
The 2026 FIFA World Cup may be spread across the United States, Canada, and Mexico, but the opening ceremony will not be held in the U.S.
That decision has already raised questions because the United States will host the majority of the tournament, including the final and most of the knockout-stage matches.
But FIFA’s schedule was designed to give each host nation a major spotlight moment. For Mexico, that moment comes right at the beginning, and it also carries major historical weight.
According to Bolavip’s report, Mexico was chosen to stage the inaugural match instead of the United States or Canada.
The opening ceremony is expected to take place before the first match at Estadio Azteca in Mexico City on June 11, 2026, when Mexico faces South Africa.
The decision is partly about balance. The United States will host 78 of the tournament’s 104 matches, including the final in New York/New Jersey, so giving Mexico the opener ensured another host nation received one of the event’s biggest marquee moments.
It also reflects Mexico’s World Cup history. Estadio Azteca hosted matches in 1970 and 1986, and in 2026, it will become the first stadium to host three World Cup opening matches.
The venue is central to why FIFA placed the opener in Mexico City.
Estadio Azteca is one of football’s most iconic stadiums, having hosted the 1970 and 1986 World Cup finals, including Pele’s triumph with Brazil and Diego Maradona’s famous 1986 tournament.
By hosting the 2026 opener, the stadium adds another historic milestone to its legacy, becoming the first venue ever to stage three World Cup opening games.
The U.S. and Canada will still get their own home openers the next day, with Canada playing in Toronto and the United States playing in Los Angeles.
But the official curtain-raiser belongs to Mexico. That makes the decision less about the U.S. being overlooked and more about FIFA spreading the biggest moments across the three host nations.
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