World Cup 2026 Full Schedule in AEST: Every Match, Every Kick-Off Time for Australian Fans

One hundred and four matches across 39 days, scattered between Vancouver and Mexico City, and you need to know exactly when to set your alarm. The World Cup 2026 schedule spans three countries and four time zones, but for Australian viewers, one question matters: what time does this kick off in AEST? I’ve converted every match — group stage through Final — so you can plan your mornings, book your leave, and never miss a crucial moment of the biggest football tournament ever staged.
Socceroos Match Times: All Three Group D Games in AEST
Let’s start with what matters most. Australia’s Group D fixtures fall on the US West Coast, the most AEST-friendly region of all host cities. This wasn’t random — FIFA’s scheduling considered broadcast audiences, and the Pacific Time Zone venues deliver afternoon football for Australian viewers.
| Date | Match | Stadium | City | AEST |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Saturday 14 June | Australia vs Turkey | BC Place | Vancouver | 2:00 PM |
| Thursday 19 June | USA vs Australia | Lumen Field | Seattle | 5:00 AM |
| Wednesday 25 June | Paraguay vs Australia | Levi’s Stadium | San Francisco | 12:00 PM |
The opener against Turkey lands on a Saturday afternoon — no work conflicts, no early alarms, just pure viewing convenience. The USA match demands commitment: 5:00 AM Thursday means setting alarms and potentially calling in late. The final group game against Paraguay returns to lunchtime territory, perfect for extended breaks or leaving early. Of the three fixtures, two are genuinely convenient; one requires sacrifice. That’s a better deal than most World Cups deliver Australian fans.
SBS broadcasts all Socceroos matches free-to-air with pre-match coverage beginning approximately 30 minutes before kick-off. Set your recording devices as backup, but these times are designed for live viewing — afternoon Saturday, early Thursday, lunchtime Wednesday creates a rhythm you can plan around.
Group Stage Week 1: 11-17 June
The tournament opens on Wednesday 11 June with Mexico vs South Africa at Estadio Azteca. By Sunday 17 June, all 48 teams will have played at least once. Here’s Week 1 in AEST:
| Date | Match | Group | AEST |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wed 11 June | Mexico vs South Africa | A | 9:00 AM |
| Wed 11 June | South Korea vs Czechia | A | 12:00 PM |
| Thu 12 June | Canada vs Bosnia and Herzegovina | B | 4:00 AM |
| Thu 12 June | Switzerland vs Qatar | B | 7:00 AM |
| Thu 12 June | Brazil vs Scotland | C | 10:00 AM |
| Thu 12 June | Morocco vs Haiti | C | 1:00 PM |
| Fri 13 June | USA vs Paraguay | D | 5:00 AM |
| Fri 13 June | Germany vs Curaçao | E | 8:00 AM |
| Fri 13 June | Côte d’Ivoire vs Ecuador | E | 11:00 AM |
| Sat 14 June | Australia vs Turkey | D | 2:00 PM |
| Sat 14 June | Netherlands vs Tunisia | F | 5:00 AM |
| Sat 14 June | Japan vs Sweden | F | 8:00 AM |
| Sat 14 June | Belgium vs New Zealand | G | 11:00 AM |
| Sun 15 June | Egypt vs Iran | G | 4:00 AM |
| Sun 15 June | Spain vs Uruguay | H | 7:00 AM |
| Sun 15 June | Cabo Verde vs Saudi Arabia | H | 10:00 AM |
| Sun 15 June | France vs Senegal | I | 5:00 AM |
| Mon 16 June | Iraq vs Norway | I | 8:00 AM |
| Mon 16 June | Argentina vs Jordan | J | 11:00 AM |
| Mon 16 June | Algeria vs Austria | J | 2:00 PM |
| Tue 17 June | Portugal vs Colombia | K | 5:00 AM |
| Tue 17 June | DR Congo vs Uzbekistan | K | 8:00 AM |
| Tue 17 June | England vs Panama | L | 11:00 AM |
| Tue 17 June | Croatia vs Ghana | L | 2:00 PM |
Week 1 delivers 24 matches across seven days, with AEST kick-offs ranging from 4:00 AM to 2:00 PM. The pattern emerges: East Coast American matches land around 5:00-9:00 AM AEST, Central venues around 8:00-11:00 AM, Mexican matches around 9:00 AM-12:00 PM, and West Coast fixtures from 12:00-2:00 PM. Planning your week around these windows saves scrambling for each matchday.
