BMO Field
Toronto, Canada · Capacity: 45,736
Local timezone: America/Toronto
See Toronto timezone infoBMO Field in Toronto, Canada (capacity 45,736) hosts 6 matches at the FIFA World Cup 2026, including a round of 32. Opened in 2007 as Canada’s first purpose-built professional soccer stadium, it is the smallest venue in the tournament, which translates into an intimate, loud atmosphere that larger stadiums rarely match. Toronto is making its World Cup debut in 2026, as part of Canada’s first-ever co-hosting of the FIFA World Cup.
BMO Field sits on the Toronto waterfront at Exhibition Place, on the western edge of downtown. Lake Ontario breezes keep the venue cooler than inland alternatives, and the view from the upper concourse toward the city skyline is one of the more distinctive stadium backdrops in the 2026 tournament.
Toronto is Canada’s largest city and one of the most diverse cities in the world. Football has grown significantly here over the past decade, driven by immigration from football-centric countries across South America, Europe, and Africa. BMO Field is home to Toronto FC of Major League Soccer, and it has been expanded several times to meet demand.
The IANA timezone is America/Toronto, UTC-4 during Eastern Daylight Time in the summer months. Toronto runs in sync with New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Atlanta, and Miami. A 19:00 kickoff in Toronto is 00:00 in London, 08:00 in Beijing, and 14:00 in Los Angeles.
For European viewers, the Eastern timezone venues including Toronto offer the friendliest kickoff times in the tournament. A 19:00 local start is midnight in the UK, which is watchable. Earlier 14:00 starts land at 19:00 in London and 20:00 in most of Western Europe, making them prime time.
At 45,736 seats it is the smallest venue in the tournament, which creates an intimacy and noise level that larger stadiums rarely match.
World Cup Debut
Toronto has not previously hosted FIFA World Cup matches, and Canada has never before co-hosted the tournament. 2026 is a debut for the city and the country simultaneously.
Canada qualified for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar after a 36-year absence from the finals, a breakthrough that transformed the country’s footballing self-confidence. The Canadian men’s national team arrives at a home World Cup on the back of genuine competitive progress, with players across Europe’s top leagues. Toronto, as Canada’s largest city, will be the emotional centre of the Canadian host experience. BMO Field’s intimate atmosphere and the city’s diverse, football-invested population make it one of the most anticipated debut venues of the entire tournament.