd in Group | Round of 32 — July 3, AT&T Stadium, Dallas (vs. Group G runner-up) |
The USA holds the highest FIFA ranking in Group D at #16, making them the clear favourite to advance. Paraguay, returning to the World Cup for the first time in 16 years, were beaten 2-1 by the US in a November friendly — a confidence-boosting result. Australia brings physical, organised football under Tony Popovic, while Turkiye — featuring Real Madrid’s Arda Guler — represents the group’s toughest challenge. The USMNT are heavy favourites to qualify from Group D and reach the knockout rounds.
| Strategic AdvantageAll three USMNT group matches take place on the West Coast — Los Angeles for games one and three, Seattle for game two. This minimises travel distance and allows Pochettino’s squad to set up a stable base camp in Southern California, maintaining consistent preparation routines without cross-country disruptions that could affect form and fitness. |
The 26-Man USMNT Squad
Coach Mauricio Pochettino announced his official 26-man squad on May 26, 2026, at a live FOX broadcast event in New York City. The roster blends 13 returnees from the 2022 Qatar World Cup campaign with 13 first-time World Cup players — an average age of just 26 years and 332 days, the fifth youngest squad the USA has ever sent to a World Cup.
| Position | Player | Club | Key Facts |
| GK | Matt Turner | New England Revolution | First-choice keeper; 50+ caps |
| GK | Chris Brady | Chicago Fire | Young backup; strong form in 2025 |
| GK | Matt Freese | New York City FC | Third-choice; MLS experience |
| DEF | Antonee Robinson | Fulham (ENG) | Star left-back; dangerous going forward |
| DEF | Sergino Dest | PSV Eindhoven (NED) | Right-back; pace and creativity |
| DEF | Chris Richards | Crystal Palace (ENG) | Centre-back; Premier League quality |
| DEF | Tim Ream | Charlotte FC | Captain; experienced leader |
| DEF | Miles Robinson | Cincinnati | Aerial threat; MLS form |
| DEF | Auston Trusty | Celtic (SCO) | Champions League experience |
| DEF | Mark McKenzie | Toulouse (FRA) | Ligue 1 starter; composed in build-up |
| DEF | Joe Scally | M’gladbach (GER) | Bundesliga right-back; two-way threat |
| DEF | Alex Freeman | Villarreal (ESP) | La Liga exposure; versatile |
| DEF | Max Arfsten | Columbus Crew | MLS breakthrough season |
| MID | Tyler Adams | Bournemouth (ENG) | Captain material; engine of the team |
| MID | Weston McKennie | Juventus (ITA) | Box-to-box force; Serie A experience |
| MID | Gio Reyna | M’gladbach (GER) | Technically gifted; key creative outlet |
| MID | Malik Tillman | Bayer Leverkusen (GER) | Champions League-winning club |
| MID | Sebastian Berhalter | Vancouver Whitecaps | Son of former USMNT coach |
| MID | Cristian Roldan | Seattle Sounders | Veteran; local hero at Lumen Field |
| FWD | Christian Pulisic | AC Milan (ITA) | Captain & superstar; 84 caps, 32 goals |
| FWD | Folarin Balogun | Monaco (FRA) | Striker goals; poached from England U21s |
| FWD | Ricardo Pepi | PSV Eindhoven (NED) | Prolific striker; Dutch league form |
| FWD | Josh Sargent | Norwich City (ENG) | Physical striker; Championship form |
| FWD | Johnny Cardoso | Real Betis (ESP) | La Liga midfielder/forward hybrid |
| FWD | Taylor Booth | FC Zurich (SUI) | Technical forward; Swiss league |
| FWD | Patrick Agyemang | Brighton (ENG) | PL experience; pace off the bench |
Key Players to Watch
Christian Pulisic — The Captain, The Star
Christian Pulisic is the beating heart of the USMNT and the player American fans will pin their hopes on. At 27, the AC Milan winger enters this World Cup at the peak of his powers — 84 caps, 32 international goals, and a Champions League pedigree earned at both Chelsea and AC Milan. On home soil, in front of crowds who have watched him grow from teenage prodigy to fully-fledged superstar, Pulisic will carry the enormous weight of a nation’s expectation. He is the first American player to win the Champions League, and he wants the World Cup to be his defining moment.
