The FIFA World Cup 2026 is coming to New York City, and for the first time ever, the greatest sporting event on earth is playing out in the most soccer city in the world. Forty-eight nations. Sixty-four matches. And a city of eight million people who've been waiting their entire lives for this moment — because most of them came from the countries playing.
That's what makes World Cup NYC different from any other host city. This isn't just about stadiums and fan zones. It's about neighborhoods. It's about the Colombian grandmother on Roosevelt Ave who's been in Queens for thirty years and never thought she'd see her team play ten minutes from her apartment. It's about the Senegalese community in Harlem getting ready to shut down 116th Street. It's about Bay Ridge Brooklyn becoming the Arab capital of the soccer world for a few weeks in June.
The Official Fan Zones
Let's start with what's official. New York and New Jersey are hosting the full FIFA World Cup 2026 group stage experience across all five boroughs, with fan zones in New York that'll run from June 11 through late July. The main hub is the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Flushing, Queens — the Queens Fan Zone is the Group Stage HQ, and you'll need tickets from nynjfwc26.com. There's also the Brooklyn Fan Zone at Brooklyn Bridge Park, the Hudson Yards Big Screen in Manhattan, the Bronx Fan Zone at Bronx Terminal Market, and a Telemundo Fan Village at Rockefeller Center running through Finals week.
These are great. But they're not the whole story.
Where It Really Lives: The Neighborhoods
The real World Cup NYC experience happens on the streets, in the bodegas, in the restaurants and sports bars of New York's immigrant communities. This city has neighborhoods that are closer to the heart of these nations than most cities in those countries. Here's where to be for the biggest matches.
Jackson Heights & Roosevelt Ave — For Ecuador & Argentina
QueensIf you only go to one place this World Cup, make it Jackson Heights. Roosevelt Ave between 74th Street and 90th Street is the most diverse square mile on earth, and during the World Cup it becomes something else entirely. Colombia, Ecuador, Argentina, Mexico, Uruguay — they're all here, often on the same block. When those teams play, the avenue shuts down naturally. People pour out of every bar, every restaurant, every apartment building.
Little Senegal — 116th Street, Harlem
ManhattanLittle Senegal on West 116th Street is one of New York's most electric neighborhoods on any given day. But when Senegal plays — or France — the entire stretch between Lenox Avenue and Frederick Douglass Boulevard transforms. Flags, drums, people streaming out of every West African restaurant and shop. If Senegal advances, 116th Street will be the place to witness it.
Bay Ridge, Brooklyn — Arab NYC
BrooklynBay Ridge is home to the largest Arab-American community in New York City. When Egypt, Morocco, Jordan, or Saudi Arabia plays, the Fifth Avenue corridor from 67th to 86th Street comes alive. It's also where the Moroccan and North African diaspora overlaps — making it essential for the Africa and Arab World matchdays.
Koreatown & Flushing — For South Korea
Manhattan · QueensSouth Korea fans have two strongholds. Koreatown on 32nd Street in Manhattan is the most concentrated Korean block in the city. For a deeper community experience, head to Flushing, Queens, where the Korean community in the Murray Hill area is the largest outside Korea itself.
The Bronx — Ghana's Home in NYC
The BronxThe most concentrated Ghanaian enclave in New York City sits around East 167th Street and McClellan Street in the Bronx. This community is tight-knit and absolutely passionate about the Black Stars. For Ghana matches, the Bronx is the only place to be.
Steinway Street, Astoria — Egypt & Morocco
QueensSteinway Street in Astoria, between Broadway and Astoria Boulevard, is Little North Africa — hookah bars, Egyptian restaurants, Moroccan cafes. One of the most atmospheric stretches in the city during North African matchdays.
The Ironbound, Newark — Portugal
NJTechnically not NYC, but absolutely essential. The Ironbound neighborhood in Newark — centered on Ferry Street — is one of the most famous Portuguese communities in the United States. Take the PATH train from Manhattan (about 25 minutes) and arrive early.
Finding Watch Parties for Every Match
Every match in the group stage has community spots, bars, and fan events scattered across the five boroughs. We built a watch party search tool directly into worldcupinnyc.com for exactly this reason. Open any match card on the site, expand it, and hit "Find Watch Parties with AI" — it searches Eventbrite, Facebook events, and neighborhood venues for that specific match on that specific date, cross-referenced with the community neighborhoods for those two nations.
🔍 Use the watch party finder at worldcupinnyc.com — search by match, date, team, or borough to find where your community is watching every game of the 2026 FIFA World Cup in NYC.
The Bigger Picture
The FIFA World Cup 2026 is historic for New York — but the city has always been hosting its own version of the World Cup. Every four years, the neighborhoods light up, the flags come out, and for a few weeks in summer, the whole city remembers where it came from. This year, the rest of the world finally gets to see what New Yorkers already know: this is the most soccer city on earth.
We built worldcupinnyc.com to document it. Every match, every neighborhood, every community — all in one place. Come find your spot.
Written by Undrgrnd Futbol — a NYC-based soccer content brand documenting the beautiful game through the city's immigrant communities. Follow us on Instagram @undrgrndfutbol.