Arrowhead Stadium
Kansas City, United States · Capacity: 76,416
Local timezone: America/Chicago
See Kansas City timezone infoArrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri (capacity 76,416) hosts 6 matches at the FIFA World Cup 2026, including a quarter-final. Opened in 1972, the stadium has been home to the Kansas City Chiefs NFL franchise ever since and holds the Guinness World Record for crowd noise at an outdoor sports venue. That atmosphere will transfer directly to World Cup football.
Kansas City sits at the geographic centre of the continental United States, making it accessible for supporters travelling from all directions. The metropolitan area straddles the Kansas-Missouri state line, and the stadium sits in Missouri, off Interstate 70 on the eastern edge of the city.
The timezone is America/Chicago, UTC-5 during Central Daylight Time throughout the tournament window. Kansas City shares this offset with Dallas, Houston, and Chicago. A 19:00 local kickoff is 20:00 in New York, 01:00 in London, and 09:00 in Tokyo. The Central timezone offers the most workable viewing window for European audiences among the US time zones.
Kansas City in June averages highs around 30 degrees Celsius with moderate humidity. The open-air stadium means weather is a factor: afternoon thunderstorms are common in the Great Plains, and match day weather should be monitored.
A knockout match at one of the loudest stadiums in world sport will be something to experience.
World Cup Debut
Kansas City has not previously hosted FIFA World Cup matches. When the United States staged the 1994 World Cup, the tournament’s 9 venues were spread across the country but Kansas City was not among them.
2026 is Kansas City’s first time on the World Cup map. It is a significant inclusion: Arrowhead Stadium is one of the genuinely atmospheric sports venues in North America, and a quarter-final here will introduce the city’s noise and passion to a global audience encountering it for the first time. The debut stage could not be bigger.