When FIFA sat down to decide which stadiums would host the most important matches of the 2026 World Cup, one venue kept coming up. AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas — home of the Dallas Cowboys — walked away with nine matches, more than any other ground in the entire tournament. That includes four knockout games and one of the two semi-finals.
This isn’t just a big stadium. It’s one of the most remarkable sports venues ever built, and come June 2026, the whole world will be watching what happens inside it.
AT&T Stadium at a Glance
| Location | Arlington, Texas, USA |
| Home Team | Dallas Cowboys (NFL) |
| World Cup Capacity | 94,000 |
| Total Matches Hosted | 9 (most of any stadium in 2026) |
| Knockout Matches | 4 (Round of 32 x2, Round of 16, Semi-Final) |
| Semi-Final Date | July 14, 2026 |
| Roof Type | Retractable |
| World’s Largest HD Screen | Yes (Guinness World Record) |
| NFL Attendance Record | 105,121 (Sept 21, 2009) |
| Basketball Attendance Record | 108,713 (2010 NBA All-Star Game) |

Why Nine Matches Is Such a Big Deal
Most World Cup stadiums get three or four games. A few get five. AT&T Stadium is getting nine — and that gap matters. More matches means more history, more atmosphere, and more moments that people will remember for the rest of their lives. For fans in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, this is a once-in-a-lifetime window that won’t come around again.
To put it simply: if you want to see the most World Cup football in one place, AT&T Stadium is where you need to be.
The Full Match Schedule at AT&T Stadium
| Date | Stage | Match | Kick-off (ET) |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 14, 2026 | Group Stage | Netherlands vs. Japan | 9:00 PM |
| June 17, 2026 | Group Stage | England vs. Croatia | 9:00 PM |
| June 22, 2026 | Group Stage | Argentina vs. Austria | 6:00 PM |
| June 25, 2026 | Group Stage | Japan vs. TBD | 12:00 AM |
| June 27, 2026 | Group Stage | Jordan vs. Argentina | 11:00 PM |
| June 30, 2026 | Round of 32 | TBD vs. TBD | 1:00 PM |
| July 3, 2026 | Round of 32 | TBD vs. TBD | 2:00 PM |
| July 6, 2026 | Round of 16 | TBD vs. TBD | 3:00 PM |
| July 14, 2026 | Semi-Final 1 | TBD vs. TBD | 3:00 PM |
The group stage alone brings some blockbuster matchups. England vs. Croatia is a rematch of the 2018 World Cup semi-final — a game most England fans still talk about. Netherlands vs. Japan is a classic clash of styles. And then there’s Argentina, who show up twice in the group stage, giving fans in Texas a chance to watch the defending champions live.
The Records That Set This Venue Apart
AT&T Stadium doesn’t just host big events. It tends to break records at them.
Attendance records: The stadium holds the NFL regular season attendance record — 105,121 fans packed in on September 21, 2009, when the Dallas Cowboys hosted the New York Giants. That figure earned recognition in the Guinness World Records. Just months later, the same venue hosted the 2010 NBA All-Star Game, which drew 108,713 people — the highest attendance ever recorded for a basketball game anywhere on Earth.
The giant screen: When AT&T Stadium opened in 2009, it installed what was certified as the world’s largest high-definition video display — another Guinness World Record. The screen runs almost the full length of the pitch from end to end, hanging from the roof. For a World Cup match, that means 94,000 people watching replays and close-ups on a screen most of them will have never seen anything like.
Boxing: Even the stadium’s boxing record is impressive. Manny Pacquiao vs. Joshua Clottey in March 2010 drew 50,994 fans, one of the biggest boxing crowds in American history.
Four Knockout Matches — The Highest Stakes in the Tournament
The group stage is exciting. But the knockout rounds are where World Cups are really decided. AT&T Stadium is hosting four of them.
Round of 32 (June 30 & July 3): The brand-new Round of 32 is a feature unique to this expanded 48-team World Cup. Two of those matches will take place at AT&T — each featuring teams who scraped through their groups as second-place finishers, desperate to stay alive in the tournament.
Round of 16 (July 6): By this stage, only 16 teams remain. The stadium that has already seen Argentina, England, Netherlands, and Japan in the group stage now becomes the site of a straight knockout contest for a place in the quarter-finals.
Semi-Final 1 (July 14): This is the one. When July 14 arrives, AT&T Stadium will host the first of the two World Cup semi-finals — meaning two teams will step onto that field knowing that a win puts them in the final in New York. Lose, and it’s over. There are very few bigger moments in world sport than a World Cup semi-final, and this ground will be the place where one country’s dream survives and another’s is ended.
AT&T Stadium’s Life Beyond Football
The venue has always been more than just an NFL stadium. Over the years, it has hosted events that most venues would never be considered for:
| Event Type | Notable Examples |
|---|---|
| NFL | Super Bowl XLV (2011), Cowboys regular season |
| College Football | Cotton Bowl Classic, Big 12 Championship |
| NBA | 2010 All-Star Game (108,713 attendance) |
| Boxing | Pacquiao vs. Clottey (50,994) |
| Music | Beyoncé, U2, Taylor Swift concerts |
| NCAA Basketball | Men’s Final Four 2014 |
| NFL Draft | 2018 |
| Bowl Games | Rose Bowl 2021 |
That kind of versatility is rare. Most sports stadiums struggle to host one major sport well. AT&T Stadium does everything — and then adds a World Cup semi-final on top.
The Dallas Cowboys’ Record at Home
Since the stadium opened in 2009, the Dallas Cowboys have played their home games here through good seasons and bad ones. Their all-time home record through 2025 stands at 80 wins, 57 losses, and 1 draw — a respectable record for a team with one of the most demanding fan bases in American sport.
In the playoffs, they’ve gone 3-3 at AT&T Stadium, with memorable moments including a 2018 Wild Card win over the Seattle Seahawks and a painful 2023 Wild Card loss to the Green Bay Packers. Super Bowl XLV in February 2011 saw the Green Bay Packers beat the Pittsburgh Steelers 31-25 on the same turf that will now host World Cup football.
Also Read: FIFA World Cup 2026 Squads
What Makes This Venue Different
There are 16 cities hosting World Cup 2026 matches. There are some genuinely impressive stadiums on that list — MetLife in New York, the Rose Bowl in Los Angeles, Estadio Azteca in Mexico City. But AT&T Stadium has one thing none of the others can match: sheer volume of World Cup football.
Nine matches. Four knockout rounds. A semi-final. The world’s largest HD screen. A capacity of 94,000. A track record of handling events that break records just by showing up.
There’s a reason FIFA gave this stadium more games than anyone else. And when those 94,000 seats fill up on July 14 for that semi-final — with the noise, the flags, and two teams fighting for a place in the World Cup final — it’ll be clear why.
Similar Read: FIFA World Cup 2026 Stadiums
Looking Ahead to July 14
The entire tournament builds toward two moments: the semi-finals and the final. AT&T Stadium gets one of those semi-finals. From the first ball kicked on June 14 between the Netherlands and Japan, through five group stage matches, two Round of 32 games, and a Round of 16 thriller, every step leads to the moment when the stadium becomes the most important football venue on the planet.
Two teams. One match. A place in the World Cup final on the line.
It all happens in Arlington, Texas. And it’s going to be something else entirely.

