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World Cup 2026 Visa Requirements by Nationality

Sarah Chen
Senior Immigration Policy Analyst··15 dakikalık okuma

The 2026 World Cup is the first to be hosted across three countries at once, which means there is no single answer to "do I need a visa?". Your requirement depends on two things: your nationality and which of the three host countries (the United States, Canada, or Mexico) you are travelling to. A German fan breezes in on an ESTA and an eTA; an Iranian fan faces a full US travel ban that no ticket can override.

This page is the master reference. It explains the three-country matrix, then gives a per-nationality table covering all 48 qualified teams plus the biggest fan-sending nations, with an honest flag on exactly who is restricted and why.

World Cup 2026 Visa Requirements by Nationality
Host countries
USA, Canada, Mexico
Qualified teams
48
US visa-waiver
42 countries (ESTA)
Travel-ban flag
Iran, Haiti (full)
Requirements differ per host country AND per nationality. Two separate US policies are constantly confused: the immigrant-visa freeze (people moving to live in the US) does NOT affect World Cup fans, but the travel ban DOES restrict some nationalities such as Iran and Haiti. A match ticket never guarantees entry; CBP and border officers decide at the port of entry. Verify your status against each official US, Canadian, and Mexican government source before you travel or pay any fee. As of 2026.

Not sure where to start? The main hub walks through dates, host cities, FIFA PASS, and the freeze-versus-ban question end to end.

FIFA World Cup 2026 Visa Guide

The three-host-country matrix

Because the 2026 tournament runs across the United States, Canada, and Mexico from 11 June to 19 July, each host country applies its own entry rules to your passport. There is no shared "World Cup visa" and no document that covers all three. A fan following one team through the group stage and knockouts could legally need an ESTA for the US, an eTA for Canada, and a tourist card for Mexico, all on the same trip. The first step is to understand the three separate systems, then look up your nationality in the table below.

The United States runs the strictest system of the three. Citizens of the 42 Visa Waiver Program (VWP) countries can travel on an ESTA, an online authorisation that costs USD 40.27, is valid for two years, and permits stays of up to 90 days. Everyone else needs a B1/B2 visitor visa, which means an in-person interview at a US embassy or consulate. On top of that, a small group of nationalities is affected by the US travel ban (Presidential Proclamation 10998), which restricts or blocks entry regardless of any visa appointment. We separate those three buckets clearly in the table.

Canada is simpler. Visa-exempt nationals (most of Europe, plus countries like Japan, South Korea, Australia, and several others) need only an Electronic Travel Authorisation (eTA), which costs CAD 7 and is approved online, usually within minutes. Canada advises noting "FIFA World Cup 26" in the application. Everyone else needs a Temporary Resident Visa (TRV), a full visa application that can take roughly four to eight weeks. Critically, the eTA is required even if you only transit through a Canadian airport by air, so check it even if Canada is not your final destination.

Mexico is the most flexible host. Many nationalities are visa-free for tourism and simply complete a tourist entry (the FMM tourist card). Just as importantly, Mexico operates a powerful shortcut: holders of a valid US visa, Canadian permanent residency, or a Schengen visa can often enter Mexico without a separate Mexican visa. That means a fan from a country that normally needs a Mexican visa, but who already holds a US B1/B2 for the American matches, can frequently use that US visa to enter Mexico too. Nationalities that are neither visa-free nor eligible for the shortcut must apply for a Mexican visa.

Two US policies cause more confusion than anything else in this tournament, so read this carefully. The 75-country immigrant-visa freeze that took effect on 21 January 2026 applies ONLY to immigrant visas, meaning people moving to live in the US permanently. It does not touch tourists, B1/B2 visitors, or ESTA travellers, so it does not block World Cup fans. The separate travel ban (Proclamation 10998) is what actually restricts certain fans. Keep these two apart: the freeze does not affect fans, while the travel ban does affect the banned nationalities.

How to read the table - the four buckets

Every nationality falls into one of a few buckets for each host country. For the United States the buckets are: ESTA (you are on the Visa Waiver Program and only need the online authorisation), B1/B2 (you need a full visitor-visa interview), or travel-ban-affected (full ban or partial restriction under Proclamation 10998). For Canada the buckets are eTA (visa-exempt, online only) or TRV (full visa). For Mexico they are visa-free, US-visa-shortcut (you can use an existing US visa to enter), or visa (you must apply for a Mexican visa).

