The last time the FIFA World Cup was held in the United States, Bill Clinton was in his first term, Netscape was about to launch, and the internet was not yet part of how businesses found their customers. That was 1994. What happened to the American economy that summer is worth understanding — because it’s about to happen again, at a scale nobody in 1994 could have imagined.
The 2026 World Cup runs from June 11 to July 19 across 11 U.S. cities, three countries, and 104 games — the largest tournament in the history of the sport. A pre-tournament study by Boston Consulting Group projects more than $5 billion in short-term economic activity across North America — a figure that, like most mega-event projections, should be read as an upper-bound estimate rather than a guarantee. The U.S. is projected to receive 1.24 million additional international visitors across host cities — most of them arriving with strong currencies, long itineraries, and spending habits that look nothing like the typical American consumer.
Boston is a host city. So are Miami, Dallas, New York, Los Angeles, Seattle, San Francisco, Kansas City, Philadelphia, Atlanta, and Houston.
This is national demand surging with a very specific time window attached to it.
What happened in 1994
The tournament drew over 3.5 million fans to stadiums across nine U.S. cities — the highest attendance in World Cup history, a record that still stands. Hotels in host cities like New York, Boston, and San Francisco reported revenue gains of approximately 10% compared to the same period the prior year; food and beverage businesses saw gains closer to 15%. Some individual markets, including Los Angeles, saw direct economic gains in the hundreds of millions.
But the cities that saw the least benefit shared a common trait: they were already at capacity with existing summer demand, or they failed to position themselves specifically for international visitors. The opportunity didn’t miss them — they missed the opportunity.
The gap wasn’t product quality. It wasn’t location. It was visibility and readiness.
Three moves to turn the World Cup into your business opportunity
01
Be visible where international visitors are already searching
International travelers search differently than domestic ones. They use different platforms and look for signals of trust that locals take for granted — reviews, clear pricing, fast response times, easy booking. By the time the tournament starts, the research is already done. The window to be found is now, not in June.
02
Treat the 40-day window as a sprint, not a brand campaign
The World Cup window is roughly 40 days. That’s not enough time to build awareness — it’s only enough time to capture demand that already exists. Businesses that wait for the opening match to start promoting are introducing themselves to visitors who already made their choices. The work that converts in July starts in May.
03
Don’t assume this opportunity is only for hotels and restaurants
The demand wave from an event like this moves through far more sectors than the obvious ones: legal and financial services for international business meetings, healthcare and wellness, real estate, logistics, B2B hospitality for corporate client entertainment. If your business serves people — locally or internationally — there’s a version of this opportunity that applies to you.
The 2026 World Cup starts in a few weeks. The businesses that prepared in Q1 are already fielding inbound interest from sponsors, hospitality partners, and international visitors doing early research. The ones that haven’t started yet are not too late — but the window is narrowing, and it won’t reopen for at least another four years.
The event will bring opportunity to your market. The question is whether your business will be visible and ready when it does.
What does your business look like to someone who just arrived in your city and is searching for what you offer?
Volp Agency
1.24 million visitors are coming.
Make sure they find you first.
For more than five years, we’ve helped established businesses stop relying on referrals and build a predictable system for bringing in new clients — through targeted campaigns on Google and Meta that put your business in front of buyers who are already looking for what you sell.
*1 FIFA official. Tournament dates: June 11 – July 19, 2026. Format: 48 teams, 104 matches, 16 host cities (11 in the U.S., 3 in Canada, 2 in Mexico).
*2 Boston Consulting Group (BCG), February 2018. Pre-bid economic impact study commissioned for the United 2026 candidacy. Projected $5+ billion in gross short-term economic activity across North America; individual U.S. host cities estimated at $160–$620 million each. Independent economists note that mega-event projections of this type tend to overestimate actual impact by 30–40%.
*3 Focus on Travel News / BCG, 2026. 5–7 million international visitors projected across all three host nations; 1.24 million additional international arrivals specifically for U.S. host cities (~60% classified as incremental trips).
*4 FIFA historical data. 1994 World Cup: 3,587,538 total attendance across 52 matches; average of 68,991 per game — both figures remain records as of 2026.
*5 Economics of the FIFA World Cup (Wikipedia, citing Baade & Matheson and historical reports). New York City, San Francisco, and Boston combined: $1.045 billion in revenue during the tournament period. Hotel revenue in host cities up approximately 10% vs. same period in 1993; food and beverage revenue up approximately 15%.