FIFA World Cup stadiums ranked, with Mercedes-Benz and Lumen Field tied for top spot
The rankings highlight the growing importance of stadium design and fan experience in shaping the future of global sports events. The post FIFA World Cup stadiums ranked, with Mercedes-Benz and Lumen Field tied for top spot appeared first on Crypto Briefing.

FIFA World Cup stadiums ranked, with Mercedes-Benz and Lumen Field tied for top spot The New York Times rated all 16 venues across three countries ahead of the 2026 tournament, and Atlanta and Seattle came out on top. Share Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jun. 18, 2026 The 2026 FIFA World Cup is shaping up to be the biggest logistical experiment in soccer history: 48 teams, 16 stadiums, three countries.
The New York Times ranked all 16 World Cup stadiums based on atmosphere, location, and suitability for soccer, and two venues ended up sharing the crown. Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta and Lumen Field in Seattle tied for the top spot. What the rankings actually measured The evaluation came down to three core criteria: atmosphere, location, and how well the stadium works for soccer specifically.
Mercedes-Benz Stadium, which opened in 2017, was purpose-built with soccer in mind from the start. It’s home to Atlanta United in MLS. Add a retractable roof that eliminates weather concerns and a 360-degree video board, and you get a venue that checks nearly every box.
Advertisement Lumen Field in Seattle, which opened in 2002, holds roughly 69,000 to 72,000 fans for soccer configurations and has built a reputation as one of the loudest venues in North American sports. Seattle’s Sounders consistently draw some of the highest attendance figures in MLS. How other outlets see it USA Today published its own rankings on June 9, putting Mercedes-Benz Stadium at number one.
Lumen Field landed at fifth in that assessment. Sports Illustrated, which released rankings on June 10, placed Lumen Field fourth. None of these rankings carry any official FIFA endorsement.
They’re media exercises with differing criteria, different weights, and different conclusions. Mercedes-Benz Stadium is widely expected to host multiple games, potentially including knockout-stage fixtures. The bigger picture: a three-nation experiment The 2026 World Cup will be the first tournament co-hosted by three nations.
The US, Canada, and Mexico are splitting duties across a geographic footprint that stretches thousands of miles. The expanded 48-team format is itself historic, representing the largest World Cup field ever assembled. More teams means more games across 16 venues.
What this means for fans and the tournament Atlanta’s stadium offers a retractable roof, meaning no weather delays, no baking in July heat, no rain-soaked pitches affecting play quality. Lumen Field accommodates 69,000 to 72,000 fans and has a supporter culture built over two decades in a stadium specifically known for generating noise. Multiple independent media rankings converge on these two venues, even if they disagree on the exact order, with Mercedes-Benz Stadium favored for its contemporary features and Lumen Field climbing higher when atmosphere carries more weight in the formula.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy. SOCCER FIFA World Cup stadiums ranked, with Mercedes-Benz and Lumen Field tied for top spot The New York Times rated all 16 venues across three countries ahead of the 2026 tournament, and Atlanta and Seattle came out on top.
by Editorial Team Jun. 18, 2026 Share Add us on Google The 2026 FIFA World Cup is shaping up to be the biggest logistical experiment in soccer history: 48 teams, 16 stadiums, three countries. The New York Times ranked all 16 World Cup stadiums based on atmosphere, location, and suitability for soccer, and two venues ended up sharing the crown.
Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta and Lumen Field in Seattle tied for the top spot. What the rankings actually measured The evaluation came down to three core criteria: atmosphere, location, and how well the stadium works for soccer specifically. Mercedes-Benz Stadium, which opened in 2017, was purpose-built with soccer in mind from the start.
It’s home to Atlanta United in MLS. Add a retractable roof that eliminates weather concerns and a 360-degree video board, and you get a venue that checks nearly every box. Advertisement Lumen Field in Seattle, which opened in 2002, holds roughly 69,000 to 72,000 fans for soccer configurations and has built a reputation as one of the loudest venues in North American sports.
Seattle’s Sounders consistently draw some of the highest attendance figures in MLS. How other outlets see it USA Today published its own rankings on June 9, putting Mercedes-Benz Stadium at number one. Lumen Field landed at fifth in that assessment.
Sports Illustrated, which released rankings on June 10, placed Lumen Field fourth. None of these rankings carry any official FIFA endorsement. They’re media exercises with differing criteria, different weights, and different conclusions.
Mercedes-Benz Stadium is widely expected to host multiple games, potentially including knockout-stage fixtures. The bigger picture: a three-nation experiment The 2026 World Cup will be the first tournament co-hoste
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