The best World Cup journeys don’t begin at kickoff—they start with a plan.
Following your team through the 2026 tournament isn’t just about buying tickets. It’s about knowing where to stay, how to move between cities, and what to do when your team wins—and thousands of fans suddenly need the same hotel room or flight you were eyeing.
Unlike FIFA's venue packages that keep you in one city, following your team means crossing borders, chasing matches, and navigating a continent. When you plan ahead, however, that chaos becomes a memorable part of the adventure.
The 2026 tournament's 104 matches across three countries create travel challenges no previous World Cup has demanded. Understanding how to move between cities efficiently transforms what could be a logistical nightmare into seamless celebration of your team's journey.
The 2026 tournament spans 16 cities across the United States, Mexico, and Canada—and planning early is essential.
The 16 host cities fall into three natural travel corridors, each with its own personality and challenges for fans following their teams.
Your route: Guadalajara → Monterrey → Mexico City
Mexico's three cities provide the tournament's most authentic experiences, anchored by Estadio Azteca—the only stadium that will have hosted three World Cups. Getting between cities means choosing between quick 1.5-hour flights or luxury buses that wind through the countryside for six to eight hours, showcasing the Mexico most tourists never see.
Teams that advance from Mexico will likely head to Texas venues such as Dallas or Houston, creating a natural geographic flow. You'll experience markets, foods, and cultures that make the soccer feel like just one part of a much grander adventure.
Your route: Boston → New York/New Jersey → Philadelphia → Atlanta → Miami
This corridor makes multi-city travel as easy as it gets. Amtrak connects Boston through New York to Philadelphia, beating flights when you factor in airport time. Each city has distinct character—Boston's history, New York's energy, Atlanta's warmth, Miami's international vibe—but you're always in the same time zone with familiar infrastructure.
The Eastern corridor ends at MetLife Stadium for the final. If your team has championship potential, this route provides the clearest path to where it all concludes.
Your route: Vancouver → Seattle → San Francisco → Los Angeles
The West Coast offers spectacular settings but covers serious distances between cities. You'll need passports for Vancouver to Seattle, costs run higher than other routes, and Pacific Northwest weather can be unpredictable.
The trade-off is remarkable diversity—Vancouver's mountains, Seattle's coffee culture, San Francisco's fog, Los Angeles's sprawl. If you see World Cup matches as part of broader cultural exploration, this route delivers.
How you plan depends on your team's chances. Being honest upfront saves stress and money later.
Teams such as France, Germany, Brazil, Argentina
These teams often get group stage matches spread across regions—maybe Los Angeles, Kansas City, and Boston. Then advancement means Dallas for Round of 32, Atlanta for Round of 16, New York for quarterfinals, back to Dallas for semifinals, and New York again for the final.
That's multiple flights across time zones. Group stage gives you 4-5 days between matches to move comfortably. By quarterfinals, you're doing two- to three-day turnarounds between cities three to four hours apart by plane.
Teams such as Japan, Netherlands, Colombia, Poland—plus Cinderellas and smaller nations
These teams often get clustered regionally or focus on maximizing their group stage experiences. Maybe all three group matches around Kansas City, Dallas, and Houston, with potential advancement to nearby Atlanta or Miami.
This makes life much easier—two-hour flights between familiar cities, no time zone confusion, and you can focus on soccer instead of constant logistics.
Even if your team exits after group stage, you're positioned to enjoy other matches while properly exploring your host cities.
It's also the most budget-friendly approach, whether you're following a solid contender or treating the group stage as your complete World Cup experience.
Whether your team’s a tournament favorite or just happy to be there, the travel planning gets complicated fast. InteleTravel Advisors specialize in building multi-city World Cup itineraries—complete with expert routing, flexible bookings, and backup plans if your team advances.
Talk to an InteleTravel Advisor today and let us help you lock in the fun parts—before the scramble starts.
The biggest mistake is trying to book everything reactively. Here's the right approach.
Your team's group stage cities are guaranteed. Research these properly—neighborhoods worth exploring, how you'll get around, where you want to eat. You'll spend three to four days in each place with predictable schedules, so book with confidence.
The group stage also provides the most stability for restaurant reservations, day trips, and cultural activities that become impossible during later tournament phases.
You can't book rooms in cities you might never visit, but do your homework. Know which neighborhoods make sense in Atlanta, understand train connections between Boston and New York, bookmark hotel websites you'll need quickly if your team advances.
Create research files for potential cities—airport situations, neighborhoods, transportation options. This preparation transforms scrambling into execution when your team progresses.
Some travelers book refundable rooms in likely advancement cities and accept cancellation fees. It's expensive, but availability can disappear completely during the tournament.
Yes, refundable hotel rates cost more. Flight change fees add up. But when your team makes an unexpected semifinal run, you'll gladly pay that extra cost for peace of mind. Think of it as tournament insurance—the difference between flexible and rigid bookings is usually less than a nice dinner, but the value of changing plans when your team advances is priceless.
