FIFA is banning an essential fan item for World Cup games
Published in Soccer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — We’ve already gotten a taste of the heat that is coming to KC this summer.
Temperatures haven’t been awful, but the humidity has made it feel miserable at times as the calendar is about to turn to summer. Even warmer weather is coming, and it could be toasty when the World Cup matches are being held at Kansas City Stadium (née Arrowhead Stadium).
That’s why soccer fans were outraged to learn FIFA will no longer allow fans to bring an empty bottle into games.
The Athletic’s Adam Crafton and Matt Slater reported that FIFA contacted World Cup ticket-holders and said their fan code of conduct has changed. Now, “reusable water bottles are no longer permitted at the FIFA World Cup 2026 stadiums,” the Athletic story said.
In a May 12 story, the Athletic noted water bottles were explicitly allowed, and it quoted the code of conduct: “For the avoidance of doubt, empty, transparent, reusable plastic bottles, up to (1 liter in) capacity, may be brought into the Stadium.”
The language now banning bottles is nearly the same.
The code of conduct says: “For the avoidance of doubt, reusable water bottles may not be brought into the Stadium.”
FIFA cited safety as the cause for the change.
“FIFA is committed to protecting the health and safety of all players, referees, fans, volunteers, and staff,” a FIFA spokesman told The Kansas City Star. “The decision to prohibit capped water bottles is based on a number of factors related to safety and security, including mitigating risks to players and spectators, ensuring a safe and efficient ingress experience for all attendees, and the presence of additional heat mitigation and alternative hydration strategies at FIFA World Cup 2026 stadiums. “Bottles from outside the stadium are already prohibited at several of these venues for safety considerations, and FIFA is applying this consideration across its tournament stadiums. FIFA works closely with each Host City Committee and local authorities on heat mitigation factors for fans traveling to the stadium, which can include resources such as misting stations, fans, hydration stations, cooling tents, and more at the last mile as fans enter the stadium. “Inside the stadium footprint, pricing for water bottles for the FIFA World Cup 2026 will remain consistent with other events held at each stadium.”
Ronan Evain, the executive director of Football Supporters Europe, told the Guardian that FIFA’s argument doesn’t, well, hold water. Fans could bring water bottles into last year’s Club World Cup in the United States.
“If they allowed it last year and originally for this tournament then I find the security argument a bit hard to believe,” Evain told the publication. “It shows water is unfortunately still seen as a commodity, but it’s not, it’s a matter of health. We don’t know how expensive a bottle of water will be inside the stadium because no prices have been published.”
While pricing may be a mystery, typical summertime temps in KC are not. According to the website Extreme Weather Watch, here is the average high and low temperature in Kansas City on the dates of the six matches scheduled here. Temperatures are in degrees Fahrenheit:
— June 16: 84.3/64.5
— June 20: 85.2/65.4
— June 25: 86.1/66.4
— June 27: 86.4/66.8
— July 3: 87.3/67.5
— July 11: 88.3/66.5
The good news is each of these matches will be played between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m., and not in the middle of the day — when the heat is at its worst.
The Club World Cup last year was plagued by complaints of heat from the players and FIFA instituted water breaks in each half. That won’t help those in the stands, of course.
Evain said FIFA’s decision will could literally hurt fans, especially those coming from countries that don’t see temperatures as hot as Kansas City’s.
“It’s a real health risk,” Evain told the Guardian. “In Europe we see people collapsing in the stands from heatstroke more and more often. So it’s a very simple mathematics issue: the more you complicate the access to water, the more the risk of people getting serious heatstroke and dehydration.
©2026 The Kansas City Star. Visit kansascity.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.







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