FIFA World Cup 26™ — Toronto
Canada's first-ever men's World Cup match on home soil — and five more fixtures at Toronto Stadium across the next three weeks.
Built for: Soccer fans from around the world converging on Toronto to witness Canada's first-ever men's FIFA World Cup match on home soil and five further tournament fixtures.
The week, distilled
Toronto hosts Canada's first-ever men's World Cup match on home soil — Canada vs Bosnia & Herzegovina, June 12 at 15:00 ET — plus five more fixtures at Toronto Stadium (BMO Field) through July 2, closing with the city's only Round of 32 knockout.
You're in Toronto because Canada is playing a men's World Cup match on home soil for the first time. The crowd splits roughly in two — locals in red jerseys, and international travelers chasing the tournament between U.S. and Canadian hosts — with smaller diaspora pockets around each fixture (the Ghana supporters on June 17, the Croatia veterans on June 23, the Senegalese and Iraqi fans the afternoon of June 26). Toronto is a relaxed city by default, and the tournament doesn't break that; between match days the streets feel like a slightly louder version of a good summer.
What most ticket-holders miss: the FIFA Fan Festival at Fort York / The Bentway is the actual spine of the trip, not a consolation prize. It runs every day from June 11 through July 19, broadcasts every tournament match on supersized screens, and stacks the Toronto match days with Canadian artists — Big Wreck and Choir! Choir! Choir! on the June 12 Canada–Bosnia opener, French Montana the Sunday after, k-os and Aqyila on the Germany–Côte d'Ivoire Saturday, Alessia Cara when Canada plays Switzerland on June 24. GA tickets are already sold out for the headline match days but the venue sits a 10-minute walk from BMO Field, so even premium-ticket holders use it as a pre-match staging ground. Skip it once and you'll regret it; commit to it as part of your stadium days and the trip doubles in shape.
The shape of the run: weekday evenings at Toronto Stadium are the meat — Ghana vs Panama under the lights June 17, Croatia vs Panama June 23, both 19:00 ET kickoffs. The afternoon games — Canada vs Bosnia on June 12 at 15:00 ET, Senegal vs Iraq on June 26 also at 15:00 ET — are the family-friendly slots and the ones that pair best with a Fort York morning. Saturday June 20 is the marquee: Germany vs Côte d'Ivoire at 16:00 ET, the biggest international name on the city's card, and the day the whole city dials up. Then the group stage closes, Toronto goes quiet for four days while the rest of the tournament plays elsewhere, and the city tilts back in on July 2 at 19:00 ET for the Round of 32 — Toronto's only knockout fixture and the closer.
A practical note on the trip itself. The Exhibition Place corridor around Toronto Stadium wasn't built for FIFA-level crowds, but the transit story is solved: GO Train from Union Station to Exhibition GO in six minutes, every 10–15 minutes on match days, last westbound at 12:55 a.m. Hotel pricing isn't solved — match-night rates are punishing if you wait — so the move is to book the Fairmont Royal York across from Union Station for the train-to-stadium combination, or Hotel X if you want to walk to the gates and don't blink at the rate. After a night kickoff, walk back through Liberty Village rather than queue at Exhibition Loop — same trip home, with a King West patio on the way.
Day by day
Tournament eve — the city opens its doors a day before Toronto's first match, and the Fan Festival's Mexico–South Africa opener is the soft launch.
