World Cup 2026 Full Schedule in Australian Time (AEST)

Planning your World Cup viewing requires understanding how North American kickoff times translate to Australian schedules. Unlike European tournaments that produce late-night to early-morning viewing, World Cup 2026 offers significantly better timing for Australian audiences — most matches fall between 5:00 AM and 2:00 PM AEST, meaning early risers and lunch-break viewers can catch live action without sacrificing entire nights of sleep.
This schedule converts all World Cup 2026 fixtures to Australian Eastern Standard Time (AEST, UTC+10). Remember that Australia does not observe daylight saving during June and July, so AEST applies consistently throughout the tournament. Western Australian viewers should subtract two hours for AWST; other time zones adjust accordingly.
Key Dates
The tournament spans 39 days from opening whistle to Final Trophy presentation. Understanding the critical dates helps plan viewing priorities around work schedules, social commitments, and the reality that 104 matches across six weeks requires selective engagement unless you’ve arranged tournament leave from employment.
Opening Match: Mexico vs South Africa — Wednesday, June 11, 2026 (Thursday, June 12, approximately 7:00 AM AEST)
Group Stage: June 11-27, 2026 (June 12-28 AEST for most matches)
Round of 32: June 28 – July 2, 2026 (June 29 – July 3 AEST)
Round of 16: July 3-6, 2026 (July 4-7 AEST)
Quarter-finals: July 9-11, 2026 (July 10-12 AEST)
Semi-finals: July 14-15, 2026 (July 15-16 AEST)
Final: Sunday, July 19, 2026 (Monday, July 20, approximately 6:00 AM AEST)
The tournament structure means Australian weekends align favourably with knockout stage fixtures. Semi-finals fall on weekday nights in North America, translating to mid-week morning viewing in Australia — potentially requiring strategic sick days or understanding employers.
Group Stage Schedule
Group stage matches run from June 11-27, with multiple matches daily throughout this period. Early tournament days feature three or four simultaneous kickoff windows, allowing viewers to choose between matches or switch between broadcasts. Later group stage days feature two windows with final matchday simultaneous kickoffs within each group to prevent dead rubber manipulation.
The schedule below represents typical kickoff windows during group stage. Exact match assignments to specific times will be confirmed closer to the tournament, with Socceroos matches already scheduled to particular venues and approximate times.
Typical Group Stage AEST Windows:
Window 1: 2:00 AM – 4:00 AM AEST (Late evening in Eastern/Central US)
Window 2: 5:00 AM – 7:00 AM AEST (Prime time Eastern US)
Window 3: 8:00 AM – 10:00 AM AEST (Afternoon Eastern/Morning Pacific US)
Window 4: 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM AEST (Morning Pacific US)
Australian viewers benefit from the geographical spread of World Cup venues. West Coast matches (Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles) kick off during Pacific time zone hours that translate to more accessible AEST viewing. East Coast matches (New York, Miami, Boston) occur earlier in AEST terms. Mexican matches add further timing variation.
Socceroos Matches
The Socceroos’ three group stage matches are confirmed for specific venues and approximate times. These fixtures represent Australian punters’ primary interest, with Australia’s World Cup campaign concentrated across three June dates that shape our tournament involvement.
Match 1: Australia vs Türkiye
Date: Saturday, June 14, 2026 (local) — Sunday, June 15, AEST
Kickoff: Approximately 2:00 AM AEST (Saturday evening Vancouver time)
Venue: BC Place, Vancouver, Canada
Broadcast: SBS (Free-to-air), Optus Sport
The Socceroos open against Türkiye in Vancouver, with kickoff falling overnight Saturday-Sunday for Australian viewers. This timing requires dedication — setting alarms for 2:00 AM means sacrificing Saturday night social plans or committing to minimal Sunday morning sleep. The match’s importance as our tournament opener justifies whatever lifestyle adjustments prove necessary.
Match 2: USA vs Australia
Date: Friday, June 19, 2026 (local) — Friday, June 20, AEST
Kickoff: Approximately 5:00 AM AEST (Thursday evening Seattle time)
Venue: Lumen Field, Seattle, USA
Broadcast: SBS (Free-to-air), Optus Sport
The crucial USA match kicks off at 5:00 AM AEST — early enough to catch before work for most schedules, though Friday morning zombies will populate Australian offices regardless. This fixture likely determines whether Socceroos qualification hopes remain alive or require mathematical miracles. The timing works better than our opener, though 5:00 AM still demands commitment.
