
2026 FIFA World Cup
48-team FIFA Men's World Cup co-hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico, opening 11 June 2026.
Last refreshed: 15 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Why has the 2026 FIFA World Cup become a major procurement event for counter-drone companies?
Timeline for 2026 FIFA World Cup
Prompted US, Mexico and Canada to announce Ebola screening protocols on 28 May
Pandemics and Biosecurity: Kenyan court halts US quarantine siteMentioned in: DHS, Shield AI and a Section 232 clock still running
Drones: Industry & Defence- Where is the 2026 FIFA World Cup being held?
- The 2026 FIFA World Cup is co-hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico across 16 stadiums. The US hosts matches in 11 cities including New York, Los Angeles, Dallas, Miami, and Kansas City; Canada hosts in Toronto, Vancouver, and Edmonton; Mexico hosts in Mexico City, Guadalajara, and Monterrey.Source: FIFA official communications
- How many teams are in the 2026 FIFA World Cup?
- The 2026 FIFA World Cup expanded to 48 teams from the previous format of 32, making it the largest men's World Cup in history. The expanded field adds a round of 32 before the traditional knockout stages.Source: FIFA official communications
- Why are counter-drone companies involved in the 2026 FIFA World Cup?
- The US federal government allocated $250m in C-UAS grants across 11 World Cup host states ahead of the tournament. Vendors including DroneShield and Sentrycs were contracted to provide counter-drone coverage at specific venues, treating the tournament as a major national-security event requiring air-threat protection.Source: Lowdown drones-industry-defence briefing, June 2026
- When does the 2026 FIFA World Cup start and finish?
- The 2026 FIFA World Cup opened on 11 June 2026 and runs to the final on 19 July 2026.Source: FIFA official communications
Background
The 2026 FIFA World Cup is the 23rd edition of the FIFA Men's World Cup, the first to feature 48 national teams (expanded from 32) and the first co-hosted across three nations: the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Matches are played across 16 stadiums in 11 US cities, three Canadian cities, and three Mexican cities; the tournament opened on 11 June 2026 and runs to 19 July 2026. With an expected attendance exceeding five million across all matches, it is the largest-format World Cup in the competition's history. The expanded format extends the group stage and requires a new round of 32 before the traditional knockout rounds begin.
The tournament has become a significant national-security event in addition to a sporting one. The US Department of Homeland Security and FEMA staged $250m in Counter-UAS grants across 11 host states and the National Capital Region ahead of the opening , and vendors including DroneShield and Sentrycs (owned by Ondas Holdings) were selected to provide counter-drone coverage at specific venues . Separately, the US, Canada, and Mexico announced joint Ebola screening protocols for tournament arrivals, reflecting the parallel public-health security posture applied to events of this scale.
For the counter-drone and autonomous-systems industry, the World Cup functions as a live audition at a complex, high-profile civilian site. A positive operational reference from a tournament watched worldwide carries more commercial weight than a laboratory test, and vendors selected for the programme gain a credential that accelerates access to subsequent federal procurement cycles. The tournament therefore represents both a genuine security commitment and a contested procurement shop window for the C-UAS sector.