Tyler Adams — The Engine
Tyler Adams is the player who makes the USMNT work. The Bournemouth defensive midfielder combines elite ball-recovery with sharp passing and the leadership qualities of a natural captain — he wore the armband at the 2022 World Cup despite being 23 years old. His fitness coming into the tournament is the most-discussed variable in the American camp; when Adams is on the pitch, the team is transformed.
Weston McKennie — The Wild Card
Weston McKennie at Juventus has shown the kind of driving, box-to-box football that can unlock any defence. Big-game temperament, powerful in the air, and capable of scoring from distance, McKennie is the USMNT’s X-factor — the player who can single-handedly win a match that is drifting away.
Antonee Robinson — The Weapon
Fulham’s Antonee Robinson is considered one of the best left-backs in the Premier League and brings relentless energy to the USMNT’s attacking play. Dangerous in possession, rapid in transition, and a genuine set-piece threat, Robinson will be a constant source of danger down the American left flank.
| Realistic TargetQuarter-finals or beyond is the stated goal, and it is achievable. The USMNT avoided the tournament’s elite nations in the group stage, the knockout path is navigable, and home advantage in front of 70,000+ partisan crowds is a genuine factor. This team is good enough to reach the last eight. Everything beyond that requires the stars to align — but in 2026, at home, they might. |
American Football Culture in 2026
The 1994 World Cup is widely credited with triggering the modern era of American soccer. MLS launched two years later. Youth participation exploded. A generation grew up watching the Premier League on Saturday mornings. Today, the United States has the fourth-largest footballing population on earth by participation numbers, a thriving domestic league, and millions of fans who follow European football with the same obsessive detail as any club fan in England or Spain.
But 2026 is different in kind, not just degree. For the first time, the World Cup is coming to American cities where millions of people actually attend football matches regularly — from the Seattle Sounders’ 40,000-per-game average to Atlanta United’s passionate fanbase. These aren’t empty NFL shells being temporarily repurposed; they’re venues with existing football cultures and supporter groups who know how to create an atmosphere.
Add to this the sheer diversity of the American population — cities like Miami, Houston, Los Angeles, and New York are among the most multicultural on earth — and you have a tournament that will feel simultaneously like a home event for supporters of dozens of different nations. When Brazil play in Houston. When Argentina take the field at MetLife. When Mexico fans — who have crossed the border to watch their team — fill Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City: the USA in 2026 will be the world’s football party.
The American Fan Experience
FIFA and the host organisation have invested heavily in the fan experience at the 2026 World Cup. Each host city features an Official FIFA Fan Festival — large, free-to-enter public events with live match screenings, entertainment, food, and merchandise. These festivals are designed to bring the World Cup to the entire city, not just the tens of thousands inside each stadium.
- FIFA Fan Festivals: Free entry, live screenings in every host city. Miami’s Bayfront Park, Seattle’s waterfront, and New York’s Hudson Yards are expected to be particularly spectacular.
- Supporter Zones: Each stadium area has dedicated supporter sections where organised fan groups can gather with flags, drums, and coordinated displays.
- City Activation Events: Host cities are running weeks-long football festivals — street football tournaments, player appearances, cultural events — timed around match days.
- Food & Culture: Each host city puts its culinary identity front and centre. Miami’s Cuban and Latin American food scene, Houston’s Texas BBQ alongside Tex-Mex, Philadelphia’s cheesesteak trail — local food culture is woven into the fan experience.