Moving between World Cup cities involves three countries and complex logistics. Here's what actually works.
Dallas (DFW) becomes the tournament's unofficial hub—central location, connections everywhere. Atlanta grants the most flight options overall, while Los Angeles handles West Coast routing. New York has three airports, which sounds great until you realize getting between them takes forever.
The Northeast Corridor is perfect for Amtrak—Boston to New York to Philadelphia beats flying when you include airport time. You avoid security, travel city center to city center, and there's something fun about celebrating with other fans in the café car.
However, the World Cup promises to invite a deluge of new travelers onto a system that already serves millions each day. To be sure, if you’re used to a high standard of rail efficiency, the United States’ infrastructure will leave you wanting—just be mindful that this isn’t Europe’s train system.
Without a doubt, train capacity will be limited. When teams advance, everyone wants the same seats. Book immediately when your team qualifies for Eastern Corridor matches.
You need passports for Vancouver to Seattle, even if you're American. Mexico-U.S. crossings require passports for everyone, and non-U.S. citizens should verify re-entry requirements. Build extra time into international transitions—border delays during the tournament aren't worth stressing about. And research each country’s border requirements, as some may require additional travel documentation.
Mexico offers domestic flights between Guadalajara, Monterrey, and Mexico City (1.5 hours) or luxury buses (six to eight hours) that highlight the stunning countryside between cities.
Don't just book the closest hotel to stadiums. Most venues are suburban, while interesting neighborhoods are usually downtown or in specific districts.
In Mexico City, Roma Norte or Condesa put you among the best restaurants and nightlife. Seattle's Pike Place Market beats airport hotels. Downtown Atlanta trumps suburban stadium areas. You'll spend way more time in neighborhoods than at venues.
Following your team means booking rooms in multiple cities simultaneously. Keep spreadsheets of confirmations, cancellation policies, and deadlines. Use hotel loyalty programs when possible—status members often get better cancellation terms and upgrades during busy periods.
If you're traveling with a group, establish who books what and how you'll split costs before tournament pressure begins.
Mexico's World Cup cities require preparation but reward it with experiences unavailable elsewhere.
The Mexico circuit provides World Cup experiences unavailable anywhere else—authentic markets, family restaurants serving traditional recipes, and archaeological sites that provide historical context.
Multi-city World Cup travel gets complex, especially when managing groups across three countries while following your team's emotional journey.
Following your team involves coordinating hotels across different countries, transportation systems that don't always connect smoothly, and cultural differences—all while managing tournament progression emotions. Add language barriers, border crossing requirements, and varying group budgets, and it becomes overwhelming.
InteleTravel Advisors work with suppliers across these host cities, providing access to rooms and flights for all types of major events. They understand visa requirements, cultural navigation, and have emergency protocols across three countries.
The real value comes long before kickoff. When you’re booking accommodations in cities that may sell out—or trying to understand the best neighborhoods, transit systems, and travel routes in unfamiliar places—having a professional on your side makes all the difference. InteleTravel Advisors help you get ahead of the crowds, avoid costly mistakes, and ensure you have support when it matters most.
Instead of standard packages, professional advisors can build itineraries around your team's potential path, your group's budget, and your desired balance between soccer focus and cultural exploration.
This customization proves especially valuable for complex groups—multiple generations, different budget levels, or people with mobility considerations.
Here's how to turn World Cup dreams into workable plans.
Book group stage cities with confidence—these are guaranteed matches. Research neighborhoods, transportation, and restaurants. Get documentation sorted: passport validity, travel insurance, Mexico requirements. Establish group communication systems and decision-making processes before tournament pressure.
Research your team's possible progression paths without booking anything yet. Understand logistics of potential city transitions, know which neighborhoods make sense, and prepare airport and transportation information. This homework enables smooth execution if your team advances.
Stay realistic about your team's chances while preparing for best-case scenarios. Execute researched plans quickly when they advance rather than starting from scratch.
Remember that flexibility matters more than perfection—minor inconveniences become adventure stories, while major stress comes from trying to control uncontrollable factors.
Most importantly, balance following your team with enjoying the overall experience. Even if they exit earlier than hoped, you're potentially positioned to see other great matches while properly exploring these remarkable cities.
Ready to follow your team across the continent? The 2026 World Cup's three-country format creates complexity that goes way beyond typical tournament travel.
Connect with an InteleTravel Advisor who understands multi-city logistics. We'll handle the coordination while you focus on cheering your team through their World Cup journey. Our relationships across all 16 host cities, experience with international requirements, and dedicated support turn potential stress into seamless experiences.
Contact an InteleTravel Advisor today to start planning your World Cup adventure. We make supporting your team across three countries part of the fun, not a logistical headache.