The FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 will be starting during the winter this year, a delayed start due to the weather conditions in the host country. The next FIFA tournament, FIFA World Cup 2026 will be jointly hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico.
The FIFA World Cup 2026 will be jointly hosted by 16 cities across the three North American countries. The World Cup 2026 edition will also be the first World Cup to have 48 teams. Among the 80 matches in total, the United States will host the majority of the matches, holding 60 matches. Mexico and Canada will host 10 matches each.
FIFA World Cup 2026: Here’s the list of the official host cities and their stadiums
United States host cities
Atlanta – Mercedes-Benz Stadium
Boston – Gillette Stadium
Dallas – AT&T Stadium
Houston – NRG Stadium
Kansas City – Arrowhead Stadium
Los Angeles – SoFi Stadium
Miami – Hard Rock Stadium
New York/New Jersey – MetLife Stadium
Philadelphia – Lincoln Financial Field
San Francisco – Levi’s Stadium
Seattle – Lumen Field
Canada host cities
Toronto – BMO Field
Vancouver – BC Place
Mexico host cities
Guadalajara – Estadio Akron
Mexico City – Estadio Azteca
Monterrey – Estadio BBVA