The first 48-team World Cup is coming north
Fan Guide 2026 is an independent editorial desk for supporters travelling to the tournament. We map the host cities, decode the schedule and help you turn one match into the trip of a lifetime.
Counting down to the opening match
The tournament opens in June 2026 and runs for just over a month. Whether you follow Brazil, Argentina, England or the co-hosts, the clock is already running — and so is the race for tickets, hotels and flights.
Start here: our core guides
Four hand-built guides to help you plan smartly, watch like a local and understand the tournament that reshaped the modern World Cup.
Independent, practical, made for travelling fans
City-by-city detail
Each host city gets honest notes on stadiums, fan zones, getting around and where the atmosphere lives.
Schedule made simple
We translate twelve groups and a new knockout bracket into plans you can build a holiday around.
No hype, no selling
We do not sell tickets or tours. Everything here is editorial — written to help you decide, not to upsell.
A continent-sized event
The expanded World Cup, explained for newcomers
For decades the World Cup grew slowly — 16 teams, then 24, then 32. The 2026 edition is the biggest leap yet: 48 nations, three host countries and a calendar that crosses time zones from the Pacific to the Atlantic.
That scale brings debutants alongside familiar giants. Expect Spain, Germany and the Netherlands to chase the trophy, while sides such as Norway, Croatia and Canada itself look to make their mark. Our job is to keep all of it readable.
What you will find here
- Clear, current host-city overviews for Canada and beyond
- Practical travel logistics: borders, transit, budgets and timing
- A plain-English breakdown of groups and the knockout path
- Context and history so every match means a little more
Build your matchday around the right city
Start with our host-city guide, then layer in travel tips and the schedule. One afternoon of reading saves a week of stress.