A star-studded Mexican musical lineup will take the stage at the World Cup opening ceremonies
Mexico City’s marquee 83,000-seat soccer stadium will take global center stage on Thursday, June 11, with a star‑studded World Cup opening ceremony of sound, color and spectacle designed to showcase Mexican culture.
Set to start 90 minutes before the 2026 tournament’s very first game — Mexico vs. South Africa at 1 p.m. — the ceremony will fuse music, dance and tradition, with fans urged to be seated by 11 a.m.
FIFA has announced the Mexican headliners as ranchera and pop legend Alejandro Fernández, Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Lila Downs, Spanish-born pop star Belinda, and the bands Los Ángeles Azules and Maná.
Other stars include South African singer Tyla, Colombian star J Balvin and Venezuelan singer-songwriter Danny Ocean.
The ceremony, to be followed at 12:10 p.m. with team warmups, will take place at “Mexico City Stadium,” the name FIFA is using for Aztec Stadium during the tournament.
Of course, Mexicans continue to call the esteemed edifice Estadio Azteca even though it was rebranded Estadio Banorte last year.
The opening ceremony will put Mexican identity front and center, anchored by the intricate cut‑paper art of papel picado as the visual motif. Indigenous performers and modern folkloric artists will share the field with the global stars, aiming for a show that reads as both a national self‑portrait and a curtain‑raiser for the three‑nation tournament.
The Mexico City ceremony is the first in a trilogy of opening ceremonies.
Italian producer Marco Balich and his Balich Wonder Studio are overseeing all three, with Canada’s ceremony on June 12 in Toronto before Canada vs. Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the U.S. show that same night in Los Angeles ahead of Team USA vs. Paraguay.
Balich describes the shared thread as “the celebration of sports, the passion for soccer, symbolized by the cup itself” interpreted through each country’s aesthetic.
In Mexico City, logistics will be tight around the stadium, where gates will open at 9 a.m. There will be road closures around the venue, including stretches of Calzada de Tlalpan, with access limited to ticketed fans, accredited staff, residents and emergency vehicles.
It will effectively be a public holiday in Mexico City. Mayor Clara Brugada has declared June 11 a day off from preschool through secondary school, and has urged employers to let staff work from home.
Two days later, the festivities will move to Paseo de la Reforma in Mexico City, where the “Great World Cup Parade” on June 13 will blend Mexican popular culture with soccer‑themed floats and performances.
Mexico City will host five games, including one each in the Round of 32 and Round of 16. The second will be Uzbekistan vs. Colombia on June 17.
There will also be four games each in Guadalajara and Monterrey, starting with South Korea vs. Czechia at 8 p.m. June 11 and Sweden vs. Tunisia at 8 p.m June 14, respectively.
The 2026 World Cup will air on official broadcast partners across Mexico, the U.S. and Canada. One free streaming option for the opening ceremony and Mexico City opening match will be Tubi, Fox’s ad-supported service.
With reports from ESPN Mexico, Excélsior, Associated Press and FIFA
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6/4/2026 2:10:17 PM