Mexico will play a larger role at the 2026 World Cup than any other co-host. The tournament’s Mexico chapter runs through three cities and three very different stadium experiences: the opening match at the historic Estadio Azteca in Mexico City, group games at Estadio Akron in the Guadalajara metro area, and a mix of group and knockout matches at futuristic Estadio BBVA in Monterrey. FIFA’s official schedule confirms Mexico as the host nation for the June 11 opener in Mexico City and multiple group and Round of 32 matches across the three venues, while making the country the first to host a men’s World Cup for the third time.

For the World Cup, think of the three host cities as one connected route, with short flights and long-distance buses making it easy to move between stadiums and use each city as a base for matches, food, and culture. The federal government has also announced a coordinated security plan for all three host cities, bringing multiple agencies together to protect stadiums, airports, and accommodations. If you are mapping out the World Cup in Mexico City, Guadalajara, and Monterrey, it helps to think of this as one extended Mexico trip.

Things To Do In Mexico’s Host Cities During The World Cup

aerial view of Palacio de Bellas Artes at dusk
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On non-match days in Mexico City, you can treat the Historic Center and Chapultepec as your anchors. The Centro Histórico, built over the remains of Aztec Tenochtitlan, brings together the Zócalo, Metropolitan Cathedral, and the Templo Mayor archaeological site within a few blocks, and UNESCO recognizes the wider historic core and Xochimilco canal district as a cultural World Heritage site. From there, you can walk to Palacio de Bellas Artes and Alameda Central, or head west to Bosque de Chapultepec, a vast urban park with museums, walking paths, and viewpoints known as Mexico City’s “central park.” If you want something more local between games, a day in Xochimilco’s trajinera boats adds music, food, and a close look at canal-side chinampa farms.

In Guadalajara, the historic center and nearby artisan towns give you a slower, regional counterpoint to the capital. The Hospicio Cabañas complex, now the Museo Cabañas, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and former hospital that houses José Clemente Orozco’s famous murals and anchors a network of plazas, markets, and churches you can reach on foot. South of the center, many travelers spend an afternoon in the arts-driven Tlaquepaque and nearby Tonalá, known for handicraft markets and colorful streets.

Monterrey’s appeal lies in its landscape and industrial history. Macroplaza concentrates monuments and museums in the middle of the city, while Fundidora Park turns a former steel foundry into one of Latin America’s most distinctive urban parks, with walking and cycling paths among preserved industrial structures.

Where To Stay In Mexico For World Cup Matches

aerial view of Condesa and South Roma district in Mexico City
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Visitors can build their Mexico World Cup base in the capital’s central neighborhoods, then add shorter stays in Guadalajara and Monterrey. In Mexico City, Roma Norte and Condesa are sweet-spot areas, with walkable streets, strong restaurant and bar scenes, and easy metro or rideshare access to Azteca and the historic center. Polanco adds a more upscale layer with international hotels, high-end dining, and quick access to museums, while Centro Histórico offers budget-friendly hotels and guesthouses a short walk from the Zócalo and potential FIFA fan zones.

In Guadalajara, visitors split their time between the walkable historic center and Colonia Americana, a neighborhood often described as the city’s creative hub, with nightlife, cafés, and 20th-century architecture along Avenida Chapultepec. You can also look at lodging in Zapopan, closer to Estadio Akron, especially if you want to minimize commute times on match days.

Monterrey’s hotel scene clusters around downtown, Barrio Antiguo, and the modern districts near Fundidora Park and Estadio BBVA in Guadalupe, where you can find a mix of business hotels, mall-adjacent stays, and new towers with mountain views.

Best Neighborhoods For Visiting Fans

When you zoom out and look at Mexico as one World Cup stop, certain neighborhoods across the three cities stand out for fans. In the capital, Roma, Condesa, and Colonia Juárez offer nightlife, dining, and a younger crowd, while still staying connected to the stadium and fan zones via major avenues and public transport. Centro and Coyoacán work better if you care more about history and plazas than bars, with the bonus that Coyoacán sits on the same side of the city as Azteca and some training facilities.

In Guadalajara, many World Cup travelers will likely split their time between the Centro Histórico and Colonia Americana. Colonia Americana is a neighborhood where early-20th-century mansions now hold bars, restaurants, and galleries, and the nightlife along Chapultepec and its side streets keeps the area buzzing late into the night. The historic center keeps you close to Hospicio Cabañas, major plazas, and tram connections out to artisan towns.

In Monterrey, Barrio Antiguo and the blocks around Macroplaza give you colonial streets and bar life in the shadow of downtown towers, while the areas around Fundidora Park and Estadio BBVA suit fans who want to be near green space, concert venues, and the stadium itself.

Free Things To Do In Mexico Between Matches

You can cover a lot of ground in Mexico’s host cities without paying for more than transit and snacks. In the capital, the Bosque de Chapultepec is free to enter and covers more than 1,000 acres, with walking trails, lakes, monuments, and vantage points over the skyline. A slow day could start with a stroll through Chapultepec’s first section, continue through the Historic Center and Zócalo, and end with people-watching on pedestrian Avenida Madero, where street food and informal fan gatherings will likely blur into one another during the tournament.

In Guadalajara, simply walking the historic center and Parque Revolución, then drifting into Colonia Americana and along Paseo Chapultepec, gives you plazas, murals, and café culture without waiting in ticket lines.

Monterrey offers a similar low-cost route. You can cross Macroplaza from the cathedral to the government buildings, then follow the Santa Lucía riverwalk toward Fundidora Park, where you can explore much of the grounds and see the preserved furnaces and industrial structures from the outside at no charge. On quieter match days, parks and plazas in all three cities will likely become unofficial fan zones even beyond FIFA’s formal programming.

Bringing The Kids? How To Make It Family-Friendly

Mexico’s host cities can work well for multi-generational trips if you build in kid-focused time between games. Across all three cities, parents can mix stadium days with parks, zoos, and museums to keep kids engaged without losing the tournament atmosphere.

In Mexico City, Chapultepec alone offers enough to fill several days with children. Chapultepec Zoo ranks among the country’s best-known attractions and receives millions of visitors a year. It houses more than 200 species, including Mexican wolves and giant pandas. Nearby, Papalote Museo del Niño anchors a large corner of the park with interactive science, art, and technology exhibits, as well as an IMAX theater.

For a different type of day out, older kids often enjoy a boat ride in Xochimilco for the music, food, and floating vendors. Guadalajara brings its own family options. The Guadalajara Zoo offers themed areas, a safari train, and aquarium experiences that make a full-day outing. In neighboring Zapopan, the interactive Trompo Mágico museum gives kids hands-on science and art exhibits, outdoor play areas, and digital experiences.

Meanwhile, in Monterrey, Fundidora Park doubles as a family park and open-air museum, while Horno3, the interactive steel museum inside a former blast furnace, offers science exhibits, an industrial show with real fire, and a high viewing platform over the city.