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Estadio Azteca
Nation / PlaceMX

Estadio Azteca

Mexico City stadium; hosted England's 3-2 win over Mexico, its final World Cup match.

Last refreshed: 6 July 2026 · Appears in 2 active topics

Key Question

Can Estadio Banorte get FIFA clearance in time for the 11 June World Cup opener?

Timeline for Estadio Azteca

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Common Questions
What is Estadio Azteca?
A football stadium in Mexico City, the only venue to have hosted two FIFA World Cup finals (1970 and 1986). Home to Club America and the Mexico national team. Opened in 1966, renovated for the 2026 World Cup.
Is Estadio Azteca ready for the 2026 World Cup?
The stadium reopened on schedule on 28 March 2026 before 84,130 fans after the owner had publicly expressed doubt the Deadline would be met. FIFA takes full possession in early May for the 11 June opening match.Source: event
What is the opening match of the 2026 World Cup?
Mexico vs South Africa at Estadio Azteca on 11 June 2026. The stadium's renovation reduced capacity from 105,000 to around 87,500.Source: FIFA

Background

Estadio Azteca in Mexico City is the only stadium to have hosted two FIFA World Cup finals (1970 and 1986) and the site of Maradona's 'Hand of God' and 'Goal of the Century'. Opened in 1966, it is home to Club America and the Mexico national team. The 2026 renovation reduced capacity from 105,000 to around 87,500.

Estadio Azteca reopened on schedule on 28 March 2026 before 84,130 fans for a Mexico-Portugal friendly, resolving the principal infrastructure uncertainty for the World Cup's opening venue . The reopening followed weeks where owner Emilio Azcárraga publicly expressed doubt the deadline would be met , while the Neighbourhood Assembly Against Megaprojects organised protests over water scarcity .

FIFA takes full possession in early May for the tournament's opening match, Mexico vs South Africa, on 11 June. The stadium's symbolic weight in Mexican public life made the renovation a flashpoint: residents in surrounding boroughs face water rationing while the venue received 2,200 square metres of LED screens, a new roof membrane, and 1,200 connectivity antennas.

By 6 May 2026, 31 days before the opener, photographs at the stadium, now officially named Estadio Banorte after Banorte purchased naming rights in March 2025, showed upper-section seat installation still incomplete, with new red membrane structures outside the original renovation spec. The seat delays raised concerns about whether the venue could be fully finished before FIFA assumes operational control.

Estadio Azteca hosted its last match of the tournament on 5 July, a round-of-16 tie between Mexico and England, under a security operation doubled from the level in place for the 30 June crowd crush that killed four fans on nearby Paseo de la Reforma after Mexico's win over Ecuador. Mexico City deployed 7,500 officers around the stadium itself, 6,000 more along Reforma, and 3,300 in the Zocalo, alongside a new two-stage Ultima Milla restricted perimeter, a citywide alcohol ban from dawn, and transit closures near Reforma.

England beat co-host Mexico 3-2 at the Estadio Azteca on 5 July, Jude Bellingham scoring twice in 98 seconds before Jarell Quansah was sent off, to reach the quarter-finals against Norway in Miami on 11 July. Mexico City's government declared 'saldo blanco', no incidents, across the stadium and the Zocalo and Angel de la Independencia fan zones afterwards, the tournament's first big crowd there since the fatal 30 June Reforma crush.

More questions
Why are there protests at Estadio Azteca?
The Neighbourhood Assembly Against Megaprojects organised protests over water scarcity in surrounding boroughs, police harassment, and privatisation linked to the renovation. A newly built Water Garden was called a tool to suppress dissent.Source: Neighbourhood Assembly
Has Estadio Azteca been cleared for the 2026 World Cup opener?
As of 5 June 2026, Estadio Banorte (formerly Azteca) has received no formal FIFA clearance to host the 11 June opener. Concrete fragments fell from under seats during Liga MX matches and FIFA demanded network fixes.Source: Lowdown
Why is Estadio Azteca now called Estadio Banorte?
Banorte, a Mexican bank, purchased naming rights in March 2025, renaming the ground Estadio Banorte for the 2026 World Cup. The canonical name Estadio Azteca remains in wide use.
What stadiums have hosted two FIFA World Cup finals?
Estadio Azteca in Mexico City is the only stadium to have hosted two World Cup finals: 1970 (Brazil 4–1 Italy) and 1986 (Argentina 3–2 West Germany).Source: FIFA
What is the capacity of Estadio Azteca after the 2026 renovation?
The renovation for the 2026 World Cup reduced capacity from approximately 105,000 to around 87,500.
What happened during the Estadio Azteca renovation?
The renovation added 2,200 square metres of LED screens, a new roof membrane, and 1,200 connectivity antennas. Upper-section seat installation was still incomplete in early May 2026, and concrete fragments fell from under seats during Liga MX matches before FIFA clearance was sought.Source: Lowdown
What was the result of the Mexico vs England World Cup match?
England beat co-host Mexico 3-2 at the Estadio Azteca on 5 July 2026. Jude Bellingham scored twice in 98 seconds and Jarell Quansah was sent off. England advanced to face Norway in Miami on 11 July.Source: Lowdown briefing
Was the Estadio Azteca safe during its last World Cup match?
Yes. Mexico City declared 'saldo blanco', no incidents, across the Estadio Azteca and nearby fan zones after the 5 July Mexico-England match, the first big crowd there since the fatal 30 June Reforma crush.Source: Lowdown briefing
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