Toronto Stadium
BMO Field Stadium
5 x Group Matches
1 x Round of 32
Events at Toronto Stadium
- Sep 27, 2025SAT•04:30 PMSep27sat04:30 PM - Toronto FC vs. Inter Miami CFBMO Field, Toronto, CA●13 People Viewing Right Now
- Oct 18, 2025SAT•06:00 PMOct18sat06:00 PM - Toronto FC vs. Orlando City SCBMO Field, Toronto, CA
- Nov 15, 2025SAT•02:00 PMNov15sat02:00 PM - NSL FinalBMO Field, Toronto, CA
- Jun 12, 2026FRI•(TBD)Jun12fri(TBD) - World Cup 26: Group Stage - Match 03BMO Field, Toronto, CA●20 People Viewing Right Now●3 Tickets Left!
- Jun 17, 2026WED•(TBD)Jun17wed(TBD) - World Cup 26: Group Stage - Match 21BMO Field, Toronto, CA●12 People Viewing Right Now●9 Tickets Left!
- Jun 20, 2026SAT•(TBD)Jun20sat(TBD) - World Cup 26: Group Stage - Match 33BMO Field, Toronto, CA●11 People Viewing Right Now●9 Tickets Left!
- Jun 23, 2026TUE•(TBD)Jun23tue(TBD) - World Cup 26: Group Stage - Match 46BMO Field, Toronto, CA●9 Tickets Left!
- Jun 26, 2026FRI•(TBD)Jun26fri(TBD) - World Cup 26: Group Stage - Match 62BMO Field, Toronto, CA●9 Tickets Left!
- Jul 2, 2026THU•(TBD)Jul2thu(TBD) - World Cup 26: Round of 32 - Match 83BMO Field, Toronto, CA●9 Tickets Left!
- Capacity: 45,736
- Location: Toronto ON
- Distance to City: 2 miles
- Opened: 2007
- Roof Type: Open
- Leagues: MLS, CFL
- FIFA Renovations: $146M
- Avg Temp: 77°F
- Climate Control: No
- Public Transit: Yes
- Cashless: Yes
How do I get to BMO Field?
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The Game Plan
Welcome to the fortress of Canadian men’s soccer. Since opening in 2007 as the country’s first purpose built stadium for professional fútbol, Toronto FC’s home has also provided a home base for Les Rouge home games. But 2026 will mark the first time in history that Canada has hosted a World Cup match on home soil, and BMO Field will contain the hopes and dreams of the entire country as the Reds take the pitch on June 12th for their inaugural match.
The intimate, 30,000-seat space is being turned into a 45,736 capacity battledome for six total matches through an ingenious $146 million expansion, adding temporary grandstands without sacrificing the venue’s soccer soul. With the north and south ends temporarily enclosed, BMO will become an acoustic amplifier for not only a home nation hungry for international validation, but every visiting fan base making the trip to the Great White North’s largest and most diverse city.
SEATING GUIDE
LOWER BOWL
The intimate bowl design puts you right on top of the action, with the closest seats reportedly close enough to hear players calling for the ball. Sections 112-118 are typically supporter territory, where drums never stop and the standing sections create walls of noise. The lakefront location means temperatures run several degrees cooler than the rest of Toronto, so bring an extra layer even in July.
CLUB & PREMIUM LEVELS
Added during a 2016 expansion, the Club sections benefit from the canopy roof that shields you from summer sun and sudden showers. Meanwhile, the venue's luxury suites and executive boxes occupy dedicated levels, with the Rogers Club's 700-capacity space in section 123 offering all-inclusive dining. The KLM Tunnel Club at field level sits steps from the Toronto FC locker room, so you can watch players walk on to the pitch.
TEMP WC26 SECTIONS
Spread out across the north and south ends, the roughly 17,000 new seats will rise above the existing structure, creating never-before-seen elevated views of the pitch (and possibly Lake Ontario). These sections put you in uncharted territory, literally watching history from seats that will cease to exist after 2026.
AROUND THE STADIUM
Pregame Plan: Local FC supporters typically gather two hours before gametime at Brazen Head Irish Pub (165 East Liberty Street) to prepare for the traditional march to BMO Field. The 10-minute procession transforms the industrial neighborhood into a street festival, with drums, smoke, and songs echoing off converted warehouse walls. Hopefully it ramps up for the World Cup.
Pregame Plan (Pt 2): BMO Field resides within a 192-acre complex that includes Enercare Centre and the Queen Elizabeth Building. Between the Medieval Times castle on the grounds and the waterfront Martin Goodman Trail stretching along Lake Ontario just steps from the stadium's entrance, you're surrounded by carnival grounds that have hosted everything from the Canadian National Exhibition to IndyCar races.
Fan Zone: FIFA's official Festival takes over Fort York National Historic Site and The Bentway, transforming Toronto's historic military grounds and urban park beneath the Gardiner Expressway into the beating heart of World Cup celebrations. While these locations sit about a mile east of BMO Field, they'll offer massive screens for all matches, international food vendors, and cultural exhibitions, creating a second stadium atmosphere in the heart of downtown.
WHAT TO EAT AND DRINK
BMO Field's signature carved-to-order Porchetta Sandwich features pork that's been slow-roasted for 12 hours, creating the kind of tender, herb-crusted Italian roast that's become a match-day ritual for fans. The perfectly seasoned, fall-apart pork has achieved legendary status as the must-have sandwich that fans line up for before kickoff. Meanwhile, Food Junction's foot-long taquitos stuffed with house-braised pork birria represent Toronto's Latin community, while the dedicated Frites stand in section 110 serves triple-cooked, house-cut fries with options like Jerk Chicken Poutine. And Mill St. Brewery taps flow throughout the concourses, pouring Toronto's original craft beer alongside Labatt products.
TRAVEL TIPS
- Public Transit: Exhibition GO Station's 500-foot proximity potentially makes this North America's most transit-accessible World Cup venue. Lakeshore East-West trains run every 20-30 minutes until 1:00 AM on event days, with the trip to Union Station taking seven minutes for just a few dollars. The 509 Harbourfront and 511 Bathurst streetcars both terminate at Exhibition Loop, a few hundred feet from gates.
- Parking: Drivers will find only 5,400 spaces at Exhibition Place, charging $30-45 through cashless payment only. The lots open four hours before matches, but the better idea may be to park at a Liberty Village establishment and walk 10 minutes.
FINAL FUN FACTS
The Temperature Trick: The underground heating system maintains the pitch at exactly 50°F year-round through 23 miles of glycol-filled pipes. This same system can reverse in summer, cooling the grass during Toronto's humid July days when surface temperatures would otherwise exceed 95°F.
A 24th Minute Tradition: At exactly the 24th minute of every home match since 2007, the entire stadium sings in honor of the striker who scored Toronto FC’s first-ever goal (he wore number 24). He probably won't be scoring any goals in 2026, but a spontaneous chorus would certainly be a form of World Cup glory for him!
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