Fifa World Cup 2026 drives $10.5bn ad surge, but with diminshed impact

Fifa World Cup 2026 drives $10.5bn ad surge, but with diminshed impact


While the 2026 Fifa men’s World Cup, expected to inject $10.5bn into the ad market, will be the biggest in the tournament’s history, the World Cup’s measurable contribution to ad growth appears to be weakening, says Warc Media’s latest global advertising trends study.

The fifa World Cup 2026 is predicted to drive $10.5 billion surge in ad spend but ad impact has diminished amid a shifting media landscape (Image supplied)

The World Cup kicks off on 11 June, hosted across Canada, Mexico, and the United States.

Despite more matches than ever before, with large audiences, rising rights fees, and expanding sponsorship packages, advertisers are no longer competing within a single commercial surface but are having to engage with fans across diverse touchpoints beyond traditional broadcast rights.

“This World Cup is no longer just about live matches—brands will engage with fans across touchpoints before, during and after matches have concluded,” says Alex Brownsell, head of content, Warc Media.

“Media plans will include platforms that benefit from the conversation about the World Cup without the burden of bidding for rights – from creator content to podcasts, turning conversations around the games into powerful opportunities for connection and impact.”

  • Fragmented commercial impact

    Warc Media’s Global Ad Trends: Fifa World Cup 2026 report examines how the World Cup has become a high-visibility event whose commercial impact is increasingly fragmented.

    Fifa World Cup 2026 drives $10.5bn ad surge, but with diminshed impact

  • Diminished advertising impact

    The 2026 Fifa World Cup promises record-breaking global audiences and a $40.9bn boost to global GDP, yet its direct impact on ad spend growth is diminishing.

    Warc Media forecasts show a modest $10.5bn uplift into the global ad market during the quarter the event takes place, marking a 1.1% incremental gain versus the Qatar World Cup in 2022.

    In contrast, the 2018 World Cup in Russia drove a $12.6bn (+2.8%) ad market boost.

    Fifa World Cup 2026 drives $10.5bn ad surge, but with diminshed impact

    Annual advertising spend growth during World Cup years is inconsistent, driven more by broader economic cycles than tournament cycles. Even for host markets, the tournament does not guarantee market-level acceleration or outperformance.

    In the US – where soccer competes with popular domestic sports – the World Cup’s effect on ad investment is modest and inconsistent. In most positive years, the impact has been between 0.4-1% of total ad spend.

    Annual ad spend for Mexico, and a similar pattern is visible in Canada, shows no consistent pattern of acceleration in World Cup years. WARC Media’s forecast of approximately +4% for Mexico, is positive, but not exceptional for a host market.

    Fifa World Cup 2026 drives $10.5bn ad surge, but with diminshed impact

  • Shifting audience consumption

    Linear TV audiences are increasingly in decline as multiplatform consumption rises with expanded digital viewing.

    Qatar 2022 reached 2.87 billion people for at least one minute, yet linear reach fell 11.9% versus 2018. Multiplatform consumption rose as digital viewing expanded, particularly in China and India.

    Audience fragmentation will be further highlighted during this upcoming tournament as attention shifts beyond the games to the conversations around games.

    TikTok has become a Fifa partner, and will show behind-the-scenes footage; YouTube, also a preferred platform, will stream live matches from media partners; while platforms such as Netflix are looking to monetise the conversation around the games through video podcasts.

    While tournaments drive TV and OOH revenue, premium pricing often displaces regular advertisers, with gains reflecting spend redistribution rather than market expansion.

    Football remains the world’s most popular sport, with 51% of global respondents identifying as fans.

    During Qatar 2022 viewing levels were highest in Africa, Latin America, and MENA, with engagement far above global averages, while Europe’s largest audiences are concentrated in the UK and Germany.

    In the US, 37% of Americans expect their interest in football to increase over the next 18 months, supporting positive momentum ahead of the 2026 World Cup.

  • Category opportunities beckon from late-night kick-off times

    With many Fifa World Cup 2026 matches airing outside peak viewing hours in Europe, the Middle East, and Asia, live broadcast advertising opportunities may be limited.

    In Western Europe, less than half (42.3%) of games will take place during daytime hours, dropping to just over a third (34.6%) in China.

    Fifa World Cup 2026 drives $10.5bn ad surge, but with diminshed impact

    However, this late-night schedule may yield new opportunities for non-rights holders to capitalise on curated World Cup content with highlights and commentary like podcasts, social media, and publishing.

    It also presents unique opportunities for brands in restricted categories such as quick-service food delivery in the UK, where high fat sugar and salt ads are now subject to restrictions on pre-9 pm airing.

Warc Media subscribers can read the report in full.

A Warc podcast on the findings outlined in the report will be available from 31 March.

Global Ad Trends, part of Warc Media, is a quarterly report which draws on Warc’s dataset of advertising and media intelligence to take a holistic view on current industry developments.



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