  1. Find your nationality in the big table below (qualified nations and major fan-senders are both included).
  2. Read the USA column first, because it is the most restrictive and decides whether you need a B1/B2 interview or are affected by the travel ban.
  3. Read the Canada column to see whether you need a quick eTA or a full TRV, even if Canada is only a transit stop.
  4. Read the Mexico column. If you already hold a valid US visa, check whether the US-visa-shortcut lets you skip a separate Mexican visa.
  5. If your US column says B1/B2, consider the FIFA PASS priority interview option to book a faster slot.

A vital caveat applies to the whole table: it tells you what document you must obtain, not whether you will be admitted. A valid ESTA, eTA, or visa is permission to travel to the border, not a guarantee of entry. US Customs and Border Protection officers make the final admission decision at the port of entry, and they can refuse anyone. Approval rates, processing times, and even bucket assignments can change, so always confirm your exact status with the official government source for each host country before booking flights.

Visa requirements by nationality - the full table

The table below covers the 48 qualified nations plus the largest fan-sending countries (including India and Pakistan, who did not qualify but send huge travelling crowds). For each nationality it shows the United States bucket, the Canada bucket, and the Mexico bucket, with a short note. "ESTA" means Visa Waiver Program; "B1/B2" means a full US visitor-visa interview; "BAN" means fully banned and "PARTIAL" means partially restricted under Proclamation 10998. For Mexico, "US-visa shortcut" means a valid US visa usually lets you enter without a separate Mexican visa.

NationalityUSACanadaMexicoNotes
USA (host)CitizeneTAVisa-freeCo-host; US citizens need nothing for the US, eTA for Canada
Canada (host)ESTA-equiv (visa-free)CitizenVisa-freeCo-host; Canadians enter the US without ESTA
Mexico (host)B1/B2eTACitizenCo-host; Mexicans need a B1/B2 for the US, eTA for Canada
EnglandESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; smoothest of all routes across the three hosts
FranceESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP and Schengen; Mexico visa-free
GermanyESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; ESTA + eTA only
SpainESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; Mexico visa-free
ItalyESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; qualification subject to confirmation but visa rules unchanged
NetherlandsESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; ESTA + eTA only
PortugalESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; Mexico visa-free
BelgiumESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; ESTA + eTA only
CroatiaESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP (joined 2021); ESTA + eTA only
SwitzerlandESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; common fan-sender
AustriaESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; ESTA + eTA only
NorwayESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; ESTA + eTA only
Scotland (UK)ESTAeTAVisa-freeTravels on UK passport; VWP
BrazilB1/B2eTAUS-visa shortcutNo VWP; needs US interview. Canada eTA-eligible. Use US visa for Mexico
ArgentinaB1/B2eTAVisa-freeNo VWP; B1/B2 interview. Canada eTA-eligible. Mexico visa-free
UruguayB1/B2eTAUS-visa shortcutNo VWP; B1/B2 needed. Mexico via US-visa shortcut
ColombiaB1/B2eTAUS-visa shortcutNo VWP; B1/B2. Canada eTA-eligible. US visa eases Mexico entry
ParaguayB1/B2eTAVisa-freeNo VWP; B1/B2. Mexico visa-free
EcuadorB1/B2TRVVisaNo VWP; B1/B2. Canada TRV. Mexico visa unless US-visa shortcut
JapanESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; ESTA + eTA only, Mexico visa-free
South KoreaESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; ESTA + eTA only, Mexico visa-free
AustraliaESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; ESTA + eTA only, Mexico visa-free
New ZealandESTAeTAVisa-freeVWP; ESTA + eTA only
Saudi ArabiaB1/B2TRVUS-visa shortcutNo VWP; B1/B2 interview. Canada TRV. Mexico via US visa
QatarB1/B2TRVUS-visa shortcutNo VWP; B1/B2. Mexico via US-visa shortcut
JordanB1/B2TRVUS-visa shortcutNo VWP; B1/B2. Flagged for honesty; not banned, but interview required
UzbekistanB1/B2TRVVisaNo VWP; B1/B2. Canada TRV. Mexico visa unless US-visa shortcut
IranBAN (full)TRVVisaFULL US travel ban (Proclamation 10998). Fans face severe restrictions; FIFA PASS does NOT bypass it
HaitiBAN (full)TRVVisaFULL US travel ban. Ordinary fans heavily restricted; no FIFA PASS bypass
MoroccoB1/B2TRVUS-visa shortcutNo VWP, NOT banned; needs B1/B2. See the Morocco hub.
EgyptB1/B2TRVUS-visa shortcutNo VWP, NOT banned; B1/B2 interview. See the Egypt hub.
TunisiaB1/B2TRVVisaNo VWP, NOT banned; B1/B2 needed. Mexico visa unless US-visa shortcut
AlgeriaB1/B2TRVVisaNo VWP, NOT banned; B1/B2. Canada TRV. Mexico visa or US-visa shortcut
SenegalPARTIALTRVVisaPARTIAL US restriction under Proclamation 10998; expect extra scrutiny. NOT a full ban
Cote d'IvoirePARTIALTRVVisaPARTIAL US restriction; heavier vetting. NOT a full ban. B1/B2 where allowed
GhanaB1/B2TRVVisaNo VWP, NOT banned; B1/B2 interview. See the Ghana hub.
NigeriaB1/B2TRVVisaNo VWP, NOT banned; B1/B2. Did not qualify but huge fan-sender. See the Nigeria hub.
Cape VerdeB1/B2TRVVisaNo VWP, NOT banned; B1/B2 needed. Canada TRV
South AfricaB1/B2eTAVisaNo VWP; B1/B2. Canada eTA-eligible. Mexico visa or US-visa shortcut
India (fan-sender)B1/B2eTAUS-visa shortcutDid NOT qualify but top fan-sender; B1/B2. Mexico via US visa. See the India hub.
Pakistan (fan-sender)B1/B2TRVVisaDid NOT qualify, major fan-sender; B1/B2. Canada TRV. Mexico visa or US-visa shortcut
China (fan-sender)B1/B2TRVUS-visa shortcutMajor fan-sender; B1/B2. Mexico via US-visa shortcut
CuracaoB1/B2eTAVisa-freeDutch-Caribbean qualifier; B1/B2 for the US. Check Dutch-passport status
PanamaB1/B2eTAVisa-freeNo VWP; B1/B2. Canada eTA-eligible. Mexico visa-free

