FIFA’s expansion of the 2026 World Cup into the summer heat of North America has triggered alarm among sports scientists and climate experts. With matches scheduled in cities like Dallas, Houston, and Miami during peak summer months, players and fans face exposure to potentially dangerous heat indices.
In Dallas, where temperatures frequently climb above 100°F (38°C) in June and July, the combination of high humidity and artificial turf inside climate-controlled stadiums creates a unique set of challenges. While the stadiums themselves offer relief, the “fan zones” and outdoor transit corridors remain significant points of concern.
Sports physiologist Dr. Elena Rossi, who has studied athlete performance in extreme conditions, warned that the intensity of tournament-level competition significantly alters how the body manages core temperature. “We aren’t just talking about a casual jog,” Rossi said. “These athletes are performing at their absolute physiological limit. When the ambient temperature hits the triple digits, the human cooling system simply hits a wall.”
FIFA has implemented a mandatory heat-monitoring protocol, allowing referees to pause matches for “cooling breaks” if wet-bulb globe temperatures exceed specific thresholds. Yet, critics argue these measures are reactive rather than preventative. The schedule, which includes afternoon kickoffs in some of the continent’s hottest urban centers, remains the primary point of contention.
The risk extends beyond the pitch. Hundreds of thousands of traveling fans, many unaccustomed to the specific humidity profiles of the American South, face the threat of heat exhaustion and heatstroke. Local emergency services in host cities are already drafting surge-capacity plans, bracing for an influx of heat-related hospitalizations as the tournament progresses.
Organizers maintain that the logistical necessity of hosting 48 teams requires using these specific venues, regardless of the climate. They point to the sophisticated HVAC systems in the stadiums as the primary mitigation strategy.
However, as climate data from the past decade shows a clear trend of increasing heatwaves across the region, the tournament acts as a high-stakes stress test for major event management. The success of the 2026 World Cup may ultimately be measured not just by the scorelines, but by whether the organizers can keep the heat from becoming the defining story of the games.
