U.S., Mexico, Costa Rica and Jamaica Bid to Host 2031 Women's World Cup
The U.S. Soccer Federation leads a joint bid with Mexico, Costa Rica, and Jamaica as the sole candidate to host the expanded 48-team 2031 Women's World Cup.
- On April 30, FIFA members will decide on the lone USSF proposal for the United States to co-host the 2031 Women's World Cup with Mexico, Costa Rica and Jamaica.
- After withdrawing a joint 2027 bid, the U.S. Soccer Federation and Mexican Football Federation shifted focus to staging the 2031 tournament, following the men's 2026 World Cup model.
- More than 30 U.S. cities have expressed interest, and the expanded 48-nation format will feature 104 games, with stadium decisions unlikely before 2027.
- USSF CEO JT Batson warned ticket demand for a U.S.-hosted Women's World Cup will be incredible, noting the United States—four-time champion—drew 1.2 million fans to 32 matches.
- Looking beyond 2031, Abby Wambach said she isn't concerned about Netflix streaming while FIFA selected Brazil for 2027 and the United Kingdom plan is sole for 2035.
18 Articles
18 Articles
By Edgar Avilés, CNN en Español The soccer federations of the United States, Mexico, Costa Rica, and Jamaica announced this Monday their joint bid to host the FIFA Women's World Cup in 2031, with the goal of organizing a high-impact tournament. The official announcement took place this Monday in New York City, marking a unique event for the CONCACAF federations, which could host the largest Women's World Cup in history by uniting North America, …
Costa Rica will host a Major World Cup. This Monday at 2:37 p.m., in New York, the official announcement was made of the single and joint candidacy of four countries: the United States, Mexico, Jamaica and Costa Rica to host the 2031 Women's World Cup. Although what was announced was the nomination, this is a symbolic step, since there are no more candidates or any other type of opposition, for which reason Concacaf's intentions will be ratified…
The United States added Mexico, Costa Rica and Jamaica to their candidacy, the only one currently active with FIFA.
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