Written By: S Kumar
FIFA World Cup 2026: The FIFA World Cup 2026 is now the biggest version of football’s top event ever. This has around 48 teams showing up for the first time in history. It is hosted together by the United States, Canada, and Mexico, and the whole thing runs for a bit more than a month, with 104 matches spread over 16 cities. People around the world keep a close eye on it. Here are key tournament dates, what the schedule looks like, and where you can watch it live!
The FIFA World Cup 2026 kicked off on June 11 2026, and it ends with the final on July 19 2026. In total it lasts 39 days, which makes it the longest World Cup FIFA has ever staged and also tied to the highest match count.
This tournament is spread across three countries, which is kind of a big deal
It is the first time FIFA has let three nations co-host the World Cup, plus there are 16 host cities across North America. The opening game was at Estadio Azteca in Mexico City, and the final will take place at MetLife Stadium, also listed as the New York/New Jersey Stadium.
The 2026 edition brings in a handful of historic shifts, and they are noticeable right away
– More teams than before, moving up from 32 to 48
– 12 groups, each group has 4 teams
– The top two sides in every group move on automatically
– Eight more teams, specifically the best third-placed squads, also advance
– There is a fresh Round of 32
– Match totals jump from 64 to 104
The broader setup gives more nations, more chances, to take part in football’s biggest platform, and to chase the same goal everyone wants
Football fans in India are able to catch the FIFA World Cup on both TV and digital. It’s sort of spread across different services, depending on what you prefer. Also some matches show up in more than one place.
TV Broadcast
Live Streaming
In the United States, fans can follow the tournament live on these outlets:
Together they’re offering full, broad coverage across the competition, from start to finish, basically.
For UK viewers, selected matches are available live on:
If you want streaming, that’s provided on their respective digital platforms, so you can switch modes whenever.
The schedule looks like this, more or less:
The tournament has moved into the knockout rounds now, so the teams still in it are all fighting for that semi-finals spot. The quarter-finals are loaded too, with major showdowns where each side is trying hard to secure a place in the last four.
The 2026 World Cup is hitting a bunch of milestones, sort of like 48 teams showing up, and it’s kind of a big deal:
With this bigger layout, organisers expect huge television audiences and strong fan attendance everywhere, like, really everywhere.
Since the games are happening across North American time zones, the kickoff times can look wildly different for people watching internationally.
If you’re in India, lots of matches run late-night or early-morning. Meanwhile, viewers in Europe will mostly be seeing evening fixtures. It’s smart to check the local match schedule each time before you assume the timing.
The FIFA World Cup 2026 is basically redrawing the map with its expanded 48-team format, the three-country hosting setup, and that record-breaking 104-match run. As the competition moves into the later stages, football fans around the world should be able to follow every bit of action via dedicated TV broadcasters and streaming platforms. Whether you’re tuning in from India, the United States, the United Kingdom, or somewhere else entirely, this is still the world’s biggest football tournament, and it’s set up for weeks of moments you probably won’t forget.