Trump's Travel ban — imposed in June 2025, expanded in December — prohibits tourist visas for nationals of 39 countries. Four of those countries have qualified for the 2026 World Cup: Haiti, Iran, Senegal and Côte d'Ivoire 1. Their fans cannot enter the United States to watch their teams play. Athletes and accredited officials are exempt. A further twelve qualified nations face tightened immigration restrictions, though their citizens can still obtain tourist visas 2.
No previous World Cup host has barred supporters of qualified nations by law. When Russia hosted in 2018, it created a Fan ID system that functioned as a visa waiver for all ticket holders. Qatar did the same in 2022. FIFA's hosting agreements historically include guarantees of entry for everyone with a valid match ticket — a principle the US Travel ban directly contradicts. FIFA has not publicly stated whether it sought or received assurances on fan access before the ban's December expansion.
The four affected nations span three continents. Haiti returns to the World Cup for the first time since 1974 — a 52-year wait — and its diaspora, concentrated heavily in south Florida and the New York metropolitan area, cannot legally travel to matches 3. Senegal and Côte d'Ivoire, the reigning Africa Cup of Nations finalists and champions respectively, have large diaspora communities in France rather than the US, but supporters travelling from West Africa are blocked entirely. Iran's fans face a double exclusion: the Travel ban bars their entry, while the separate factional dispute over Iran's participation means they may have no team to watch at all.
The result is a two-tier tournament. These teams will compete in stadiums where the opposing side's supporters can attend freely and theirs cannot. The American Immigration Council has argued the ban may violate FIFA's own anti-discrimination statutes 4, but FIFA has offered no public response. For the affected nations, the practical message is that entry to the 'World' Cup tracks US Foreign Policy priorities, not footballing qualification.
