Soccer-Tailgating allowed at World Cup matches in Boston, say organisers


A drone view shows Gillette Stadium, which will be called Boston Stadium when it hosts games in the 2026 FIFA World Cup, in Foxborough, Massachusetts, U.S., March 25, 2026. REUTERS/Brian Snyder

April 27 (Reuters) - Boston's World ⁠Cup organising committee announced on Monday that tailgating will ⁠be permitted at this year's matches in the city following ‌a policy clarification from world soccer's governing body FIFA on the North American tradition.

Organisers in Boston had previously indicated that earlier guidance suggested tailgating - the American ​custom of eating and drinking around parked ⁠cars in stadium lots ⁠before games - would not be permitted during the tournament.

FIFA clarified earlier this ⁠month ‌that while it does not formally ban tailgating, local regulations and public safety requirements at individual venues could ⁠mean restrictions.

Boston officials have confirmed tailgating will be ​allowed at the ‌city’s stadium, set to host seven matches during the finals, ⁠as there ​are no local restrictions preventing it.

"Based on prior information ... it was both our understanding and the host venue's understanding that 'no tailgating' was a ⁠tournament-wide FIFA rule," the Boston organising committee ​said in an Instagram post.

"We are pleased to share that tailgating will be permitted at Boston Stadium like any other event hosted at ⁠the stadium."

A long-standing part of the game-day experience in the United States and Canada, particularly at American football, tailgating sees fans gather hours before kickoff to grill food, drink and socialisein parking ​lots outside venues.

The issue sparked debate among ⁠fans after U.S. media reports suggested the practice could be banned across ​World Cup venues.

The U.S. will co-host ‌the expanded 48-team tournament alongside Canada ​and Mexico. It kicks off on June 11.

(Reporting by Janina Nuno Rios in Mexico City; Editing by Ken Ferris)

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