Fan Travel Guide: Getting Around the USA
Getting There: International Flights
Every US host city is served by a major international airport with direct connections to Europe, Latin America, Asia, and beyond. The primary international entry points for most fans will be:
- New York (JFK / Newark EWR) — for MetLife Stadium and the Final
- Los Angeles (LAX) — for SoFi Stadium and USMNT group matches
- Dallas/Fort Worth (DFW) — for AT&T Stadium and Semi-Final 1
- Atlanta (ATL) — for Mercedes-Benz Stadium and Semi-Final 2
- Miami (MIA) — for Hard Rock Stadium and the Third Place match
- Seattle (SEA) — for Lumen Field; also gateway for Canadian games in Vancouver
Getting Between Host Cities
With 11 venues spread across four time zones and roughly 3,000 miles of geography, domestic travel planning is essential for fans attending multiple matches. The most practical options:
| Option | Best For |
| Domestic Flights (Southwest, Delta, United, American) | Any city pair; most efficient for distances over 400 miles |
| Rental Car | Texas venues (Dallas–Houston is ~3.5 hrs), California venues (LA–San Francisco is ~6 hrs by road) |
| Amtrak Train | Northeast Corridor: New York–Philadelphia is 1.5 hrs; Boston–New York is ~3.5 hrs |
| Rideshare (Uber, Lyft) | Stadium to city centre; essential as public transit may be limited on match days |
| Stadium Shuttles | Most venues offer official FIFA shuttle services from designated park-and-ride points |
| Pro Travel TipBook accommodation and domestic flights as early as possible — host cities will experience extreme demand during World Cup weeks. Hotels within 10 miles of venues in Dallas, Miami, and New York/NJ are already at premium pricing. Consider staying in city centres and using rideshare or official shuttles to reach stadiums, which are often located in suburban areas. |
Visa & Entry Requirements for International Fans
Most international visitors to the United States require either an ESTA (Electronic System for Travel Authorization) or a standard US visitor visa (B-1/B-2). ESTA is available to citizens of 42 Visa Waiver Program countries — including most of Western Europe, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and New Zealand — and costs $21, applied for online at esta.cbp.dhs.gov. Processing typically takes 72 hours but can be approved instantly.
Citizens of countries not on the Visa Waiver Program — including most of South Asia, Africa, and parts of Latin America — must apply for a B-1/B-2 visitor visa at a US embassy or consulate. Processing times vary widely by country and applicant volume; fans from these regions should apply a minimum of three to six months before the tournament.
| Important for Multi-Country FansFans planning to attend matches in both the USA and Canada, or USA and Mexico, will need to meet the entry requirements of each country separately. A US ESTA does not cover entry to Canada (requires Canadian eTA) or Mexico (requires Mexican tourist permit/FMM). Apply for all relevant travel authorizations well in advance. |
Accommodation: Where to Stay
| Host City | Where to Stay |
| New York / New Jersey (Final) | Manhattan, Jersey City, or Hoboken; MetLife is accessible by NJ Transit rail |
| Los Angeles (USMNT matches) | Santa Monica, Downtown LA, or Inglewood itself for SoFi Stadium access |
| Dallas (Semi-Final 1) | Downtown Dallas or Arlington; AT&T Stadium is in Arlington between Dallas & Fort Worth |
| Atlanta (Semi-Final 2) | Downtown Atlanta; Mercedes-Benz Stadium is a short walk from major hotels |
| Seattle (USMNT vs Australia) | Downtown Seattle; Lumen Field is within walking distance of the city centre |
| San Francisco Bay Area | San Jose, Santa Clara, or San Francisco city; Levi’s Stadium is in Santa Clara |
| Miami | South Beach or Brickell; Hard Rock Stadium is in Miami Gardens (rideshare recommended) |
| Houston | Downtown Houston; NRG Stadium is accessible via METRORail |
| Kansas City | Downtown KC or Overland Park; Arrowhead is 10 miles southeast of downtown |
| Philadelphia | Center City Philadelphia; Lincoln Financial Field accessible by SEPTA rail |
| Boston | Downtown Boston; Gillette Stadium in Foxborough requires commuter rail or rideshare |
Host City Spotlights: Football & Beyond
The World Cup is as much about the cities as the matches themselves. Here is a quick guide to the personality and must-do experiences of each American host city for fans making the trip.
