FIFA World Cup 2026 Kicks Off in Three Weeks — But the International Tourism Surge Is More Complicated Than Expected
Opens June 8
48 nations, 16 host cities across the US, Canada, and Mexico — the largest World Cup in history
Bookings down 14%
Transatlantic summer bookings are 14% below 2025 levels despite World Cup expectations
$5B+ projected
Direct tourism spending projected across host cities — but international visitor shortfall is shrinking that estimate
The 2026 FIFA World Cup — the largest in the tournament's history, with 48 participating nations and matches spread across 16 host cities in the United States, Canada, and Mexico — opens on 8 June 2026, just three weeks away.12 Projections anticipated a historic tourism boom for the three host nations, with estimates of six to seven million ticket-buyers and up to 1.24 million additional international visitors to the United States alone.34 The economic impact was projected at upwards of $5 billion in direct tourism spending across the host cities combined.5
The reality emerging in the final weeks before the opening whistle is more complicated. International visitor numbers to the United States dropped 5.2% in early 2026 compared to the previous year, and transatlantic flight bookings for summer 2026 are running approximately 14% below 2025 levels — a significant shortfall given the World Cup was expected to drive a surge in exactly this category.78 Approximately 80% of hotels in World Cup host cities have reported that current reservations are underperforming against the early expectations tied to the event.8
Why the expected surge has stalled
Travel analysts point to several factors compressing the expected World Cup tourism wave. Rising airfare costs — driven by sustained jet fuel prices and strong baseline demand — have made the journey to North America significantly more expensive for European and South American fans than projections from two years ago assumed.68 Match ticket prices have also been high by historical World Cup standards, and the combination of expensive tickets and expensive flights has pushed many fans who might have attended previous tournaments to watch from home instead.7
Visa processing has been another significant friction point. The United States holds a commanding advantage in air connectivity, with direct flights available from 40 of the 48 participating nations, but the visa application process for many of those nations remains slow and uncertain — a concern flagged by travel industry bodies as likely to suppress international attendance from markets including Brazil, Mexico (for US games specifically), and parts of Africa and Asia.49 Geopolitical tensions affecting travel confidence have also played a role, with Marketplace reporting concerns from the travel industry about whether US authorities would allow sufficient volumes of international visitors through entry points in time for matches.9
Where the demand is strong
The picture is not uniformly soft. Domestic US demand for World Cup travel has been robust, with American Airlines specifically positioning its record 75-million-passenger summer in the context of World Cup demand fuelling domestic routes between US host cities.12 United Airlines is operating a dedicated daily service to Guadalajara, Mexico, between 8 and 27 June to serve fans travelling between US host cities and the Mexican matches.10 Host cities — Dallas, New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Boston, Seattle, San Francisco, Kansas City, Houston, and Philadelphia among others — are all reporting strong hotel occupancy for match weekends from domestic visitors, even where international bookings have lagged.67
Economic projections revised
The $5 billion direct spending projection is being revised downward by some analysts in light of the international booking data, though the event will still represent a significant economic catalyst for host cities regardless of whether international attendance meets early forecasts.58 Of the $4.3 billion impact originally projected for the US, more than 80% was expected to flow to the accommodation sector — and with domestic demand healthy, hotels in host cities are likely to achieve high occupancy, even if the international fan mix is lower than projected.53
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