- FIFA Fan Festival opens at Fort York — Mexico vs South Africa (Walk off the Earth, AHI, Skratch Bastid)
- GE Appliances Canada Soccer House opens at Harbourfront Centre
- RendezViews Watch Party — Mexico vs South Africa (3 PM, 19+)
- RendezViews Watch Party — South Korea vs Czechia (10 PM, 19+)
- Game On East End opens in Riverside/Leslieville
The historic day — Canada plays the first men's World Cup match ever on Canadian soil, and Toronto turns into a single-issue city for the afternoon.
- MATCH: Canada vs Bosnia & Herzegovina, 15:00 ET at Toronto Stadium
- FIFA Fan Festival — Toronto Match Day (Big Wreck, Choir! Choir! Choir!)
- RendezViews Watch Party — Canada vs Bosnia & Herzegovina (3 PM, 19+)
- Canada Soccer House active at Harbourfront
First non-Toronto match day — the city exhales into festival mode while watching elsewhere.
- FIFA Fan Festival — The Strumbellas, Anna Sofia, Springcreek Dancers
- Bloor-Yorkville BIA Soccer Fest opens
Sunday watch-party day — French Montana headlines the Fan Festival; the rest of the city scatters into neighborhood bars and BIA fests.
- FIFA Fan Festival — French Montana, Murda Beatz, Nagata Shachu
- Bloor-Yorkville BIA Soccer Fest (Day 2)
- Bata Shoe Museum — Soccer Sundays opens
Toronto match day #2 — Ghana vs Panama under the lights, and SXSE opens at Nathan Phillips Square as the downtown alternative to Fort York.
- MATCH: Ghana vs Panama, 19:00 ET at Toronto Stadium
- FIFA Fan Festival — Toronto Match Day (Ruby Waters, Esie Mensah & The Black Stars Collective)
- SXSE International Festival opens — Nathan Phillips Square (Day 1)
Canada's second group-stage match (in another host city) — Toronto watches from Fort York and Canada Soccer House.
- FIFA Fan Festival — Canada vs Qatar viewing (Dwayne Gretzky, The Brokes, HanBeat Nanta)
- SXSE Festival Day 2 — Nathan Phillips Square
- Canada Soccer House active
USA–Australia day — the closest North American rival is on, and the Fan Festival programs accordingly.
- FIFA Fan Festival — USA vs Australia viewing (Dwayne Gretzky, SuperDogs)
- SXSE Festival Day 3 — Nathan Phillips Square
Marquee Saturday — Germany vs Côte d'Ivoire is the biggest international name on Toronto's card, and the whole city dials up.
- MATCH: Germany vs Côte d'Ivoire, 16:00 ET at Toronto Stadium
- FIFA Fan Festival — Toronto Match Day (k-os, Aqyila)
- SXSE Festival Day 4 — Nathan Phillips Square
- Bloor-Yorkville BIA Soccer Fest
- La Fútbol Party — Soccer Multicultural Latin Fair, Artscape Wychwood Barns (5 PM)
Decompression Sunday — Indigenous and multicultural programming dominate the lineup, no Toronto match.
- FIFA Fan Festival — Allied Nations, Classic Roots, Nimkii, The Sky Dancers (10:30 AM start)
- Entrepreneur's Fiesta — Soccer Multicultural Latin Fair, Mel Lastman Square
Toronto match day #4 — Croatia vs Panama, an evening kickoff with a heavyweight European side.
- MATCH: Croatia vs Panama, 19:00 ET at Toronto Stadium
- FIFA Fan Festival — Toronto Match Day (Jully Black, Shawn Desman)
Canada's group-stage finale (in another host city) — Alessia Cara headlines the Fort York viewing.
- FIFA Fan Festival — Switzerland vs Canada viewing (Alessia Cara, Snotty Nose Rez Kids, SHOUT! the band)
- Canada Soccer House active
Toronto match day #5 — Senegal vs Iraq closes out the city's group-stage slate.
- MATCH: Senegal vs Iraq, 15:00 ET at Toronto Stadium
- FIFA Fan Festival — Toronto Match Day (Kiesza, Ikky)
