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2026 FIFA World Cup
16JUL

IFAB rule changes go live at World Cup

1 min read
10:33UTC

Three IFAB rule changes take effect at the 2026 World Cup: a red card for covering the mouth in confrontations, VAR review of second yellow cards, and a mandatory hydration break near the 22nd minute of each half.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Mouth-covering earns a red card and VAR now scrutinises second yellows under new IFAB rules.

Three rule changes from IFAB (the International Football Association Board), the body that sets the laws of the game, are live across all 104 World Cup matches from the 11 June opener at Los Angeles Stadium 1. A player covering the mouth during a confrontation now draws a red card; VAR (Video Assistant Referee) can review second yellow cards; and a mandatory hydration break falls near the 22nd minute of each half.

The VAR change targets a specific gap. Second bookings that send a player off had previously sat outside VAR's remit, so a marginal second yellow could not be corrected once given. Extending review to those decisions answers incidents in previous tournaments where contested dismissals stood unchecked. The hydration break is a welfare measure for summer matches in US and Mexican heat, not an officiating change.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

IFAB (the International Football Association Board) is the body that writes the official rules of football. It has four members: FIFA plus the four British football associations (England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland). Three new rules take effect for all 104 World Cup matches from 11 June. First: any player who covers their mouth with a hand or shirt during a confrontation with a referee or another player gets an automatic red card (sent off). This was introduced after players were caught giving secret instructions to avoid lip-reading cameras. Second: VAR (Video Assistant Referee, the video review system) can now review whether a second yellow card was correctly given. Previously, VAR could only review red cards issued directly; a second caution leading to a sending-off could not be overturned. Third: a mandatory water break takes place near the 22nd minute of each half. This is a welfare measure for hot-weather venues.

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