Mexico ★ Opening match — June 11 4 Group A matches + Round of 16 5 matches

Mexico City
CDMX.

The only stadium in the world where two World Cup finals were played. Now adding the opening match as well. 22 million residents, 2,200 meters above sea level — and the first whistle of an entire continent.
22 million residents 2,240 m above sea level CST · UTC −6
Azteca1966, reconstruction 2024
Stadium
87 5234th largest arena of the tournament by capacity
Capacity
5including the opening match
Matches
2 ★1970 and 1986
World Cup finals hosted

Stadium
Azteca.

Azteca

The cathedral of football. 1970 — Pelé, 1986 — Maradona, the "Hand of God," the "goal of the century." And on June 11, 2026 — the first whistle of the most ambitious tournament in history.

Built
1966
Reconstruction
2024
Field size
105 × 68 m
Surface
Hybrid grass
Altitude
2,200 m
Architect
P. Ramírez Vázquez

Five matches,
five evenings.

What you need to know
about the city.

Atmosphere

First whistle of the biggest tournament in history.

Mexico City is back in its familiar role — the city that opens the World Cup. Paseo de la Reforma will be painted green, a fan fest for 200,000 people will be set up at the Zócalo, and at 8:00 p.m. local time on June 11, fifteen kilometers south at the Azteca, the opening ceremony will kick off. The opening match hasn't been held here since 1986, and the city remembers it well.

Energy — at maximum Expectations — enormous Press Center — Reforma 350
Role

Capital of Group A — and the backbone of Mexico's entire route.

All three group matches for the host nation will take place here (Mexico — South Africa, Mexico — South Korea, Czech Republic — Mexico), plus one Czech Republic — South Africa match and a Round of 16 fixture. Mexico City is the starting point and, most likely, the return point: if Mexico wins the group, it will fly back here for the playoffs five days after the third matchday. A quiet logistical advantage.

Mexico's Home · 3 out of 3 Round of 16 Anchor
Route — for fans

From Mexico City to Monterrey.

If Mexico wins Group A: Mexico City → Mexico City → Mexico City (group stage) → Mexico City (Round of 16) → Monterrey (Quarterfinals). Approximately 920 km north.

Altitude

2,240 meters. The game is played differently here.

The ball travels farther, and by the end of the second half legs feel like lead. Visiting teams need adaptation — all Group A opponents have pre-booked altitude training camps in Toluca and Cuernavaca.

Fan zone

Zócalo. Up to 200,000 people.

The tournament's largest fan fest. Night screenings, music, round-the-clock mole stand. Free for everyone, and absolutely massive.

Where to go,
what to see.

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Seven things
about Mexico City.

Mexico City — the capital of rock en español.

Without Mexico City, rock en español as we know it wouldn't exist — Café Tacuba, Caifanes, Maldita Vecindad built the genre here. Plus José José and pop names. Only CDMX artists.

  1. 01
    Café Tacvba — La ingrata 1994 · Ciudad Satélite (CDMX metro)

    The album "Re" — the best rock album in Spanish according to Rolling Stone Latam.

    Open in Yandex Music →
  2. 02
    Caifanes — La Negra Tomasa 1989 · CDMX

    The single that brought rock en español to Mexico's mainstream radio.

    Open in Yandex Music →
  3. 03
    Maldita Vecindad y Los Hijos del 5to. Patio — Pachuco 1991 · CDMX

    An anthem for a generation. Pachuco — the Mexican zooter — became a pop hero here.

    Open in Yandex Music →
  4. 04
    Café Tacvba — Eres 2003 · Ciudad Satélite

    The band's most romantic ballad. Played at Mexican weddings.

    Open in Yandex Music →
  5. 05
    Molotov — Frijolero 2003 · CDMX

    Bilingual (English + Spanish) hit about border relations with the USA.

    Open in Yandex Music →
  6. 06
    José José — El Triste 1970 · Clavería, CDMX

    The king of Latin romance. José José — the voice of Mexican bolero in the 1970s.

    Open in Yandex Music →
  7. 07
    Natalia Lafourcade — Hasta la Raíz 2014 · Coatepec / CDMX

    Grammy. Mexico's most successful album of the 2010s.

    Open in Yandex Music →
  8. 08
    Aleks Syntek feat. Ana Torroja — Duele el Amor 2004 · Yucatán / CDMX

    Top-1 Latin Pop. The best Latin pop duet of the 2000s.

    Open in Yandex Music →
  9. 09
    Fobia — Veneno Vil 1996 · CDMX

    Alt-rock of the 90s. Fobia — one of the 4-5 main rock en español bands.

    Open in Yandex Music →
  10. 10
    Belinda — Cactus 2003 · CDMX (early childhood in Madrid)

    Latin America's pop princess makes her debut. Belinda was born in Madrid, but built her career in Mexico.

    Open in Yandex Music →