Double-header watch-party Saturday — Panama–England and Colombia–Portugal both screen at Fort York.
- FIFA Fan Festival — Panama vs England, Colombia vs Portugal viewings (Rêve)
- Bloor-Yorkville BIA Soccer Fest
The closer — Toronto's only knockout fixture, and the last night the city is at full tournament tilt.
- MATCH: Round of 32 — Match 83 (Groups K & L winners), 19:00 ET at Toronto Stadium
- FIFA Fan Festival — Toronto Match Day (Deborah Cox, TOBi)
- Canada Soccer House final day
46 events · Mon–Thu
Every event captured from the official MAU Vegas Luma calendar. RSVPs route to luma.com or the sponsor's site.
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto (June 13): The Strumbellas, Anna Sofia, Springcreek Dancers ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto (June 14): French Montana, Murda Beatz, Nagata Shachu ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto (June 18): Canada vs Qatar w/ Dwayne Gretzky, The Brokes, HanBeat Nanta ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto (June 19): USA vs Australia w/ Dwayne Gretzky, SuperDogs ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto — Toronto Match Day (June 20): Germany vs Côte d'Ivoire w/ k-os, Aqyila ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto (June 21): Allied Nations, Classic Roots, Nimkii, The Sky Dancers ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto — Toronto Match Day (June 26): Senegal vs Iraq w/ Kiesza, Ikky ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto (June 27): Panama vs England, Colombia vs Portugal w/ Rêve ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto — Toronto Match Day (July 2): Round of 32 w/ Deborah Cox, TOBi ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto (July 3): Round of 32 w/ Bedouin Soundclash, Tyler Shaw ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto (July 4): Round of 16 ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto (July 5): Round of 16 w/ MICO ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto (July 11): Quarter-finals ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto (July 14): Semi-final w/ Sam Roberts Band ↗
FIFA Fan Festival Toronto (July 15): Semi-final ↗
GE Appliances Canada Soccer House Toronto — Official Canada Soccer fan home (June 11 – July 2, select dates) ↗
Bloor-Yorkville BIA Soccer Fest (June 13) ↗
Bloor-Yorkville BIA Soccer Fest (June 14) ↗
Bloor-Yorkville BIA Soccer Fest (June 20) ↗
Bloor-Yorkville BIA Soccer Fest (June 27) ↗
Game On East End — Riverside & Leslieville BIA festival (June 11 – July 19) ↗
La Fútbol Party — Soccer Multicultural Latin Fair (June 20) at Artscape Wychwood Barns ↗
Entrepreneur's Fiesta — Soccer Multicultural Latin Fair (June 21) at Mel Lastman Square ↗
Mississauga Celebration Square — FIFA World Cup 2026 Screenings (June 11 – July 19) ↗
FIFA World Cup Original Trophy Tour — Toronto City Hall (May 25) ↗
FIFA World Cup Original Trophy Tour — Toronto City Hall (May 26) ↗
AGO Maker Night — Soccer Life Drawing (June 10) ↗
Bata Shoe Museum — Soccer Sundays (June 14 – July 19) ↗
One Love Food & Arts Market at Canoe Landing Park (June 6 – Aug 22) ↗
Tasty Tours — Soccer & Spice Food Tour, Kensington Market (June 6 – July 19) ↗
Culinary Adventure Co. — Food Halls + Football Food Tour (from June 11) ↗
The Theatre Centre — Community BBQ & Hangout (July 17) ↗
Destination Toronto — The World in a City: Global Passport (until July 19) ↗
Sponsor + community hosts with multi-event presence
Hotels, tiered by walk to the venue

