
🇺🇸 USA WORLD CUP STADIUMS
11 venues across 10 cities — from MetLife Stadium in New York to Levi's Stadium in San Francisco. The USA hosts more matches than any other nation in 2026.
US Venue Capacities
| Stadium | City | Capacity | Matches | Key Round |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MetLife Stadium | East Rutherford, NJ | 82,500 | 8 | FINAL |
| Rose Bowl | Pasadena, CA | 90,888 | 5 | Semi-Final |
| AT&T Stadium | Arlington, TX | 80,000 | 7 | Semi-Final |
| Arrowhead Stadium | Kansas City, MO | 76,416 | 4 | Group + R32 |
| Mercedes-Benz Stadium | Atlanta, GA | 71,000 | 5 | Group + R32 |
| SoFi Stadium | Inglewood, CA | 70,240 | 6 | Group + QF |
| NRG Stadium | Houston, TX | 70,000 | 5 | Group + R32 |
| Lincoln Financial Field | Philadelphia, PA | 69,176 | 5 | Group + R32 |
| Levi's Stadium | Santa Clara, CA | 68,500 | 5 | Group + R32 |
| Lumen Field | Seattle, WA | 67,000 | 5 | Group + R32 |
| Gillette Stadium | Foxborough, MA | 65,878 | 5 | Group + R32 |
| Hard Rock Stadium | Miami, FL | 65,326 | 5 | Group + 3rd Place |











Guide to all 11 USA World Cup 2026 stadiums
The United States hosts the largest share of FIFA World Cup 2026 matches — 78 out of 104 — spread across 11 stadiums in 10 cities. This reflects the country's dominant stadium infrastructure, with every venue exceeding 65,000 seats and several surpassing 80,000. The US last hosted the World Cup in 1994, when it set an all-time attendance record of 3.587 million across 52 matches.
The Final: MetLife Stadium, New Jersey
MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, will host the World Cup Final on July 19, 2026. The stadium opened in 2010 at a cost of $1.6 billion and is the home of the New York Giants and New York Jets in the NFL. It sits across the Hudson River from Manhattan, accessible by New Jersey Transit rail from Penn Station. Flying into Newark Liberty International Airport offers the shortest route — a 15-minute drive or short train connection.
Semi-Finals: Dallas and Los Angeles
AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas — 20 minutes from downtown Dallas — will host one Semi-Final. Known as "Jerry World" for Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, it cost $1.3 billion and holds 80,000 in its World Cup configuration. Rose Bowl Stadium in Pasadena, California will host the other Semi-Final. Built in 1922 and seating 90,888, the Rose Bowl is the largest stadium in the World Cup and previously hosted the 1994 World Cup Final — one of the most-attended championship matches in football history.
West Coast venues
SoFi Stadium in Inglewood opened in 2020 as the most expensive stadium ever built ($5.5 billion) and is the home of the LA Rams and Chargers. Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara serves the San Francisco Bay Area and is the nearest US venue to Vancouver — approximately 1,100 km by air. Lumen Field in Seattle is the closest US venue to BC Place, Vancouver (less than 250 km). Canadian fans driving south on I-5 can reach Lumen Field in under 3 hours from the border. See our World Cup 2026 USA stadiums guide.