Two honesty notes on the table. First, qualification for a handful of slots was still being finalised as of mid-2026 through play-offs, so a few listed nations are conditional, but the visa rules for each passport do not change with qualification. Second, the Mexico column shows the default; the US-visa shortcut frequently overrides a "visa" requirement, so a fan who already holds a US B1/B2 for the American matches can usually enter Mexico on that same US visa. Always confirm the current shortcut policy on Mexico's official immigration source before relying on it.

Fans from the biggest qualified and fan-sending nations can find passport-specific guidance in our nationality hubs: Nigeria, Ghana, Egypt, Morocco, and India.

The travel ban - who is actually restricted

This is the part most websites get wrong, so we state it plainly. The US travel ban under Presidential Proclamation 10998 is a real barrier for a specific set of nationalities, and it operates completely separately from the 75-country immigrant-visa freeze. Iran and Haiti are subject to a full ban, meaning ordinary fans from those countries face severe restrictions on entering the United States for the tournament. Senegal and Cote d'Ivoire are subject to partial restrictions, meaning fans can still apply but should expect heavier vetting, longer waits, and a higher chance of refusal.

CountryUS travel-ban statusWhat it means for fansAffects the freeze too?
IranFull banSevere entry restrictions; most ordinary fans cannot obtain a visitor visaFreeze is separate; the BAN is the blocker
HaitiFull banSevere restrictions; ordinary fans heavily affectedFreeze is separate; the BAN is the blocker
SenegalPartial restrictionCan apply, but expect extra vetting and higher refusal riskNot blocked by the freeze; restriction is the issue
Cote d'IvoirePartial restrictionCan apply, but heavier scrutiny and slower processingNot blocked by the freeze; restriction is the issue
A FIFA PASS priority interview does NOT bypass the travel ban. It only speeds up the scheduling of a B1/B2 interview for nationalities who are eligible to apply. If your passport is on the full-ban list, a faster appointment changes nothing. Athletes, officials, and their official entourage have specific exemptions; ordinary fans do not.