Hotel X Toronto
Near stadiumThe only hotel actually inside Exhibition Place, roughly 650 m (about a 10-minute walk) to BMO Field — you can leave your room 90 minutes before kickoff and still clear bag check. Matchday rates are punishing (reports of C$1,045–C$1,275/night) and the 9-storey rooftop pool deck books out fast.

Fairmont Royal York
Fan-districtDirectly across from Union Station, which means a 5-minute walk to the GO Train and a 6-minute ride to Exhibition GO — fastest reliable door-to-stadium combination in the city. Sits in the middle of the post-match bar circuit on Front and King.

Hyatt Regency Toronto
Fan-districtOn King Street West in the Entertainment District — a 30-minute walk to BMO Field along the waterfront or a 15-minute streetcar via the 504/509. You're surrounded by the city's busiest patio strip, so expect crowd noise on Argentina/Brazil matchdays.

The Ritz-Carlton, Toronto
Splurge181 Wellington West, a short walk from Union Station and the GO Train. The TOCA Bar pours pre-match espresso for fans who want a quiet morning before braving the streetcar surge — pricing reflects the address.

The Westin Harbour Castle
Quiet escapeWaterfront tower at Queens Quay — the 509 streetcar runs along the lake and drops you steps from BMO Field in about 15 minutes. Quieter at night than the King Street strip; lake-view rooms are worth the upcharge over harbour-side.

Gladstone House
Quiet escape55-room boutique in an 1889 Victorian on Queen West, about a 20-minute walk north of BMO Field and well clear of the matchday crush. The Melody Bar is a Toronto institution for low-key post-game drinks rather than rowdy fan singing.

Liberty Village hotels
Near stadiumLiberty Village sits immediately north of the rail corridor from Exhibition Place — a 15-minute walk to BMO Field via the King West pedestrian bridge. Boutique stays here run notably less than Hotel X but disappear from booking sites first; lock in early.
Hot venues this week
Pre- and post-conference escapes

Toronto Islands (Centre / Ward's)
15-minute ferry from Jack Layton Terminal at the foot of Bay Street; full summer service resumes mid-May and runs until late evening. Adult ferry $9.57, bikes welcome, cars not. Go before 10 a.m. on matchdays to skip the return-line crush.

Niagara Falls
Roughly 90 minutes from downtown by car or via GO Train + WEGO bus; Hornblower (Niagara City Cruise) runs through November and is the version you actually want over the U.S. Maid of the Mist. Nightly illumination plus 10 p.m. fireworks May 15–Oct 12, free to watch.

Niagara-on-the-Lake wine country
About a 90-minute drive around Lake Ontario; pair Jackson-Triggs or Peller Estates with lunch on Queen Street. Tasting fees $15–25 CAD per flight; full-day guided wine tours from Toronto run roughly C$129–200 with transport and lunch included.

Muskoka cottage country
About a 2-hour drive north on Highway 400. The RMS Segwun out of Muskoka Wharf is a 1925 steamship still running pleasure cruises on Lake Muskoka; pair with a swim at one of the 1,600 lakes. Doable in a day but expect Friday afternoon traffic.

Distillery Historic District
Toronto's only pedestrian-only neighbourhood — 40+ shops, Mill Street Brew Pub, Soulpepper Theatre, and IZUMI sake brewery across the old Gooderham & Worts buildings. Free to wander; plan 3–4 hours. Easy 20-minute streetcar from downtown.

CN Tower + Ripley's Aquarium
Both share a base block 20 minutes from BMO Field. The 'Sea the Sky' combo pass undercuts paying separately; book the CN Tower for a sunset slot rather than midday queue. EdgeWalk runs roughly C$225 and books out two weeks ahead in summer.

St. Lawrence Market food crawl
Once named the world's best food market by National Geographic; the peameal bacon sandwich at Carousel is the canonical order, $9 cash-friendly. Closed Sundays and Mondays — plan Saturday morning, then walk 25 minutes west along King for pre-match patios.

Stratford Festival
About 2 hours west by car or VIA Rail; the festival runs May through October across four theatres. Pair a matinee with dinner on Ontario Street — a genuine reset day from the World Cup crowds.

