2026-04-19

Toronto's BMO Field is 54 days from staging Canada's first men's World Cup match on home soil, and the venue that will be known as Toronto Stadium for the tournament is still working through a final checklist of pitch care, operational rehearsal, and fan-facing rollouts. The City of Toronto and Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment confirmed the completion of a $146 million enhancement package, with the city contributing $123 million and MLSE $23 million. The expanded bowl now seats 45,000 through a 10,000-seat temporary north grandstand and a 7,000-seat south grandstand, and the stadium will host six matches between 12 June and 2 July. For the road to 2026, this matters because host readiness is judged on the quiet details: transit on match day, security perimeters that do not strangle neighbourhoods, and broadcast compounds that do not overwhelm the venue's surroundings.
The most visible work is inside the venue. Four corner LED videoboards, new LED sports lighting and a rebuilt audio system sit alongside international-standard locker rooms, new team dugouts and upgraded broadcast infrastructure. A centre-field lounge, new north suites, and a 1,000-person rooftop patio are positioned as legacy amenities Mayor Olivia Chow described in the City of Toronto release by saying, "Sport brings us together. We are supporting Team Canada while investing in the next generation."
The playing surface is the piece that still draws scrutiny. Canada head coach Jesse Marsch flagged conditions on 31 March after his side drew Iceland three days earlier at BMO Field, telling reporters ahead of the Tunisia friendly, "If it's not perfect this week that's okay, but please make it perfect for the summer for those important matches." The hybrid surface has been tested by winter weather and a busy early-season schedule, and the Toronto Argonauts agreed to move their first three home dates of the 2026 CFL campaign on the road to relieve pressure on the turf. Toronto FC management has said openly that March conditions will not be summer conditions, a point the federation is trusting as handover to FIFA approaches on 12 May.
Off the pitch, Canada Soccer has anchored its fan footprint at Harbourfront Centre. The GE Appliances Canada Soccer House Toronto will run on select dates between 11 June and 2 July with free admission, screening matches alongside live entertainment, vendors and sponsor activations. Kevin Blue, Canada Soccer CEO and general secretary, said in the announcement, "Soccer has the power to reflect who we are as a country, diverse, connected, and united." Visitors planning a trip around the opener or a later fixture will want to build an itinerary that pairs a Toronto Stadium ticket with a day at Harbourfront, and travellers heading west in the group stage can read about Canada's other host city in our Vancouver World Cup guide.
Fixture and logistics detail is firming up in parallel with the physical works. Canada opens on 12 June in Toronto, and Toronto Stadium then holds additional group-stage fixtures before a round of 32 match on 2 July. Readers mapping out a travel schedule can consult our full venues overview for capacity and site-access notes, and the how-to-watch guide for broadcast options on every Canadian kickoff. The next 54 days will settle a lot of open questions, from pitch texture to transit choreography, but the scaffolding of a host-city performance is visibly in place in Toronto.
Related