The 2026 World Cup, to be co-hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico, is being described by senior FIFA officials as the “craziest” in history. But beneath the fanfare, the tournament’s unprecedented economic scale is raising concerns about long-term financial stability for international football.
The expanded format of 48 teams, up from 32, means more matches, more venues, and more strain on host nations. Total projected costs exceed $40 billion, dwarfing previous tournaments. This spending is concentrated in infrastructure, security, and broadcasting rights, with the United States alone committing $30 billion.
FIFA’s revenue forecast for 2026 stands at $11 billion, a 50% increase from 2022. Broadcasting deals in North America have been sold for record sums: Fox Sports and Telemundo jointly paid $2.6 billion for US rights, while the BBC and ITV secured UK coverage for £400 million. Sponsorship packages are similarly inflated.
Yet the burden on host cities is uneven. Vancouver and Toronto are each spending over $1 billion on stadium upgrades and transit links. Los Angeles and New York are underwriting costs that may not be recouped. The risk of overruns is high: Mexico City’s Azteca Stadium renovations are already 30% over budget.
Smaller football federations fear being priced out. Associations from Africa and Asia worry that the rising commercial stakes will concentrate power and wealth among European and North American clubs and leagues. The World Cup’s expansion, intended to give more nations a platform, may instead widen the gap between the football elite and the rest.
Further instability stems from the player welfare crisis. The congested calendar, with the 2025 Club World Cup and 2026 World Cup back to back, has led to threats of strike action by players’ unions. Injuries are predicted to rise, and insurance premiums for national associations are soaring.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino has defended the expansion as a driver of growth. But critics point to the 2022 Qatar World Cup, whose economic benefits for the region remain disputed. The legacy of 2026, they argue, could be unsustainable debt for host cities and a sport increasingly detached from its grassroots.
The global football economy is at a crossroads. The 2026 World Cup offers unprecedented revenue, but at the risk of systemic fragility. How FIFA and the host nations manage these pressures will define the sport’s trajectory for decades.









