The 2026 World Cup is the first edition with 48 teams and 16 host cities across three countries. For the first time in history, a single trip can take you from a rooftop taqueria in Mexico City to a Dallas Cowboys stadium, a Vancouver pitch on the Pacific, and a New York night out — all within the same World Cup experience. Multi-city trips are more complex to plan, but they are absolutely worth it. This is the complete guide.
Why a Multi-City Trip Is Worth It
A single-city trip gives you depth. A multi-city trip gives you the full World Cup. Here is why fans are choosing to hop:
- More matches: Group stage matches are spread across all 16 cities. If your team plays in different venues, you either travel or miss games.
- Three countries, one tournament: The cultural contrast between Mexico City, Dallas, and Vancouver is extraordinary — and all within the same event.
- Cost arbitrage: Mix expensive US city stays with far cheaper Mexico legs to bring your average daily cost down significantly.
- Flexibility for knock-out rounds: If you plan a circuit, you can position yourself close to wherever your team's knock-out matches end up.
- The experience itself: Attending a World Cup in multiple countries in the same summer is a once-in-a-lifetime story.
Start With the Match Schedule
Everything in a multi-city World Cup trip flows from the match schedule. Before you book anything — flights, hotels, activities — get the full group stage schedule and map out every match involving your team(s).
Key facts about the 2026 schedule structure:
- There are 48 teams in 12 groups of 4, each playing 3 group stage matches
- Group stage matches run from mid-June to early July 2026
- Round of 32 begins early July; knockout rounds follow through the Final on July 19 at MetLife Stadium, New Jersey
- Each team's 3 group games may be in 3 different cities — sometimes different countries
- Matches in the same city are often days apart — plan for 2–3 night stays minimum per city
See the full schedule and city-by-city match calendar on our Host Cities page.
Best City Combinations
Not all multi-city combinations are equally practical. Some cities are close together and easily connected; others require significant travel time. Here are the best pairings based on geography, transport, and experience.
Transport Between US Host Cities
Flights
For most inter-city travel in the US, especially distances over 400 miles, short-haul flights are the fastest option. Southwest, United Express, and Delta Connection operate most of the routes between host cities. Book early — prices on these legs spike during World Cup weeks.
Train (Amtrak)
Amtrak is excellent on the Northeast Corridor (Boston–NYC–Philadelphia) and has solid service on some western routes. It's slow everywhere else in the US. Do not plan train travel between Dallas and Houston (no direct Amtrak), or Texas and the Midwest.
- NY Penn ↔ Philadelphia 30th St: Acela 67 min / Regional 90 min (~$25–$150)
- NY Penn ↔ Boston South Station: Acela 3.5 hrs (~$75–$250)
- Los Angeles ↔ San Francisco: Coast Starlight 12 hrs (scenic but slow — better as an experience than a transfer)
- Seattle ↔ Vancouver: Amtrak Cascades 3.5 hrs (~$35–$80)
Bus (FlixBus, Greyhound, Megabus)
Bus is the cheapest option for shorter US routes. Reliable, comfortable, and bookable same-day.
- Dallas ↔ Houston: 3.5–4 hrs, from $20–40
- Los Angeles ↔ Las Vegas: 4–5 hrs (useful detour)
- Philadelphia ↔ NYC: 2–2.5 hrs, from $15
Crossing Borders: What Fans Need to Know
US ↔ Mexico
Most nationalities entering Mexico on a tourist stay for under 180 days do not need a pre-arranged visa — you receive a tourist entry (Forma Migratoria Múltiple) on arrival. However, requirements vary by nationality.
- US citizens: Valid US passport required. No visa needed for tourist stays.
- EU citizens: No visa required for Mexico. Valid passport required.
- Check your specific nationality with Mexico's consulate — requirements vary for some countries
- When flying into Mexico, complete the immigration form on the plane
- Keep your entry form (FMM) — you will surrender it on departure. Losing it can cause delays at the airport
US ↔ Canada
Canada requires an Electronic Travel Authorization (eTA) for visa-exempt foreign nationals flying into Canada. This is NOT required for US citizens.
