About the World Cup 2026 Viewing Party Radar
Last updated 2026-06-06
The World Cup Viewing Party Radar is a free, public map of
bars, pubs, restaurants and venues hosting FIFA World Cup 2026 viewing parties. It currently
tracks 1,412 venues showing the games across
69 cities in 28 countries, including all
16 North American host cities. Every venue links back to the public
post where it announced it would show the World Cup, so you can check the receipts before you
head out.
How it works
We analyse millions of public social posts and venue websites in multiple
languages and surface the places that have genuinely committed to showing World Cup 2026. A
venue is marked as a viewing party when there is real evidence you can watch there, a
public announcement of a screening, a scheduled match party, or viewing language on its own
website. Venues that mention the World Cup but have not yet confirmed a screening appear as a
lighter on the radar signal. Confirmed venues always rank first.
For New York and Amsterdam the radar goes deeper, with match-by-match
schedules and the teams each venue supports, so you can filter to a specific game day or back
your own side.
Where the data comes from
Every listing is backed by a real, public source and linked so you can
verify it. We keep only hospitality venues, bars, pubs, restaurants, hotels and event spaces,
and exclude retail stores, offices and other places that are not somewhere you would watch a
match. The list is refreshed on demand and grows as kickoff nears.
Popular cities
See all 69 cities on the radar
Frequently asked questions
- What is the World Cup 2026 Viewing Party Radar?
- It is a free, public map of bars, pubs, restaurants and venues hosting FIFA World Cup 2026 viewing parties. It currently covers 1,412 venues showing the games across 69 cities in 28 countries, including all 16 North American host cities. Pick your city and see every spot on a live map, each one linked to the public post where it announced it would show the World Cup.
- How do I find a World Cup viewing party near me?
- Open the radar, and it auto-selects the nearest covered city. You can switch cities from the dropdown at the top. Each venue shows its location, a Google Maps link, its rating, and the original post announcing the screening. In Amsterdam and New York you can also filter by match day and by the team a venue supports.
- What is the difference between a viewing party and 'on the radar'?
- A 'viewing party' (or 'scheduled') venue has confirmed evidence that you can watch the games there: a public post announcing a screening, a scheduled match party, or viewing language on its own website. An 'on the radar' venue has posted World Cup content but has not yet confirmed a screening, so it is a lighter, less certain signal. The list always ranks confirmed venues first.
- How is the data collected and verified?
- We analyse millions of public social posts and venue websites in multiple languages, then keep only the venues with genuine evidence they will show the World Cup. Each venue links back to the original public post or website as proof, so you can check the receipts yourself. We exclude retail stores, offices and other non-hospitality places, and refresh the list on demand as kickoff nears.
- Which cities and host cities are covered?
- The radar covers 69 cities across 28 countries, including all 16 of the United States, Canada and Mexico host cities, plus major football cities worldwide such as London, Amsterdam, Tokyo and Sao Paulo. We add cities as more venues announce viewing parties.
- Is it free, and who built it?
- Yes, it is completely free to use. It was built by Dashmote, a data company that maps where brands win at the point of consumption. The radar runs on DashLeads, the same outlet-intelligence engine Dashmote uses to find and rank the venues that matter to any company selling into the local economy, in any city, on demand.
- Why does this matter for brands?
- Venues that host World Cup viewing parties are among the highest-energy on-premise accounts of the year, and they announce their plans publicly weeks before kickoff. DashLeads turns that public demand signal into a ranked, contactable account list for any city, so any company selling into the local economy can reach them where the crowds already are.
Built by Dashmote
The radar was built by Dashmote, a data company that maps where brands win at the point of
consumption. It runs on DashLeads, the outlet-intelligence engine Dashmote uses to find
and rank the venues that matter to any company selling into the local economy, in any city,
on demand. Venues that host viewing parties are some of the highest-energy local accounts of
the year, and DashLeads turns that public demand into a ranked, contactable account list, for
food and beverage brands, but equally for any business selling into bars, restaurants and
local venues.
Ready to explore? Open the live World Cup Viewing Party Radar.