It is just as important to say who is NOT banned, because fear spreads faster than facts. Morocco, Egypt, Tunisia, Algeria, Ghana, Nigeria, Cape Verde, Jordan, and Uzbekistan are NOT on the full travel ban. Their nationals do face a regular B1/B2 visitor-visa interview because they are not on the Visa Waiver Program, but that is the normal route, not a prohibition. Many African and Middle Eastern fans wrongly believe they are blocked when in fact they simply need to book a standard interview, ideally using the FIFA PASS priority slot if they hold a FIFA ticket.

The honest summary is that the heaviest impact falls on a relatively small set of African and Middle Eastern nationalities, with Iran and Haiti hit hardest by the full ban and Senegal and Cote d'Ivoire affected by partial restrictions. Everyone else from those regions is on the standard B1/B2 path. Because these designations can be revised, any fan from a flagged country should monitor the official US State Department source closely and read our visa rejection guide to understand how refusals and port-of-entry decisions work.

If you need a US B1/B2 - the FIFA PASS option

If the table puts your nationality in the B1/B2 bucket for the United States, you need a visitor visa with an in-person interview, and the single most useful tool is FIFA PASS. Fans who bought a ticket directly from FIFA can opt in to receive a priority B1/B2 interview slot. The US State Department added more than 400 extra consular officers for the tournament and says roughly 80 percent of the world can secure an appointment within 60 days. FIFA PASS is a scheduling advantage only; it does not approve your visa and does not bypass the travel ban.

The practical workflow for a B1/B2 nationality is straightforward: buy your ticket from FIFA, opt into FIFA PASS, complete the DS-160 application, pay the visa fee, and attend the priority interview at your nearest US embassy or consulate. Bring proof of your ticket, accommodation, funds, and ties to your home country, because the officer is assessing whether you will return home after the tournament. The full mechanics, including who qualifies and the exact opt-in steps, are covered in our FIFA PASS explained guide.

One reassuring point for B1/B2 applicants: a B1/B2 visitor visa is the same document used for any tourist trip, and the immigrant-visa freeze does not touch it. The 75-country freeze that took effect on 21 January 2026 applies only to people immigrating to live in the US permanently. As a fan applying for a temporary visitor visa, you are outside that freeze entirely, even if your country appears on the freeze list. Read the freeze report if you want the precise legal distinction, then apply for your B1/B2 with confidence.

There is also a useful knock-on benefit for the wider trip. Once you hold a valid US B1/B2 for the American matches, that same visa frequently unlocks Mexico through the US-visa shortcut, letting you attend the Mexico City, Guadalajara, or Monterrey games without applying for a separate Mexican visa. So securing the US visa can effectively solve two of your three host countries at once. Canada remains separate: visa-exempt fans use the eTA, while B1/B2-bucket nationalities typically also need a Canadian TRV for the Toronto and Vancouver matches.

Planning a multi-country trip

Many fans will follow a team across borders, so plan all three documents at once rather than country by country. There is no combined permit: you cannot use one visa for all three host countries because each runs its own rules. A realistic worst case for a non-VWP, non-banned fan is a US B1/B2, a Canadian TRV, and either a Mexican visa or the US-visa shortcut. A best case for a VWP fan is an ESTA plus an eTA plus visa-free Mexican entry, all arrangeable online in a day.

Fan profileUSACanadaMexicoTotal effort
VWP nationality (e.g. England, Japan)ESTA onlineeTA onlineVisa-freeLow - all online, same day
Non-VWP, not banned (e.g. Brazil, Egypt)B1/B2 interview (use FIFA PASS)TRV or eTAUS-visa shortcut or visaMedium - plan months ahead
Partial restriction (e.g. Senegal)B1/B2 with heavy vettingTRVVisa or US-visa shortcutHigh - extra scrutiny, allow extra time
Full ban (e.g. Iran, Haiti)Banned - severe restrictionsTRVVisaVery high - US entry largely blocked

Sequence your applications smartly. Apply for the US B1/B2 first if you need one, because it is the slowest and because it can unlock the Mexican shortcut. Lodge the Canadian eTA or TRV next, remembering the eTA is mandatory even for an air transit through Canada. Handle Mexico last, since visa-free entry or the US-visa shortcut often makes it the easiest leg. Throughout, keep checking the official government source for each country, because designations, fees, and processing times shift and a single rule change can alter your whole itinerary.

