FIFA will allow broadcasters to air commercials during three-minute hydration breaks in each half of 2026 World Cup matches, confirming a policy that balances player welfare with revenue opportunities. The breaks, held regardless of temperature, provide a roughly 2:10 ad window, with U.S. and UK partners planning varied uses amid fan debate.
FIFA announced in December that all 104 matches of the expanded 48-team 2026 World Cup, hosted by the United States, Canada, and Mexico from June 11 to July 19, will feature mandatory three-minute hydration breaks midway through each half (around the 22nd or 27th minute). Drawing from extreme heat at the 2025 Club World Cup, these referee-called pauses prioritize rehydration irrespective of conditions.
Broadcasters gained flexibility for these intervals: ads can air from 20 seconds after the referee's whistle to over 30 seconds before resumption, yielding a 2-minute-10-second slot. Options include full cutaways (open to non-sponsors), split-screens (FIFA sponsors only, e.g., Aramco, Adidas, Coca-Cola/Powerade, Visa), or staying with live feed/studio analysis. In-stadium branding remains FIFA-controlled, as with 'Powerade hydration breaks' previously.
U.S. rights holder Fox plans to use the time for ads, while Spanish-language Telemundo favors 'on-pitch moments' and coaching stories. 'I am a soccer fan first — meaning, I like to watch the game, and I like to listen to everything that happens, even during hydration breaks,' said Telemundo EVP Joaquin Duro. 'There’s a lot of stories to read with the coaches.' He noted soccer's uniqueness versus quartered sports.
In the UK, ITV is exploring ad integration akin to rugby's Six Nations, but public broadcaster BBC cannot show commercials. Sports sponsorship exec Ricardo Fort highlighted the economics: 'If you are FIFA... is it more profitable to sell this at a premium to a partner? Or give it back to the broadcasters? ... It’s a no-brainer.'
Unlike natural pauses in American football, soccer rarely interrupts, making this novel but divisive. Fans criticize it as greed-driven, disrupting flow; CONMEBOL's similar Copa Libertadores breaks (90 seconds) avoid ads, focusing on content.