The 2026 FIFA World Cup is the biggest in history. For the first time the tournament features 48 teams, split into 12 groups of four, and is hosted across three countries: the United States, Canada and Mexico.
The format change means more matches, more nations making their debut, and a new Round of 32 stage before the bracket narrows toward the final. The top two from every group advance automatically, joined by the eight best third-placed teams, giving smaller footballing nations a realistic path into the knockouts.
On this site you can follow every fixture as it happens, check kick-off times for your day, and watch the group tables shift with each result. Bookmark the homepage and you will always be one tap from the latest scores.