Updated 2026-06-03
Every one of the 104 matches in one calendar — group stage through the final, with dates, kickoff times and AI win probabilities you can plan around.
$49 · one-time, all 104 matches
Total matches
104
Group stage through the final
Host cities
16
Across USA, Canada and Mexico
Tournament window
Jun 11 – Jul 19
Opener in Mexico City to the MetLife final
The 2026 World Cup is the first 48-team edition, which stretches the calendar to 104 matches over roughly six weeks across three host nations. The schedule opens with the group stage on June 11 in Mexico City and runs through to the final on July 19 at MetLife Stadium. This timeline lays out every fixture in order so you can see exactly when each group plays, when the knockouts begin, and where the rest days fall.
With 16 host cities spread across the USA, Canada and Mexico, kickoff times span several time zones — from Pacific in Vancouver and Los Angeles to Eastern in New York/New Jersey, Toronto and Miami. The schedule shows each match in your local time so you never miss a window, and clusters early-tournament fixtures so you can build a watch plan around the matches that matter to you.
After the group stage, 32 teams advance into a brand-new Round of 32, followed by the Round of 16, quarter-finals, semi-finals, the third-place match on July 18 and the final on July 19. Each fixture carries a KickOracle model win probability built from team strength, squad chemistry, travel, rest and venue climate, so the calendar doubles as a forecast of how the bracket is likely to unfold.
The 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off on June 11, 2026 with the opening match in Mexico City, and the group stage runs to roughly June 27.
There are 104 matches in total — 72 in the expanded 48-team group stage plus 32 across the Round of 32, Round of 16, quarter-finals, semi-finals, third-place match and final.
The final is on July 19, 2026 at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, preceded by the third-place match on July 18.
The tournament is played across 16 host cities in the USA, Canada and Mexico, which is why kickoff times span multiple time zones.
Yes. The schedule converts every fixture to your local time zone so you can plan exactly when each group-stage and knockout match starts.
Scout Pass layers real-time model updates over the full calendar so every fixture re-prices as squads, results and knockout paths change through the tournament.