- US citizens: Valid US passport required — no eTA needed
- Most EU, UK, Australian citizens: eTA required (apply online at ircc.canada.ca — takes minutes, costs CAD $7, valid 5 years)
- Other nationalities: May require a full Canadian visa — check well in advance
- Land border crossing between Seattle and Vancouver: passport required for all nationalities
Open-Jaw Flight Strategy for Multi-City Trips
The single best flight strategy for multi-city World Cup travel is the open-jaw ticket: fly into one city, fly home from a different one. This saves you the cost and time of backtracking to your entry airport.
Sample Open-Jaw Strategies
| Fly In | Fly Out | Cities Covered | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mexico City (MEX) | Dallas (DFW) | CDMX, GDL, MTY, Dallas | Start in Mexico; end in Texas for knockout rounds |
| New York (JFK) | Miami (MIA) | NYC, Philly, Boston, Miami | Northeast loop south to Miami; train for most legs |
| Vancouver (YVR) | Los Angeles (LAX) | Vancouver, Seattle, LA, SF Bay | Pacific coast south; good Asian/Oceanic entry point |
| Houston (IAH) | New York (EWR) | Houston, Dallas, NYC, Philly | Texas start, end near MetLife for final |
| Mexico City (MEX) | New York (JFK) | Mexico triple + East Coast | Full 2-country circuit; 2–3 weeks ideal |
Sample 12-Day Multi-City Itinerary
Mexico City → Dallas → New York (2 Matches + Atmosphere)
Packing for Multiple Climates
A multi-country trip means packing for genuinely different conditions:
- Mexico City (2,240m): Warm days 20–24°C, cool evenings 12–16°C, afternoon rain showers in June–July
- Guadalajara / Monterrey: Hot and humid June-July, 28–34°C; occasional heavy rain
- Texas (Dallas/Houston): Very hot and humid, 35–40°C; air-conditioned everything indoors
- East Coast US (NYC/Philly/Boston): Hot in July, 28–34°C; occasional storms
- Pacific Northwest (Seattle/Vancouver): Mild, 18–24°C; can be overcast and cool in evenings
Pack layered, versatile clothing. A light rain jacket, one warm layer for Mexico City evenings and Pacific Northwest, and moisture-wicking shirts for Texas heat. See the full packing guide here.
Booking Flexibility: The Multi-City Rule
Multi-city trips require more booking flexibility than single-city trips. If your team advances unexpectedly to a later round in a different city, you need to be able to move. Build flexibility in:
- Choose refundable or changeable hotel rates where the price premium is small
- Book flights on airlines with no change fees (Southwest for US domestic; check international carriers)
- Do not book non-refundable accommodation more than 2 nights before each leg begins
- Avoid selling your hotel slots for later rounds until your team's progress is clear
Multi-City vs Single-City: Budget Comparison
| Factor | Single City (US) | Multi-City (Mexico + US) | Multi-City (3 Countries) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flights | $400 round trip | $600–900 (open jaw + intern.) | $900–1,400 |
| Accommodation | $1,050 (7 nights @ $150) | $800–1,200 (mix of MX + US) | $1,000–1,800 |
| Between-city transport | $0 | $150–350 | $400–700 |
| Daily costs | $150/day (US city) | $90–130/day (mixed) | $90–150/day (mixed) |
| Trip complexity | Low | Medium | High |
| Overall experience | Focused | Varied + cost-efficient | Maximum World Cup breadth |
A Mexico + one US city combination often costs less total than a single US city stay, because the lower Mexico costs offset the additional transport expenses. Smart routing makes multi-city affordable.
Plan Your Full World Cup Route
Explore every host city, book hotels, find tickets, and get transport info — all in one place.
Host Cities Hub → Country Hopper Guide →For the complete flight booking strategy for your multi-city trip, see our dedicated article: Flying to the World Cup: Best Flights to Host Cities.