A Tournament Split Six Ways
First, let's untangle the geography. The vast majority of the 2030 FIFA World Cup—101 of its 104 games—will be played across Spain, Portugal, and Morocco. These three nations form the primary bid and will host everything from the group stages to the final.
So, what about the other three countries? That’s where it gets complicated. The tournament will kick off with three standalone inaugural matches held in South America: one in Montevideo, Uruguay; one in Buenos Aires, Argentina; and one in Asunción, Paraguay. The six teams involved in those opening games will then fly thousands of miles across the Atlantic to join the rest of the tournament in Europe and Africa. In essence, it’s one tournament with two opening ceremonies and a logistical footprint that spans half the globe. It's a structure unprecedented in the history of major sporting events.
Why This Bizarre Birthday Party?
The entire South American component is an elaborate—and deeply romantic—nod to history. The year 2030 marks the 100th anniversary of the very first FIFA World Cup, which was held and won by the host nation, Uruguay. The final match was played in Montevideo’s Estadio Centenario against their rivals, Argentina. Paraguay’s inclusion honors the fact that the South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL) was headquartered there at the time and was the only confederation in existence. By awarding these three nations celebratory opening matches, FIFA is attempting to pay homage to the tournament’s origins. It’s a sentimental gesture meant to connect the modern, 48-team mega-event with its humble 13-team beginnings. This structure was also a clever political solution, satisfying the original joint bid from the South American countries while giving the main hosting rights to the financially stronger Morocco-Portugal-Spain bid.
The Logistical and Environmental Nightmare
While the sentiment is historic, the practical reality has drawn heavy criticism. For starters, there’s the issue of competitive fairness. The six teams playing in South America will have to endure grueling cross-continental travel and significant jet lag before playing their second group-stage games. Their opponents, meanwhile, will be comfortably settled in Europe. Then there's the environmental impact. At a time when sporting bodies claim to be prioritizing sustainability, sanctioning a tournament that requires multiple teams and thousands of fans to make transatlantic flights has been called hypocritical. For fans wanting to follow their team, the cost and complexity of a multi-continent tour is a significant barrier. Critics argue that the plan prioritizes political deal-making and historical pageantry over the well-being of players, fans, and the planet.
Is This the New Normal?
The 2030 model may feel like a one-off gimmick for a centennial, but it’s actually an acceleration of a trend. The 2026 World Cup, hosted across the United States, Canada, and Mexico, already normalized the idea of a multi-country tournament. With the expansion to 48 teams, the financial and infrastructural burden of hosting has become too immense for most single nations to bear. Spreading the cost and logistics across multiple countries makes bidding more feasible. While future tournaments are unlikely to span continents in quite the same way, the era of the single-nation host is likely drawing to a close. The "tri-host experiment" of 2030 isn't just an experiment; it's a confirmation that to accommodate its own massive scale, the World Cup has had to sacrifice its compact, nation-unifying identity for a globalized, and far more complex, future.











