GOLD CUP

Gold Cup 2023: Where is it being played? venues, stadiums, and cities

The 17th edition of the CONCACAF tournament will be held in two countries across 14 host cities. Here’s all you need to know.

MEG OLIPHANTAFP

The 17th edition of the CONCACAF Gold Cup will take place between 24 June and 16 July 2023. A total of 16 teams will be taking part in the 2023 tournament - eight teams qualified from the Nations League A and four teams from the Nations League B along with guests Qatar, who appear as the invited team for the second consecutive edition.

Participating teams in the 2023 CONCACAF Gold Cup

  • United States (Tournament hosts)
  • Canada (Tournament hosts)
  • Qatar (Invited guests)
  • Costa Rica
  • Cuba
  • El Salvador
  • Guatemala
  • Haiti
  • Honduras
  • Jamaica
  • Mexico
  • Panama
  • Trinidad and Tobago

Plus the three winners from the Preliminary Round 2 ties: Guadeloupe vs Guyana, Martinique vs Puerto Rico, Saint Kitts and Nevis vs French Guiana

The United States and Canada will jointly host the tournament for the second time (the first being the 2015 edition) with games being played in 14 host cities - 13 in the US and one in Canada.

2023 CONCACAF Gold Cup host cities

Canada

  • Toronto

United States

  • Arlington, Dallas
  • Charlotte
  • Chicago
  • Cincinnati
  • Fort Lauderdale, Miami
  • Glendale, Pheonix
  • Harrison, NYC
  • Houston*
  • Houston**
  • Inglewood, Los Angeles
  • Paradise, Las Vegas
  • San Diego
  • Santa Clara
  • St. Louis

*NRG Stadium
**Shell Energy Stadium

2023 CONCACAF Gold Cup venues

Teams will be split into four groups: A, B, C and D, with all 24 group stage matches being played at various venues across the US and Canada. The top two teams from each group will advance to the knockout stage with the quarter finals to be played in Cincinnati and Arlington.

Paradise and San Diego will host the semi-finals with the final to be played at SoFi stadium in Inglewood, Los Angeles on Sunday 16 July (7:30 p.m. PDT / 4:30 p.m. EDT).

Canada

  • BMO Field. Toronto (Capacity: 30,991)

United States

  • AT&T Stadium. Arlington, Dallas (Capacity: 80,000)
  • Bank of America Stadium. Charlotte (Capacity: 74,867)
  • Soldier Field. Chicago (Capacity: 61,500)
  • TQL Stadium. Cincinnati (Capacity: 25,513)
  • DRV PNK Stadium. Fort Lauderdale, Miami (Capacity: 18,000)
  • State Farm Stadium. Glendale, Pheonix (Capacity: 63,400)
  • Red Bull Arena. Harrison, New Jersey, NYC (Capacity: 25,000)
  • NRG Stadium. Houston (Capacity: 72,220)
  • Shell Energy Stadium. Houston (Capacity: 22,039)
  • SoFi Stadium. Inglewood, Los Angeles (Capacity: 70,240)
  • Allegiant Stadium. Paradise, Las Vegas (Capacity: 61,000)
  • Snapdragon Stadium. San Diego (Capacity: 35,000)
  • Levi’s Stadium. Santa Clara, California (Capacity: 68,500)
  • CityPark. St. Louis (Capacity: 22,500)

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