Finally, repeat the golden rule on every leg: the document gets you to the border, not through it. ESTA, eTA, and visas are travel authorisations, and the officer at each port of entry makes the final call. Carry your match tickets, accommodation bookings, return flights, and proof of funds for every crossing, and never assume that one country's approval implies another's. With the matrix understood and the right documents in hand well ahead of 11 June, the vast majority of fans will move between the three hosts smoothly.

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Do I need a visa for the 2026 World Cup?

It depends on your nationality and which of the three host countries you visit. For the United States, citizens of the 42 Visa Waiver Program countries need only an ESTA, while everyone else needs a B1/B2 visitor visa, and a small group is affected by the travel ban. For Canada, visa-exempt fans need an eTA and others need a TRV. For Mexico, many nationalities are visa-free or can use an existing US visa. There is no single World Cup visa, so check your passport against each host country's official source.

Which countries can attend visa-free?

Citizens of the 42 US Visa Waiver Program countries (including England, France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, Belgium, Croatia, Japan, South Korea, Australia, and others) come closest to visa-free: they use a simple online ESTA for the US, an online eTA for Canada, and enter Mexico visa-free. No nationality is fully document-free across all three hosts, since even VWP travellers must obtain an ESTA and an eTA, but for these countries the whole process is online and quick.

Which nations are affected by the US travel ban?

Under Presidential Proclamation 10998, Iran and Haiti face a full ban, so ordinary fans from those countries face severe restrictions on US entry. Senegal and Cote d'Ivoire face partial restrictions, meaning fans can apply but should expect heavier vetting and a higher refusal risk. Athletes, officials, and their entourage have specific exemptions, but ordinary fans do not. A FIFA PASS appointment does not bypass the ban. Designations can change, so verify with the official US State Department source before booking.

Does the 75-country freeze affect fans?

No. The 75-country freeze that took effect on 21 January 2026 applies only to immigrant visas, meaning people moving to live permanently in the United States. It does not affect World Cup tourists, B1/B2 visitors, or ESTA travellers, so it does not block fans, even if your country is on the freeze list. The policy that actually restricts some fans is the separate travel ban (Proclamation 10998), which is a different rule. Keep the two apart: the freeze is immigrant-visa only and does not stop fans.

Can I use one visa for all three host countries?

No. Each host country has its own rules and there is no combined permit. You may need an ESTA or B1/B2 for the US, an eTA or TRV for Canada, and visa-free entry or a visa for Mexico, all separately. The one helpful overlap is that a valid US visa often lets you enter Mexico without a separate Mexican visa through the US-visa shortcut. But the US and Canada always require their own authorisations, so plan all three documents before you travel.

I am from Nigeria, Ghana, Egypt, or Morocco - am I banned?

No. Nigeria, Ghana, Egypt, Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria are NOT on the US full travel ban. Their nationals are not on the Visa Waiver Program, so they need a standard B1/B2 visitor-visa interview for the United States, but that is the normal route and not a prohibition. If you hold a FIFA ticket, you can use the FIFA PASS priority slot to book a faster interview. For Canada you will generally need a TRV, and for Mexico you can often use your US visa via the shortcut.

Does my country need to have qualified for me to attend?

No. Anyone can attend the World Cup as a fan regardless of whether their team qualified, and the visa rules depend on your passport, not on qualification. That is why major fan-senders like India, Pakistan, and China are included in the reference table even though they did not qualify: they each need a US B1/B2 visitor visa, with Canada and Mexico rules varying by nationality. Buy your tickets from FIFA, then arrange the right document for each host country you plan to visit.

Does a match ticket guarantee I can enter the United States?

No. A match ticket, and even an approved ESTA or visa, gets you to the border but does not guarantee entry. US Customs and Border Protection officers make the final admission decision at the port of entry and can refuse anyone. FIFA PASS only speeds up scheduling a B1/B2 interview; it does not approve the visa or bypass the travel ban. Carry your tickets, accommodation, return flights, and proof of funds, and verify your status with the official government source for each host country before you travel.

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