Evergreen Brick Works + Kensington Market
Evergreen Brick Works is a converted brick factory in the ravine system — Saturday farmers' market plus easy hiking. End the day on College and Augusta in Kensington for tacos at Seven Lives and a beer at Cold Tea (entrance is unmarked, behind the mall food court).
Survival tips
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Questions visitors ask
When is it, and where do I get tickets?
Toronto's six matches run June 12 through July 2, 2026 at Toronto Stadium (BMO Field), with the FIFA Fan Festival at Fort York / The Bentway open daily June 11 through July 19. Tickets are sold via FIFA at fifa.com/en/tournaments/mens/worldcup/canadamexicousa2026/tickets; everything is digital through the FIFA app, so download it before you fly and pre-load to Apple/Google Wallet — cell coverage along Princes' Boulevard collapses around kickoff, and the name on the ticket has to match the ID at the gate.
How early should I arrive at Toronto Stadium?
Plan to clear the perimeter 90–120 minutes pre-kickoff. Gates open two hours before, but FIFA-level security regularly runs 45+ minutes, and Princes' Boulevard chokes as you approach the stadium. Bag policy is strict: clear bags only at 12"x6"x12" max, or a non-clear clutch under 6.5"x4.5" — and BMO Field has no bag check or storage, so don't show up with a backpack you brought from the airport. Stasher locations near Union Station will hold a bag for a few dollars if you're traveling in that day.
Where should I stay?
Two genuinely good options, depending on what you want. Hotel X is the only hotel actually inside Exhibition Place — about a 10-minute walk to the gates — but match-night rates are punishing and the rooftop pool deck books out months ahead. The smarter play for most people is the Fairmont Royal York across from Union Station: the GO Train puts you at Exhibition in six minutes, you stay in the city's real fan-bar district along Front and King, and you don't pay a stadium-adjacent premium. Liberty Village boutique hotels are the budget version of the walkable option and disappear from booking sites first — book by early March or pay the surge.
What about the weather?
Toronto in June runs 20–24°C (68–75°F) daytime, dropping to 13–17°C (55–62°F) after sunset, with 3–8 rainy days expected across the month and lake-effect wind whipping over BMO Field. Pack a light shell. An afternoon forecast won't tell you much about an evening kickoff — the lake decides the wind.
Where do I watch if I don't have a ticket?
The FIFA Fan Festival at Fort York / The Bentway is the official answer — every tournament match on the big screens, Canadian artists programmed around the Toronto fixtures, and a 10-minute walk to the stadium if you want to be near the action (GA is sold out for headline days, premium remains). Beyond that: RendezViews on Queen West runs a curated open-air series with per-match tickets (19+); Real Sports Bar in South Core has a 39-foot indoor super-screen and 200+ TVs but lines form hours before a Canada match; Café Diplomatico in Little Italy is the institutional patio for any European fixture (get there 90+ minutes early); Galo Toronto in Little Portugal is the room you want for Brazil or Portugal; Chili Con Chile in Kensington is best for a CONMEBOL or CONCACAF side. If you're staying east, Rivals on the Danforth saves you the commute.
Fan zone vs stadium — which is better?
Different trips. The stadium is the once-in-a-lifetime moment, especially for the Canada–Bosnia opener on June 12 and Germany–Côte d'Ivoire on June 20 — being inside Toronto Stadium for either is the point. But the Fan Festival has the better all-day rhythm: arrive at lunch, watch the early match outdoors with a beer, eat from one of the international food vendors, see a Canadian band, walk over to the stadium for an evening kickoff. If you're picking one and the ticket isn't Canada–Bosnia or Germany–Côte d'Ivoire, the Fan Festival probably wins.
Transit on match day — what's realistic?
GO Train from Union Station to Exhibition GO is the move — one stop, six minutes, with Metrolinx boosting service to up to 6 trains per hour during match windows, every 10–15 minutes. The 509 Harbourfront streetcar is reliable mid-day but standing-room only 90 minutes before kickoff. Skip Lyft/Uber on match day: surge climbs sharply inside the cordon and drivers can't get within 600 m of the gates, so post-match pickups regularly take 30+ minutes. For egress, the local trick is to walk 15 minutes east to the King/Strachan stop and grab the 504 with seats, or push through Liberty Village to King and Dufferin for a faster rideshare pickup outside the surge zone. Last westbound GO from Exhibition is 12:55 a.m. — miss it on a night kickoff and you're not getting home cheap.
How does this fit into the larger tournament?
Toronto is one of two Canadian host cities, alongside Vancouver, which hosts the other Canadian fixtures. Toronto's slate is all group stage plus a single Round of 32 fixture on July 2; after that, the tournament moves to the U.S. host cities for the deeper knockout rounds, with the final at MetLife Stadium in New York/New Jersey. If you're building a multi-city tournament trip, the natural Toronto add-on is a flight to a U.S. host the week after July 2; chasing Canada specifically through the group stage means a Toronto-then-Vancouver routing, which is fun but a lot of plane time for two Canada matches.