FIFA has begun informal soundings with US broadcasters following the 2026 Men's World Cup, which delivered viewership figures 15-20% above the federation's pre-tournament projections across both linear television and streaming platforms. Three people familiar with the discussions say Fox Sports, NBCUniversal, and Amazon are already building financial models for a combined 2030-2034 rights package that could command $1.5 billion or more, nearly double the $425 million Fox paid for 2018 and 2022 combined.
The 2026 tournament benefited from expanded inventory—104 matches versus 64 in prior cycles—and three host nations that delivered consistent primetime windows for US audiences. Fox Sports reported an average of 6.2 million viewers across its English-language telecasts, with streaming on Fox Sports app adding another 1.8 million per match during group stage. Spanish-language rights holder Telemundo posted similar lifts. The quarterfinal between the United States and Argentina drew 18.3 million combined viewers, the largest US soccer audience outside a domestic final. FIFA president Gianni Infantino mentioned "north of $2 billion" for the next US cycle during a Zurich meeting in late June, according to two attendees.
The arithmetic matters because FIFA typically bundles Men's World Cup rights with Women's World Cup and other properties, creating a package that rewards scale buyers. Fox currently holds US rights through 2026; its deal expires without automatic renewal. NBC bid aggressively for English Premier League rights in 2021, paying $2.7 billion over six years, and views FIFA as a complementary asset. Amazon, which spent $1 billion annually for Thursday Night Football, has told FIFA it will bid but prefers streaming-exclusive windows rather than simulcast requirements that favored traditional broadcasters in past auctions. Apple Sports has not formally entered discussions but sent two executives to the final in New Jersey, where they sat four rows behind Infantino.
The 2030 World Cup will take place across six countries on three continents—a format that creates scheduling complexity but also unlocks morning and afternoon inventory for US broadcasters seeking to fill non-primetime slots. The 2034 tournament, awarded to Saudi Arabia, will likely require similar daytime coverage, which makes the combined package more attractive to streaming platforms that prioritize always-available content over appointment viewing. One media executive sizing the bid noted that FIFA's asking price assumes continued growth in US youth participation and MLS attendance, both of which have risen since 2022 but face headwinds from fragmentation in sports viewership overall.
FIFA plans to formalize its request for proposals in Q4 2026, with bids due by March 2027 and a decision before the Women's World Cup that summer. The federation is also negotiating separate streaming rights for archive content and shoulder programming, a revenue stream that did not exist in prior cycles.
Watch for Fox to lobby for a first-look matching period, which it secured in 2011 but lost in subsequent renewals. NBC's bid will likely include a Peacock-exclusive window for group stage matches, testing FIFA's willingness to sacrifice linear reach for guaranteed minimums. Amazon's bid structure—whether it includes TNF-style exclusive windows or hybrid arrangements—will signal how aggressively FIFA wants to court streaming-native buyers. The first executive hire at FIFA's New York commercial office, expected in August, will clarify whether the federation intends to run a traditional auction or negotiate bilaterally with incumbent Fox. Infantino's Zurich comment suggests the latter is unlikely.