Some stadiums are built to host games. SoFi Stadium was built to redefine what a stadium even is.
Sitting in Inglewood, California, in the heart of greater Los Angeles, this venue is widely regarded as the most technologically advanced and most expensive sports stadium ever constructed. For FIFA World Cup 2026, it carries the tournament name Los Angeles Stadium, and it’s hosting eight matches — including the United States’ opening match of the entire tournament, two Round of 32 knockout games, and a quarterfinal on July 10.
For Southern California, this summer has already delivered one of the most electric nights in the region’s sporting history.
Los Angeles Stadium at a Glance
| Official Tournament Name | Los Angeles Stadium |
| Primary Name | SoFi Stadium |
| Location | Inglewood, California |
| FIFA World Cup Capacity | 70,492 |
| Built By | Kroenke Sports and Entertainment (privately funded) |
| Signature Feature | The Oculus — dual-sided 4K HDR video board |
| Total 2026 World Cup Matches | 8 |
| Group Stage Matches | 5 (including 2 USA matches) |
| Knockout Matches | 3 (2× Round of 32, 1 Quarterfinal) |
| Quarterfinal Date | July 10, 2026 |
The USA’s World Cup Begins Here
For the first time in 32 years, the United States hosted a World Cup match on home soil — and it happened at SoFi Stadium.
On Friday, June 12, 2026, the U.S. Men’s National Team opened their tournament against Paraguay, and the result was about as good as American fans could have hoped for: a dominant 4-1 victory. The U.S. Men’s National Team kicked off its 2026 FIFA World Cup campaign on home turf at SoFi Stadium with a win over Paraguay, marking the first time in 32 years that the U.S. is hosting the World Cup, this time as one of three host nations alongside Canada and Mexico.

For a team that made it to the Round of 16 in the 2022 World Cup in Qatar after failing to qualify for the 2018 tournament in Russia, this opener mattered enormously. Captain Tim Ream summed up the weight of the occasion clearly: “You’re playing for 330 million people. That’s a big deal. There’s added responsibility, added eyes. But at the same time, it’s the ultimate goal, the ultimate honor.”
The U.S. returned to SoFi Stadium on June 25 to face Turkey, while their second group match was played away from Los Angeles, at Seattle’s Lumen Field, against Australia on June 19.
| USA Match | Date | Venue | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| USA vs. Paraguay | June 12, 2026 | SoFi Stadium | USA won 4-1 |
| USA vs. Australia | June 19, 2026 | Lumen Field (Seattle) | — |
| USA vs. Turkey | June 25, 2026 | SoFi Stadium | — |
The Full Match Schedule
SoFi Stadium is hosting eight matches across the group stage and knockout rounds:
| Date | Stage | Match | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 12, 2026 | Group Stage | USA vs. Paraguay | Group D — USA’s opener (USA won 4-1) |
| June 15, 2026 | Group Stage | Iran vs. New Zealand | Group G |
| June 18, 2026 | Group Stage | Switzerland vs. Bosnia & Herzegovina | Group B |
| June 21, 2026 | Group Stage | Belgium vs. Iran | Group G |
| June 25, 2026 | Group Stage | Turkey vs. USA | Group D |
| June 28, 2026 | Round of 32 | TBD vs. TBD | First knockout round |
| July 2, 2026 | Round of 32 | TBD vs. TBD | Second knockout round |
| July 10, 2026 | Quarterfinal | TBD vs. TBD | One of four quarterfinals |
One detail worth noting: Los Angeles is hosting two separate Round of 32 matches — a distinction shared by very few host cities in the entire tournament. That’s a significant volume of knockout football for one venue, on top of the quarterfinal still to come.
There’s also genuine local intrigue around the Iran vs. New Zealand match on June 15. Southern California is home to the largest Iranian population outside Iran itself, and the build-up to that match carried real emotional weight given the ongoing situation involving Iran. It was a reminder that World Cup matches are never purely about football — they carry the full context of the world around them.
The Oculus — The Most Advanced Screen in American Sport
If there’s one single feature that defines SoFi Stadium, it’s the Oculus.
This is a massive, dual-sided, oval-shaped 4K HDR LED screen that hangs above the pitch, center-hung from the stadium’s translucent roof. It’s visible from every seat in the building, and it’s widely considered the most advanced video display system in North American sports.
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| The Oculus | Dual-sided, oval 4K HDR LED screen, center-hung above the pitch |
| Translucent roof | Provides weather protection with an open-air feel |
| Natural ventilation | Roof design allows airflow without artificial cooling |
| Construction | Entirely privately funded — no public money used |
The stadium’s roof itself is a feat of engineering — translucent, sweeping, and designed to give fans the feeling of being outdoors even while sheltered from sun and weather. Combined with the natural cross-breeze the design allows, SoFi Stadium manages to feel open and contained at the same time.
Similar Reads: MetLife Stadium | AT&T Stadium | Boston Stadium | Estadio Akron
A Knockout-Heavy Schedule
Los Angeles isn’t just getting a taste of the group stage. With two Round of 32 matches and a quarterfinal, this venue carries some of the heaviest knockout stage responsibility on the West Coast.
The June 28 Round of 32 tie could potentially involve Mexico, depending on how Group A plays out, while the July 2 fixture brings together a Group H winner and Group J runner-up. For Southern California’s large Mexican and broader Latin American community, the possibility of seeing Mexico play a knockout match at SoFi Stadium adds another layer of anticipation to an already stacked schedule.
By the time July 10 arrives for the quarterfinal, only eight teams will remain in the entire tournament. Whoever plays that match at SoFi Stadium will be one step from a place in the semifinals.
Similar Reads: Atlanta Stadium | Kansas City Stadium | Houston Stadium
Beyond the SoFi Stadium — Los Angeles Goes All In
The World Cup experience in Los Angeles isn’t confined to the seats inside SoFi Stadium. The city has built an extended celebration around the tournament, including an official FIFA Fan Festival at the LA Memorial Coliseum, giving fans without match tickets a way to be part of the atmosphere — with music, food, and big screens showing live coverage throughout the tournament window.
For a region with one of the most diverse populations in the world, that extended fan experience matters. Every group stage match at SoFi Stadium brings with it a different international community showing up in force — Iranian fans, Swiss and Bosnian supporters, Belgian and New Zealand contingents, alongside the home crowds for both USA matches.
Similar Reads: BC Place Vancouver | Toronto Stadium | Estadio Azteca | Estadio Monterrey
Why Los Angeles Matters in This World Cup
There are 16 host cities across this tournament, but very few combine the volume of matches, the prestige of hosting a host nation’s opener, and genuinely world-leading stadium technology the way Los Angeles does.
Eight matches. The USA’s opening night, played in front of a home crowd that had waited 32 years for this moment, ending in a 4-1 win. Two Round of 32 knockout games. A quarterfinal on July 10. And all of it happening inside a stadium that redefined what “state of the art” means for a sports venue when it opened.
Hollywood has always known how to put on a show. This summer, SoFi Stadium proved it could do the same for the world’s biggest football tournament.

