Travel tips for the 2026 World Cup
A continent-wide tournament rewards planning. These are the practical lessons — borders, transit, money and safety — that turn a stressful summer trip into a smooth one.
The 2026 World Cup is unusually spread out, so the single most useful habit is to think in regions, not in individual matches. Decide which cluster of cities you'll visit, then build everything — flights, accommodation, ground transport — around that decision. Fans following Portugal or Switzerland through a single group will rarely need to cross the continent; those chasing the knockout stages should keep their plans flexible.
Golden rule: book refundable where you can. Knockout venues are only confirmed once group results are in, and a flexible booking is worth its small premium.
Crossing between Canada, the USA and Mexico
Entry requirements first
Each host country sets its own rules. Check whether you need a visa or an electronic travel authorisation for every country on your itinerary, not just your first stop. Visitors arriving in Canada from many countries need an eTA, while the US and Mexico maintain separate systems. Sort this months ahead — peak-season processing is slow.
- Passports valid well beyond your travel dates
- Separate authorisations per host country
- Printed and digital copies of every booking
The land borders are real borders
It is tempting to picture a quick hop from Toronto to a US venue, but international crossings mean full customs and immigration checks, even by air. Allow generous connection times, expect queues on matchdays and never assume a same-day double-header across the border is realistic. When in doubt, stay one country at a time.
Keep match tickets and accommodation proof handy at the border — they help explain your trip quickly.
Transit, matchday and getting around
Use public transit
Toronto's streetcars and subway and Vancouver's SkyTrain reach the stadiums directly. Driving on matchday means traffic and scarce, costly parking.
Arrive early
Security screening at modern stadiums is thorough. Aim to be at the gates ninety minutes before kick-off, especially for high-demand fixtures.
Go cashless
Most venues and transit systems are card- or phone-first. A travel card with no foreign-transaction fee saves money across all three countries.
Budgeting for peak season
June and July are the most expensive weeks of the year to travel in North America, and a global tournament only sharpens that. A few habits keep costs under control without ruining the experience.
| Cost | Smart move | Why it works |
|---|---|---|
| Flights | Book early, fly midweek | Weekend matchday demand pushes fares up sharply |
| Stays | Pick transit-linked areas | Saves on daily travel and late-night taxis |
| Food | Eat in fan neighbourhoods | Better value and far better atmosphere than the stadium |
| Tickets | Use official channels only | Resale outside official platforms risks invalid entry |
Watch the resale trap: the surest way to lose money — and your seat — is buying from an unofficial reseller. If a deal looks too good, it usually is.
Atmosphere, safety and the neutral fan
Part of the joy of a World Cup is watching a match you have no stake in. Toronto and Vancouver both plan official fan festivals, and the city's diaspora communities create unofficial ones — expect Croatia's checkerboard, Mexico's green or Argentina's sky-blue to take over a square whenever those teams play.
Keep it simple and safe: stay hydrated in the June heat, mind your belongings in dense crowds, agree a meeting point with your group in case phones die, and respect that rival supporters share the same streets. The atmosphere is overwhelmingly friendly, and a little courtesy keeps it that way.