Hosts for 2030 & 2034 men's World Cups confirmed by FIFA
- FIFA president Gianni Infantino made the announcement at Wednesday's Congress
- Six countries from three continents will host the tournament in 2030
- Saudi Arabia were the only bidding nation for the 2034 World Cup
FIFA president Gianni Infantino confirmed the host nations for the upcoming men's World Cups at Wednesday's extraordinary congress, with the 2030 tournament split across six countries and three continents and 2034 controversially going to Saudi Arabia.
The announcement on Wednesday was effectively a formality, but confirmed that all 211 FIFA nations voted.
The unique scheduling for the tournament in 2030 has been public knowledge for more than a year. Morocco, Spain and Portugal will be the main staging posts for the festival of football, while the opening trio of matches will be split across the three South American nations Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay to celebrate the World Cup's 100th anniversary.
Saudi Arabia were the only official bidders for the 2034 World Cup. FIFA regulations prohibit a confederation from hosting any of the following two World Cups after staging the global competition. The tournament in 2026 will be hosted by CONCACAF nations USA, Mexico and Canada, while CAF, UEFA and CONMEBOL play some role in the 2030 edition. That left only countries from Asia or Oceania as applicable hosts for 2034.
Australia briefly entertained the idea of putting in an official bid, having successfully hosted the 2023 women's World Cup alongside New Zealand. However, FIFA only afforded interested parties 25 days to submit their bid for the 2034 competition after unexpectedly opening the process on 6 October 2023.
The Socceroos contingent ultimately didn't have time to assemble a full report and pulled out of the process last year, leaving Saudi Arabia as the sole candidates.
Norwegian Football Federation president Lisa Klaveness has been a vocal critic of the process behind Saudi Arabia's bid and the FA had a letter read out at the extraordinary committee "raising concerns about the bidding process".
A joint statement from 11 organisations, including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, labelled the report into Saudi Arabia's treatment of migrant workers as a "whitewash [of] the reality of abuse and discrimination faced by Saudi Arabia's citizens and residents".
Despite the widespread concerns, the Saudi Arabian bid was awarded a record-high mark of 419.8 out of 500 after an assessment from FIFA. While not confirmed, it is likely that a Saudi Arabian World Cup will take place in January 2034.
Where is the 2026 World Cup?
Before the focus fully shifts to the rapidly approaching 2030s, there is the small matter of the 2026 World Cup. The competition, which is split between the USA, Mexico and Canada, will be the first to have as many as 48 nations competing with 104 matches - or as Infantino called it, "104 Super Bowls".
FIFA had originally envisaged a group stage with 16 groups of three nations. However, the success of the 2022 Qatar World Cup persuaded the powers that be to retain four-team groups, with 12 operating simultaneously over the summer of 2026.
World Cup venues - Canada
- BC Place (Vancouver, 54,500 capacity)
- BMO Field (Toronto, 45,500 capacity)
World Cup venues - Mexico
- Estadio Azteca (Mexico City, 87,523 capacity)
- Estadio BBVA (Monterrey, 53,460 capacity)
- Estadio Akron (Guadalajara, 48,071 capacity)
World Cup venues - United States of America
- AT&T Stadium (Dallas, 92,967 capacity)
- MetLife Stadium (New York/New Jersey, 87,157 capacity)
- Arrowhead Stadium (Kansas, 76,640 capacity)
- Mercedez-Benz Stadium (Atlanta, 75,000 capacity)
- NRG Stadium (Houston, 72,220 capacity)
- Levi's Stadium (San Francisco, 70,909 capacity)
- SoFi Stadium (Los Angeles, 70,240 capacity)
- Gillette Stadium (Boston, 70,000 capacity)
- Lincoln Financial Field (Philadelphia, 69,328 capacity)
- Lumen Field (Seattle, 69,000 capacity)
- Hard Rock Stadium (Miami, 67,518 capacity)