The Angus Reid Forum USA

How Gen Z really feel about the 2026 FIFA World Cup

The 2026 FIFA World Cup arrives on North American soil for the first time in 32 years.
It could become the cultural moment of a generation. But today, just 45% of Gen Z, the single most interested generation in the country, claim to be keeping tabs on the World Cup. There’s curiosity but not compulsion.


So what can FIFA do to could change this from a curiosity to a phenomenon? It’s starts with embracing digital and social to drive deeper engagement with Gen Z. Read on the find out more.

Top 3 findings

Before we get into the data, here are the top three findings that define
Gen Z’s relationship with FIFA 2026.

0%

say social media will shape how people experience the tournament, making FIFA 2026 a digital-first cultural moment.

0%

say hosting the World Cup in North America makes them more interested, showing local relevance is a major engagement driver.

0%

say being able to attend matches or local events would boost their interest, double the national rate.

So, who’s more engaged at this moment?

% currently keeping up, by generation

Gen Z Gen Millennials Gen X Boomers

How are Gen Zs following the World Cup content?

Scroll Triggered Horizontal Bar Graph
Social media or short videos
35%
Friends and family
27%
TV Sports news
20%
Official accounts
14%
Youtube/podcast
10%

54% of Gen Z say hosting boosts their interest.

Hosting the World Cup in North America is one of the strongest engagement drivers among Gen Z. More than half say it increases their interest, indicating the challenge is not generating awareness, but turning that interest into participation.

Optimistic and online generation

Gen Z’s read on the event is more positive — and more digital — than other generations.

78%

say social media is how most people will experience it

58%

see it becoming a major US sports moment

48%

are more likely to follow than past World Cups

Starting from a more open place.

Gen Z is showing more early openness to the 2026 World Cup.
While Millennials are the second most engaged generation when it comes to keeping up with tournament content, they are also significantly more likely than Gen Z to say they are not at all interested in the tournament (34% vs. 20%). That suggests Gen Z is starting from a more receptive place, even before the tournament begins.

What would increase interest among Gen Z?

30%

Games being easy and convenient to watch

30%

Seeing a lot of social buzz, friends, conversations

24%

Being able to attend matches or local events

20%

The US men’s team having a strong tournament

Gen Z
 are the audience with the most momentum.

They lead all generations in current content engagement (55%) and interest (48%), but their fandom is being shaped differently: through highlights, memes, social buzz, friends, and culturally relevant moments.

With 54% saying North American hosting makes them more interested, the opportunity is clear: Gen Z is already leaning in — now the World Cup needs to give them more reasons to show up.

Methodology

Sample n=1,000

American adults, aged 18 and older.

For this study, a nationally representative sample of n=1,000 American adults (age 18+ yrs.) who are members of the Angus Reid Forum.

The sample frame was balanced and weighted on age, gender, and region according to the latest census data.
For comparison purposes only, a probability sample of this size would yield a margin of error of +/- 2.5 percentage points at a 95% confidence level.

Field Window: May 7 – May 11, 2026

A study commissioned by Angus Reid to understand Americans’ pre-tournament participation, interest, behaviors and attitudes for the upcoming 2026 FIFA
World Cup.

Definitions

  • Gen Z (18-28)
  • Millennial (29-44)
  • Gen X (45-64)
  • Baby Boomers (65+)