The FIFA World Cup officially kicks off today, starting with Mexico vs South Africa in Mexico City and Korea Republic vs Czechia in Guadalajara! To help monitor potential public health risks, CEID has created a map showing mass gatherings near stadiums.
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Instructions on how to navigate this map below, click to expand.
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The FIFA World Cup Baseline Disease Intelligence Maps serve as a practical, high-level guide to help you visualize how major tournament elements and public health factors overlap. By mapping out team locations, stadium sites, transportation hubs, and secondary events, these maps act as a baseline visual for how large crowds and infrastructure may connect.
○To customize your view: Click the red checkboxes next to any layer to add or remove it from the map.
○To view specific data: Click the toggle under any layer name to expand a complete list of values within that layer.
○To see more detail: Click any icon directly on the map to open a pop-up window. The additional information provided in these pop-ups is standardized across each layer for easy, consistent reading.
The Concurrent Events Map is a general guide to help you track where other massive crowds might cross paths with World Cup traffic. It uses eight layers to organize events by venue, date, and crowd size. This includes all 16 Official Stadiums, all Official FIFA Fan Festivals, and all scheduled matches broken down by date within June and July layers. Other local festivals and conventions are grouped into four clear sizes: Small (2k–9.9k), Medium (10k–49.9k), Large (50k–249.9k), and Mega (250k+), giving you a quick reference for where and when the heaviest regional foot traffic may be.
*All data were last updated as of 26 May 2026, and is based on the best available data, information, and knowledge.