From Casablanca's new mega-stadium to Madrid's Bernabéu and Lisbon's Estádio da Luz — a look at the venues set to define the 2030 World Cup.
The 2030 FIFA World Cup will be played in some of football's most iconic venues — and a few brand-new ones. While FIFA will confirm the final venue list closer to the tournament, the official bid points clearly to the cities below.
Spain — the venue heavyweight
Spain contributes the most stadiums, headlined by Madrid (Santiago Bernabéu and the Metropolitano) and Barcelona (Camp Nou). Other strong candidates include Sevilla, Bilbao, Valencia, Málaga and more — a deep pool of modern, large-capacity grounds.
Portugal — Lisbon and Porto
Lisbon brings the Estádio da Luz and the Estádio José Alvalade, while Porto offers the Estádio do Dragão — three proven Champions League-level venues.
Morocco — a new era
Morocco's centrepiece is the planned Grand Stade Hassan II in Casablanca, designed as one of the largest football stadiums in the world and a leading contender to host the final. Rabat, Marrakech, Tangier, Agadir and Fes round out the Moroccan venues.
The centenary venues
Three South American grounds stage the opening matches: Uruguay's historic Estadio Centenario in Montevideo, a venue in Buenos Aires, and one in Asunción.
Where will the final be?
It is not yet confirmed. Casablanca's Grand Stade Hassan II and Madrid's Bernabéu are the front-runners. Track every confirmed detail on our 2030 World Cup hub.