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Pandemics and Biosecurity
5JUL

Mexico measles surge meets World Cup

2 min read
10:12UTC

The Americas logged 20,521 measles cases in the first five months of 2026, with Mexico alone at 10,920, weeks before it co-hosts the FIFA World Cup and draws crowds into an unvaccinated cohort.

ScienceDeveloping
Key takeaway

Mexico recorded 10,920 measles cases in five months as it prepares to co-host the World Cup.

The Americas logged 20,521 measles cases in the first five months of 2026, with Mexico alone accounting for 10,920, weeks before it co-hosts the FIFA World Cup. measles is among the most contagious diseases known: one infected person can pass it to up to 18 others in a fully susceptible group, which is why surveillance bodies treat any large cluster as a threat to spread.

The cases concentrate in an unvaccinated cohort, the population pocket where measles finds the room to circulate. Mexico is one of three World Cup co-hosts, and the tournament's gathering window opens in mid-June, drawing large crowds into and out of the country at exactly the point its case count is highest. Mass-gathering health screening for the tournament has so far been framed around Ebola importation , not a measles surge already inside a host nation. A mass gathering does not create measles, but it moves people, and movement is how a localised surge becomes an exported one.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Mexico has recorded nearly 11,000 measles cases in the first five months of 2026, making it the hardest-hit country in the Americas. Measles spreads easily through the air. It was eliminated from the Americas in 2002 but has re-emerged because some children missed their routine MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccine during the COVID-19 pandemic years. It is one of three co-hosts of the FIFA 2026 World Cup, which is bringing millions of football fans from dozens of countries together in Mexican stadiums from mid-June onwards. This creates a risk that fans who are unvaccinated may catch measles and carry it back to their home countries. Measles is preventable with a vaccine that has been in use for over 60 years.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Millions of fans from countries with varying MMR coverage attending World Cup matches in Mexico City and other Mexican host cities may seed measles chains in attendees from under-immunised cohorts, with onward spread to home countries after the tournament.

  • Consequence

    If measles cases are detected in fans returning from Mexico, affected countries will face pressure to investigate MMR coverage gaps in the 2019-2022 birth cohorts that missed routine vaccination during the pandemic.

First Reported In

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