World Cup 2026 Fixtures: Complete Match Schedule & Kick-Off Times

📅 2026-06-02 📖 3 min read Aktualisiert 2026-06-02
World Cup fixtures and kick-off times
Image source: London Evening Standard — World Cup 2026 coverage

⚡ Wichtige Erkenntnisse

  • The finals are the biggest ever, with 48 teams and a round of 32.
  • Concerns around player welfare have prompted FIFA to introduce three-minute water breaks at every game, to be taken close to the midway point in each half.
  • The new faces are Cape Verde, Curacao, Jordan and Uzbekistan.

The finals are the biggest ever, with 48 teams and a round of 32. It’s also the first time three nations have co-hosted, with Mexico the first country to host a finals three times. Concerns around player welfare have prompted FIFA to introduce three-minute water breaks at every game, to be taken close to the midway point in each half.

16 World Cup Stadiums: Capacity, Surface, and Altitude

France, Spain and England look like the most likely teams to triumph, but as ever with summer tournaments the key will be who arrives with the most players fit. The new faces are Cape Verde, Curacao, Jordan and Uzbekistan. Curacao will become the smallest nation ever to play at the finals.

England have been drawn alongside Croatia, Ghana, and Panama in Group L as they launch their quest to end what will be 60 years of hurt by the time the tournament kicks off in Mexico City. Fortunately for England faithful, the Three Lions will be based mainly on the United States’ east coast, meaning kick-off times a relatively favourable for those watching from home. Tournament co-hosts Mexico will face South Africa to open proceedings, a repeat of the 2010 World Cup’s curtain-raiser which ended 1-1.

Matches will be hosted across 16 cities, with the final due to be held at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium on July 19, 2026. Here are the full fixtures, dates, venues, and kick-off times for the 2026 World Cup... 8pm: Mexico vs South Africa (Group A, Mexico City)

Matchday Entry Rules: Bags, Security, and Gate Timings

3am: Korea Republic vs /Czechia (Group A, Guadalajara) 8pm: Canada vs Bosnia & Herzegovina (Group B, Toronto) 8pm: Qatar vs Switzerland (Group B, San Francisco)

11pm: Brazil vs Morocco (Group C, New York/New Jersey) 12am: Ivory Coast vs Ecuador (Group E, Philadelphia) 2am: IR Iran vs New Zealand (Group G, Los Angeles)

8pm: France vs Senegal (Group I, New York/New Jersey) 3am: Uzbekistan vs Colombia (Group K, Mexico City)

Complete 104-Match Fixture Calendar by Stadium and Date

8pm: Switzerland vs Bosnia & Herzegovina (Group B, Los Angeles) 2am: Mexico vs Korea Republic (Group A, Guadalajara) 1am: Norway vs Senegal (Group I, New York/New Jersey)

8pm: Bosnia & Herzegovina vs Qatar (Group B, Seattle) 2am: South Africa vs Korea Republic (Group A, Monterrey)

9pm: Ecuador vs Germany (Group E, New York/New Jersey) 9pm: Curacao vs Ivory Coast (Group E, Philadelphia)

Daily Match Planner: Peak Viewing Days and Double-Headers

The useful takeaway is how this update affects teams, supporters, or match preparation before the tournament starts. Strong World Cup coverage should make the next team, fixture, or lineup implication clear.

Readers can use the related match and team pages to move from the news angle into practical tournament context. That keeps the article grounded in what fans search for before kickoff.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

What does this Tournament News mean for World Cup 2026?

This update directly impacts squad selection, match preparation, and fan planning ahead of the FIFA World Cup 2026 in the USA, Mexico, and Canada. Check the related coverage links for specific match and team implications.

Why does this matter for World Cup 2026?

The expanded 48-team, 104-match format across 3 countries means every squad decision, injury update, and tactical shift has amplified consequences compared to previous 32-team tournaments.

Where can I find related World Cup lineups?

Use the related coverage links in the article to open team and match lineup pages connected to this story.

Ahmed Hassan

FIFA- und Turnierangelegenheiten-Korrespondent

Ahmed Hassan ist ein erfahrener Fußballjournalist mit 16 Jahren Erfahrung in den Bereichen FIFA-Governance, Turnierorganisation und Fußballpolitik. Er hat von vier Weltmeisterschaften berichtet und seit 2010 über jeden großen FIFA-Kongress berichtet. Er hat einen Abschluss in Internationalen Beziehungen von der LSE und schreibt regelmäßig für Al Jazeera English, die New York Times und das World Soccer Magazine.

Quellen und Referenzen

  • London Evening Standard Primäre Berichterstattung oder Quellenmaterial, auf das für diesen Artikel verwiesen wird.