The making of a 48-team World Cup
How an expanded format reshaped venue planning across three nations — and what it means for the rhythm of the tournament.
Read the featureCup Arenas is an independent Australian editorial dedicated to the stadiums that host football's biggest tournament. We map the design, history and atmosphere of the venues — and follow the road to the 2026 FIFA World Cup across the United States, Canada and Mexico, the first edition to feature 48 nations.
Ask any supporter to picture a World Cup and they will describe a place: the steep terraces, the roar that rolls down from the upper tier, the floodlights cutting through a winter evening. The teams change, but the arenas carry the memory.
From the Maracanã to MetLife Stadium, from Wembley to the venues being readied across North America, these buildings are where Spain, France, Brazil and Argentina have written their legends — and where Australia keeps chasing its own. Cup Arenas studies the engineering, the sightlines and the stories behind them.
About our newsroomLong-form and quick guides on the venues, the host cities and the football that will fill them.
How an expanded format reshaped venue planning across three nations — and what it means for the rhythm of the tournament.
Read the featureA clear, scannable directory of the 2026 venues, from coast to coast, with capacities and roof types.
A close look at one flagship arena — its bowl geometry, acoustics and the engineering that keeps 80,000 voices in tune.
From 1930 to today — the venues where England, Germany and the Netherlands rewrote what a final could feel like.
Roofs, façades and floodlights — a curated visual study of stadium design across continents.
Steep stands, low roofs and clever acoustics — the design choices that turn a crowd into a twelfth player.
A wider field means more debutants and more dark horses. Here are a few sides our desk is tracking as the venues fill.