| City | Football Vibe | Must Eat | Must See |
| New York / NJ | Global melting pot; electric energy around the Final | NYC pizza, bagels, diverse cuisines in all boroughs | Times Square, Central Park, Brooklyn Bridge |
| Los Angeles | Entertainment + football collide; celebrity fan culture | In-N-Out, Korean BBQ, tacos in East LA | Santa Monica Pier, Hollywood, Griffith Observatory |
| Dallas | Cowboys country turns football country; Texas-sized passion | Texas BBQ brisket, Tex-Mex, chicken-fried steak | Deep Ellum, Sixth Floor Museum, Stockyards (Fort Worth) |
| Atlanta | ATL United culture = ready-made World Cup energy | Southern fried chicken, Waffle House, Beltline food halls | Georgia Aquarium, Ponce City Market, Martin Luther King Jr. Center |
| Seattle | Most football-savvy US city; Sounders culture runs deep | Pacific salmon, Pike Place Market, coffee culture | Space Needle, Pike Place Market, Chihuly Garden |
| San Francisco | Tech-meets-football; diverse, international crowd | Dungeness crab, Mission District burritos, sourdough bread | Golden Gate Bridge, Alcatraz, Muir Woods |
| Miami | Latin America’s party capital; football fever like nowhere else | Cuban sandwiches, ceviche, stone crab claws | South Beach, Wynwood Walls, Everglades |
| Houston | Most diverse US city; world food capital | Texas BBQ, Vietnamese pho, Tex-Mex, Southern soul food | NASA Space Center, Buffalo Bayou Park, Museum District |
| Kansas City | Loud, passionate, and surprisingly football-ready | KC-style BBQ ribs (a must), burnt ends, craft beer | Country Club Plaza, Nelson-Atkins Museum, Crossroads Arts |
| Philadelphia | Intense sports culture; will embrace football passionately | Philly cheesesteak, soft pretzels, water ice | Liberty Bell, Reading Terminal Market, Eastern State Penitentiary |
| Boston | Historic, proud sporting city; international student energy | New England clam chowder, lobster rolls, craft beer | Freedom Trail, Fenway Park, Harvard/MIT campus walks |
How to Watch: TV, Streaming & Coverage
| Platform | Details |
| FOX / FS1 | Primary English-language broadcaster in the USA; all matches available |
| Telemundo / Peacock | Primary Spanish-language broadcaster; all matches in Spanish |
| Fubo TV | Streaming — includes FOX and Telemundo feeds; no cable required |
| Hulu + Live TV | Streaming — FOX and FS1 included in base package |
| YouTube TV | Streaming — includes FOX channels |
| ESPN+ | Selected matches; also strong pre/post-match coverage |
| FIFA+ App | Official FIFA app; highlights, stats, and some live content |
| Apple TV+ | MLS Season Pass offers supplementary World Cup coverage |
| Can’t Be at the Stadium?Every US host city’s FIFA Fan Festival offers free live match screenings on giant outdoor screens. For USMNT matches, bars and public screenings across every major American city will be packed. The American soccer bar culture — pioneered through years of 7 AM Premier League kickoffs — means finding a passionate crowd for any match is never difficult. |
USA at the World Cup: Historical Context
The United States has a longer World Cup history than many fans realise. The Americans were one of the original 13 nations at the 1930 World Cup in Uruguay — and reached the semi-finals, losing to Argentina. They then went absent until 1950, when they achieved one of the greatest upsets in tournament history: defeating England 1-0 in a result so shocking that many newspaper editors assumed the scoreline had been transmitted incorrectly and printed it as 0-1 to England.
| Year | Result |
| 1930 | Semi-Finals (lost to Argentina 6-1) |
| 1934 | Round of 16 |
| 1950 | Group Stage — including famous 1-0 win vs. England |
| 1990 | Group Stage |
| 1994 | Quarter-Finals (lost to Brazil 1-0) — hosted tournament |
| 1998 | Group Stage |
| 2002 | Quarter-Finals (lost to Germany 1-0) |
| 2006 | Group Stage |
| 2010 | Round of 16 |
| 2014 | Round of 16 |
| 2022 | Round of 16 (lost to Netherlands 3-1) |
| 2026 | ? — On home soil. The dream lives on. |
The USMNT’s best-ever result remains the 2002 quarter-final run in South Korea/Japan, and their home 1994 campaign that reached the last eight. In 2026, with a more talented squad than either of those eras, Pochettino’s team has a genuine opportunity to surpass those achievements. The quarter-final is the floor of ambition; the semi-final is the ceiling of realistic hope.