Group Stage Week 2: 18-24 June
Matchday 2 across all groups, with teams beginning to separate into qualification contenders and eliminated hopefuls. The Socceroos face the USA in the marquee fixture for Australian interest.
| Date | Match | Group | AEST |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wed 18 June | Mexico vs Czechia | A | 9:00 AM |
| Wed 18 June | South Africa vs South Korea | A | 12:00 PM |
| Wed 18 June | Canada vs Qatar | B | 5:00 AM |
| Thu 19 June | Switzerland vs Bosnia and Herzegovina | B | 8:00 AM |
| Thu 19 June | USA vs Australia | D | 5:00 AM |
| Thu 19 June | Paraguay vs Turkey | D | 8:00 AM |
| Thu 19 June | Brazil vs Haiti | C | 11:00 AM |
| Thu 19 June | Argentina vs Algeria | J | 9:00 AM |
| Fri 20 June | Morocco vs Scotland | C | 5:00 AM |
| Fri 20 June | Germany vs Ecuador | E | 8:00 AM |
| Fri 20 June | Côte d’Ivoire vs Curaçao | E | 11:00 AM |
| Fri 20 June | Mexico vs South Korea | A | 6:00 AM |
| Sat 21 June | Netherlands vs Sweden | F | 5:00 AM |
| Sat 21 June | Japan vs Tunisia | F | 8:00 AM |
| Sat 21 June | Belgium vs Iran | G | 11:00 AM |
| Sat 21 June | Egypt vs New Zealand | G | 2:00 PM |
| Sun 22 June | Spain vs Saudi Arabia | H | 5:00 AM |
| Sun 22 June | Cabo Verde vs Uruguay | H | 8:00 AM |
| Sun 22 June | France vs Iraq | I | 5:00 AM |
| Mon 23 June | Senegal vs Norway | I | 8:00 AM |
| Mon 23 June | Argentina vs Austria | J | 11:00 AM |
| Mon 23 June | Algeria vs Jordan | J | 2:00 PM |
| Tue 24 June | Portugal vs Uzbekistan | K | 5:00 AM |
| Tue 24 June | DR Congo vs Colombia | K | 8:00 AM |
| Tue 24 June | England vs Ghana | L | 11:00 AM |
| Tue 24 June | Croatia vs Panama | L | 2:00 PM |
USA vs Australia at 5:00 AM Thursday 19 June represents the toughest scheduling ask for Australian fans during the group stage. The match determines whether Australia realistically competes for qualification or faces must-win pressure against Paraguay. Worth the early alarm.
Group Stage Week 3: 25 June – 1 July
Final matchday for all groups, where simultaneous kick-offs prevent collusion and create pure drama. Paraguay vs Australia on Wednesday 25 June could decide the Socceroos’ World Cup fate.
