Lincoln Financial Field

Philadelphia, United States · Capacity: 69,796

Local timezone: America/New_York

See Philadelphia timezone info

Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (capacity 69,796) hosts 6 matches at the FIFA World Cup 2026, including a round of 16. The stadium opened in 2003 as the home of the Philadelphia Eagles and sits in South Philadelphia alongside Citizens Bank Park and Wells Fargo Center, forming one of the most concentrated sports complex areas in North America. Philadelphia is making its World Cup debut in 2026, having been absent from the 1994 tournament despite sitting between two 1994 host regions.

The open-air bowl is known for intense and passionate fan atmospheres built by the Eagles supporter base over decades. Philadelphia’s MLS club, the Union, competes at Subaru Park in nearby Chester, and the metropolitan area has a substantial immigrant population with football roots in Mexico, Central America, and southern Europe.

The timezone is America/New_York, UTC-4 during Eastern Daylight Time throughout the June and July tournament window. Philadelphia matches run on the same clock as all other Eastern timezone venues. A 19:00 kickoff is midnight in London, 01:00 in Paris, and 08:00 in Tokyo. For European viewers, a match starting at 14:00 local time in Philadelphia lands at 19:00 in London, making it prime-time accessible.

Philadelphia sits between New York and Washington on the Northeast Corridor, one of the most heavily travelled rail corridors in the Americas. Amtrak service from New York Penn Station takes under 90 minutes. The stadium is accessible from downtown Philadelphia via SEPTA Broad Street Line to Pattison Station.

World Cup Debut

Philadelphia has not previously hosted FIFA World Cup matches. New York and New Jersey hosted 1994 matches at Giants Stadium just 150 kilometres to the north, but Philadelphia itself was not part of that tournament.

2026 is Philadelphia’s first World Cup. The city sits at a natural intersection of American football geography: on the Northeast Corridor between New York and Washington, within easy reach of tens of millions of football fans via rail and road. Hosting a round of 16 match for its debut means Philadelphia enters the World Cup record books with knockout football, not just group stage fixtures.

6 matches at this venue