Match 3: Paraguay vs Australia
Date: Friday, June 26, 2026 (local) — Friday, June 26, AEST
Kickoff: Approximately 12:00 PM AEST (Thursday evening San Francisco time)
Venue: Levi’s Stadium, San Francisco, USA
Broadcast: SBS (Free-to-air), Optus Sport
Our final group match offers the most accessible timing of the three fixtures. Noon AEST means lunch-break viewing, working-from-home flexibility, or annual leave that covers a reasonable hour. By this match, we’ll know exactly what’s required for qualification — the preceding results determine whether we’re playing for survival or pride.
Knockout Stage Schedule
Knockout rounds intensify both stakes and viewing commitment. With elimination football replacing group stage points accumulation, every match carries weight that demands attention. The schedule below outlines typical timing patterns, with specific match allocations dependent on group stage results.
Round of 32 (June 28 – July 2):
16 matches across five days, with multiple daily fixtures. Expect kickoffs ranging from 2:00 AM to 1:00 PM AEST, distributed across available windows. If Australia progress as a third-placed team, our Round of 32 opponent and timing will be determined by final group standings.
Round of 16 (July 3-6):
8 matches across four days, typically two per day. Expect kickoffs around 5:00 AM and 9:00 AM AEST for most fixtures. Weekend dates favour Australian viewing, with July 5-6 (Saturday-Sunday in Australia) offering more accessible scheduling than weekday matches.
Quarter-finals (July 9-11):
4 matches across three days, one or two per day. Expect kickoffs around 6:00 AM and 10:00 AM AEST. These matches fall on weekdays (Thursday-Saturday AEST), requiring annual leave or understanding workplaces for live viewing.
Semi-finals (July 14-15):
2 matches on consecutive days. Expect kickoffs around 6:00 AM AEST for both fixtures. Tuesday-Wednesday viewing (AEST) during work hours tests commitment levels — recording for evening viewing becomes a legitimate strategy if spoiler avoidance proves possible.
Final (July 19):
One match to decide everything. Kickoff approximately 6:00 AM AEST on Monday, July 20. The Final’s timing requires early alarms but falls before typical work start times, allowing viewers to witness the conclusion before heading to employment (or calling in sick after Argentina’s third title in a row).
Time Zones
Understanding the time zone differences between World Cup venues and Australian locations helps plan viewing across the tournament’s geographical spread. All 16 venues operate across three time zones during June and July, with daylight saving further complicating calculations.
AEST (Australian Eastern Standard Time): UTC+10. Applies to NSW, Victoria, Queensland, Tasmania, and ACT during winter months. This guide uses AEST as the reference standard.
AWST (Australian Western Standard Time): UTC+8. Subtract 2 hours from AEST times for Perth and Western Australian viewers.
ACST (Australian Central Standard Time): UTC+9.5. Subtract 30 minutes from AEST times for Adelaide and South Australian viewers.
EDT (US Eastern Daylight Time): UTC-4. Approximately 14 hours behind AEST. Applies to New York, Miami, Boston, Atlanta, and Philadelphia venues.
CDT (US Central Daylight Time): UTC-5. Approximately 15 hours behind AEST. Applies to Dallas, Houston, and Kansas City venues.
PDT (US Pacific Daylight Time): UTC-7. Approximately 17 hours behind AEST. Applies to Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle venues.
Mexico (CDT): UTC-5. Approximately 15 hours behind AEST. Applies to Mexico City, Monterrey, and Guadalajara venues.
Canada (PDT/EDT): Vancouver operates on PDT (17 hours behind AEST), Toronto on EDT (14 hours behind AEST).
Where to Watch in Australia
SBS holds exclusive free-to-air broadcast rights for all 104 World Cup matches in Australia. Every match will be available live through SBS main channel, SBS Viceland, and SBS On Demand streaming platform. This represents comprehensive coverage that ensures no Australian misses any match due to paywall restrictions.
Optus Sport provides supplementary coverage for subscribers, offering alternative commentary options and additional programming around matches. The combination of free-to-air SBS coverage and Optus Sport subscriptions gives Australian viewers multiple access points for tournament content.
SBS On Demand allows streaming on smart TVs, mobile devices, tablets, and computers. The platform offers catch-up viewing for matches you missed live, though knockout stage fixtures demand live viewing for those wishing to avoid spoilers. Data consumption varies by stream quality — plan accordingly if mobile data limits apply.
Public viewing events will likely operate across Australian cities during key matches. Federation Square in Melbourne, Darling Harbour in Sydney, and similar venues traditionally host World Cup viewing experiences that combine football with communal atmosphere. Check local listings as the tournament approaches for specific event details.
For complete tournament coverage including betting odds, team analysis, and expert predictions, visit our World Cup 2026 betting hub.