| Date | Match | Group | AEST |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wed 25 June | Paraguay vs Australia | D | 12:00 PM |
| Wed 25 June | Turkey vs USA | D | 12:00 PM |
| Thu 26 June | South Korea vs Mexico | A | 6:00 AM |
| Thu 26 June | Czechia vs South Africa | A | 6:00 AM |
| Thu 26 June | Bosnia and Herzegovina vs Canada | B | 12:00 PM |
| Thu 26 June | Qatar vs Switzerland | B | 12:00 PM |
| Fri 27 June | Scotland vs Brazil | C | 6:00 AM |
| Fri 27 June | Haiti vs Morocco | C | 6:00 AM |
| Fri 27 June | Ecuador vs Germany | E | 12:00 PM |
| Fri 27 June | Curaçao vs Côte d’Ivoire | E | 12:00 PM |
| Fri 27 June | Argentina vs Jordan | J | 6:00 AM |
| Sat 28 June | Sweden vs Netherlands | F | 6:00 AM |
| Sat 28 June | Tunisia vs Japan | F | 6:00 AM |
| Sat 28 June | Iran vs Belgium | G | 12:00 PM |
| Sat 28 June | New Zealand vs Egypt | G | 12:00 PM |
| Sun 29 June | Uruguay vs Spain | H | 6:00 AM |
| Sun 29 June | Saudi Arabia vs Cabo Verde | H | 6:00 AM |
| Sun 29 June | Norway vs France | I | 12:00 PM |
| Sun 29 June | Senegal vs Iraq | I | 12:00 PM |
| Mon 30 June | Austria vs Argentina | J | 6:00 AM |
| Mon 30 June | Jordan vs Algeria | J | 6:00 AM |
| Mon 30 June | Colombia vs Portugal | K | 12:00 PM |
| Mon 30 June | Uzbekistan vs DR Congo | K | 12:00 PM |
| Tue 1 July | Ghana vs England | L | 6:00 AM |
| Tue 1 July | Panama vs Croatia | L | 6:00 AM |
Paraguay vs Australia at 12:00 PM AEST Wednesday represents ideal scheduling for the decisive fixture. Lunch break viewing, potential afternoon celebrations or commiserations. Both Group D matches kick off simultaneously, so you’ll need a second screen to track Turkey vs USA while watching the Socceroos.
Knockout Stage Schedule: 2-19 July
Once groups conclude, the bracket determines everything. Thirty-two teams advance to the Round of 32, with matches distributed across venues based on FIFA’s predetermined draw mapping. Times below represent typical AEST windows; exact schedules depend on which teams qualify.
| Dates | Round | Matches | Typical AEST Windows |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2-5 July | Round of 32 | 16 | 5:00 AM – 12:00 PM |
| 6-9 July | Round of 16 | 8 | 5:00 AM – 11:00 AM |
| 11-12 July | Quarter-Finals | 4 | 6:00 AM – 10:00 AM |
| 15-16 July | Semi-Finals | 2 | 8:00 AM |
| 18 July | Third-Place Match | 1 | 8:00 AM |
| 19 July | Final | 1 | 8:00 AM |
The knockout rounds concentrate at US venues, meaning more consistent AEST scheduling. All Quarter-Finals onward occur at East Coast American stadiums, with 8:00 PM local kick-offs translating to 8:00-10:00 AM AEST. The Final at MetLife Stadium kicks off at 8:00 AM AEST Sunday 19 July — potentially the most-watched Sunday morning broadcast in Australian sports history.
Viewing Tips: Planning Your Mornings and Leave
Watching every World Cup match requires strategy. One hundred and four games across six weeks, with Australian kick-offs predominantly falling between 4:00 AM and 2:00 PM AEST, demands either flexible employment or creative time management.
Consider booking annual leave around the Socceroos fixtures and marquee knockout matches. The cluster from 14-25 June covers Australia’s group stage; taking that fortnight off ensures you catch every meaningful Australian moment plus surrounding entertainment. The Final week (13-19 July) delivers Semi-Finals and Final on consecutive weekends — strategic sick days or working-from-home arrangements fill the gaps.
Early morning matches (4:00-6:00 AM AEST) challenge sleep schedules but reward commitment. Set an alarm for 3:45 AM, watch the first half, sleep through half-time, catch the second half, then prepare for work. It sounds punishing but becomes routine after a week. The adrenaline of live knockout football compensates for coffee dependency.
Recording matches for later viewing works but sacrifices the live experience. Social media spoilers, workplace conversations, and push notifications make maintaining ignorance nearly impossible for significant games. The effort required to avoid results often exceeds the effort required to simply watch live.
Federation Square in Melbourne, Circular Quay in Sydney, and equivalent public spaces across Australian cities typically host official fan zones with big-screen broadcasts. These communal viewing experiences enhance atmosphere, particularly for Socceroos matches and the Final. Check local council announcements closer to June for specific locations and schedules.
The Socceroos World Cup 2026 page provides detailed analysis of Australia’s group stage outlook beyond the schedule basics covered here.