The 2025 FIFA Club World Cup will be held in 12 stadiums across the United States, with the July 13 final set for MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, the soccer governing body announced in New York on Saturday.
The country will see 32 of the best club soccer teams in the world — like Real Madrid, Manchester City, Bayern Munich, Paris Saint-Germain, Inter Milan and Al Hilal — play in a tournament to be crowned the best.
Consider it a precursor to the 2026 FIFA World Cup, which will be jointly hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico.
Along with the site locations, 30 of 32 teams have already earned spots in the Club World Cup. The United States will produce a host club; the remaining club will hail from South America.
Here’s everything you need to know about next year's FIFA Club World Cup:
The tournament begins on June 15 with the final set for July 13. The Club World Cup final will be played at the same site as the 2026 World Cup final.
Here’s the stadium sites announced Saturday:
One of the two undecided teams will be a team that represents the United States, the host country. This seems like a two-team race.
Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami is an obvious choice. Messi, considered the world’s best player, is in the twilight of his career playing for an American team. He’ll be playing in the final year of his current contract. And he would undoubtedly be the tournament’s biggest attraction outside of Real Madrid stars Kylian Mbappe, Vinicius Junior and Jude Bellingham. Although Inter Miami won the 2023 Leagues Cup, the club might have to win either the MLS Supporters’ Shield and/or the 2024 MLS Cup to qualify for the Club Word Cup.
Another leading choice is the Columbus Crew, the reigning MLS Cup champions and 2024 Leagues Cup winners. The Crew has been the best MLS team over the last year, but fell to Pachuca in the 2024 Concacaf Champions Cup final, a match that would have qualified them for the Club World Cup.
Here are the 30 teams that have already qualified for the tournament, and how they qualified:
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A pair of back-to-back storms were forecast to dump heavy snow and rain over parts of the Pacific No
Joe Armstrong, owner of radio station WJBE in Knoxville
Every day, nearly 18,000 diesel-powered trucks barrel along State Route 60 in Jurupa Valley, a small