Toronto match schedule
Confirmed FIFA World Cup 2026 fixtures at this host city, with current ticket price ranges where published. Full kickoff times in local time are issued on FIFA.com closer to each match.
| Date | Round | Match | Tickets (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fri, Jun 12 | Group stage | Canada vs Bosnia & Herzegovina | $2,300 – $4,705 |
| Wed, Jun 17 | Group stage | Ghana vs Panama | $1,640 |
| Sat, Jun 20 | Group stage | Germany vs Côte d’Ivoire | $395 – $2,910 |
| Tue, Jun 23 | Group stage | Panama vs Croatia | $1,820 |
| Fri, Jun 26 | Group stage | Senegal vs Iraq | $1,640 |
| Thu, Jul 2 | Round of 32 | TBD vs TBD | $3,285 |
About BMO Field
BMO Field — the home of Toronto FC and Canada Soccer's men's national team — is one of two Canadian host venues for 2026, and it has been expanded for the tournament with temporary stand additions taking capacity to roughly 45,000 from its MLS-season base of around 30,000. Toronto is hosting six matches: Canada's group-stage games (the men's national team plays its group matches at BMO) plus a Round of 32 fixture. The stadium sits on the Exhibition grounds along Toronto's western waterfront, accessed by the GO Transit Exhibition station, the 509 streetcar from Union Station and the Bathurst streetcar. Toronto Pearson is the international airport; Billy Bishop on the islands handles short-haul flights from Boston, NYC and Chicago. Downtown hotels along King West and the Entertainment District are the obvious base. Expect a sold-out Canada crowd.
How FIFA World Cup 2026 tickets work
Tickets for the 2026 FIFA World Cup are sold exclusively through FIFA's official ticketing portal at FIFA.com/tickets. That is the only legitimate retail channel — no airline, no travel agency, no resale platform and no broker is an authorised primary distributor. The only FIFA-sanctioned premium product outside the standard ticketing portal is the FIFA Official Hospitality program, which sells hospitality packages (premium seating bundled with food, drink and lounge access) through On Location, FIFA's official hospitality partner. Anything else — including "guaranteed Final tickets" sold months before tickets exist — should be assumed to be either a scam or an unauthorised resale at risk of cancellation.
FIFA's standard 2026 ticket-sales path runs in phases. The Visa Presale Draw runs first and is open to Visa cardholders worldwide — fans register, are entered into a random draw, and successful applicants are given a window to buy tickets to specific matches at face value. After the Visa presale, FIFA runs an Early Ticket Draw open to all fans regardless of payment method, again on a random-draw basis. A Random Selection Draw and Last-Minute Sales follow as the tournament approaches, releasing remaining inventory and any tickets returned from team allocations. Late sales open in the weeks immediately before kick-off and continue through the tournament. Pricing is tiered Category 1 through Category 4 plus a dedicated Conditional Supporter ticket category for fans of qualified teams, with FIFA also using dynamic pricing on knockout-round matches — prices for the Final and semifinals run dramatically higher than group-stage matches.
FIFA's official Resale Platform launches in early 2026. It is the only sanctioned way to transfer a 2026 ticket between fans, and it operates inside the FIFA ID system — buyers and sellers are verified, prices are capped at face value (no markup), and the ticket transfers cleanly into the new holder's FIFA ID. Reselling a 2026 World Cup ticket outside the FIFA Resale Platform violates the ticket terms and the ticket can be voided. FIFA also runs a dedicated Accessibility Ticketing program for fans with disabilities — wheelchair seating, easy-access seating, audio descriptive commentary and companion tickets are available across all 16 venues and applied for through FIFA.com/tickets/accessibility.
Travelling to Toronto
Cross-border travel between the three host countries during the tournament will be the largest sustained mass-transit event in North American history. Plan early and assume capacity is sold out unless you have a confirmed booking. Visa rules: entry to the United States requires either an ESTA (for Visa Waiver Program countries, applied online roughly $21 USD, processing takes 72 hours) or a B1/B2 visitor visa (for non-VWP nationals, requires an embassy interview booked 3-12 months in advance — book this in summer 2025 if you need one). Entry to Canada requires an eTA for visa-exempt nationals (CAD $7, applied online) or a temporary resident visa for visa-required nationalities. Entry to Mexico is visa-free for most North American and European passports — fans receive an FMM (Forma Migratoria Múltiple) tourist permit at the airport.
Inter-city flights between host cities are the single biggest logistical chokepoint of the tournament. The FIFA match schedule release in March/April 2026 will trigger the biggest single fare spike of the year; flights between US host cities that normally run $200-$400 round trip will run $800-$1,500 in tournament windows. Book inter-city legs the moment your match tickets are confirmed. Hotels: book six to twelve months ahead. Host-city hotels around match venues will be at 95%+ occupancy through their match windows and the marquee hotels in NYC, LA, Mexico City and Toronto for the Final week and semifinal weekend are already booking out. Rental cars will be in tight supply — book at the airport you arrive at, not the city centre. FIFA Accreditation is media/team-staff credentialing and is entirely separate from fan tickets — fans do not need accreditation, just a FIFA ID and a valid match ticket.