For one month every four years, Hong Kong's sleep schedule belongs to football. The 2026 World Cup runs from 11 June to 19 July, and because it is hosted across the United States, Canada and Mexico, the matches land squarely in the small hours and early mornings here. The good news: working out how to watch the 2026 World Cup in Hong Kong has rarely been simpler, whether you want every game in 4K or just the big ones for free.
This is the city's first 48-team World Cup, which means more matches, more underdogs and a longer tournament than ever before. Below is a clear, practical guide to the broadcasters, the kick-off times in Hong Kong Time, and where to watch — at home or in a sports bar — without missing a beat.
In This Guide
When Is the 2026 World Cup?
The 2026 FIFA World Cup is the biggest in the tournament's history. It runs for 39 days, from 11 June to 19 July 2026, and is the first edition co-hosted by three nations — the United States, Canada and Mexico. It is also the first to feature 48 teams, expanding the schedule from 64 matches to 104.
The format is new, so it is worth knowing. The 48 teams are drawn into twelve groups of four. The top two from each group, plus the eight best third-placed teams, advance to a brand-new Round of 32, after which the tournament reverts to the familiar single-elimination path. Mexico get the tournament under way in Mexico City on 11 June; the final is on 19 July at MetLife Stadium, just outside New York.
2026 World Cup Schedule at a Glance
| Stage | Dates (2026) |
|---|---|
| Group stage | 11 – 27 June |
| Round of 32 (new) | 28 June – 3 July |
| Round of 16 | 4 – 7 July |
| Quarter-finals | 9 – 11 July |
| Semi-finals | 14 – 15 July |
| Third-place play-off | 18 July |
| Final | 19 July |
Round dates follow the official FIFA schedule; confirm individual fixtures at fifa.com.
What Time Do World Cup Matches Kick Off in Hong Kong?
This is the question every Hong Kong fan asks first. Hong Kong is on HKT (UTC+8), while the host cities sit 12 to 15 hours behind. In practice, that means almost every match airs between midnight and late morning here — familiar territory for anyone who already follows the Premier League.
The simplest way to plan is to add the gap to the North American kick-off. A US East Coast game lands in Hong Kong 12 hours later. So a noon kick-off on the East Coast is midnight in Hong Kong; a 3pm game is 3am; a 9pm game is 9am the next morning. West Coast matches run a few hours later again.
Kick-off Converter (US Eastern → Hong Kong)
| US Eastern kick-off | Hong Kong time (next day) | Feel |
|---|---|---|
| 12:00 noon ET | 12:00 midnight | Late night |
| 3:00 pm ET | 3:00 am | Small hours |
| 6:00 pm ET | 6:00 am | Dawn |
| 9:00 pm ET | 9:00 am | Breakfast football |
| 6:00 pm PT (West Coast) | 9:00 am | Breakfast football |
The headline fixture tells the story neatly. The final kicks off at 3pm in New York on Sunday 19 July — which is 3am on Monday 20 July in Hong Kong. A Sunday-night-into-Monday-morning alarm is the price of glory. Group-stage games are spread across the day in North America, so you will find kick-offs at almost every hour of the Hong Kong clock; the knockouts tend to cluster in prime-time slots over there, which means deep small-hours viewing here.
How to Watch the 2026 World Cup in Hong Kong: Now TV vs ViuTV
Hong Kong's coverage comes down to two names. Now TV, operated by PCCW, has secured the exclusive local rights and is showing all 104 matches, with English-language commentary, highlights and replays, digital streaming across phones, tablets and smart TVs, and confirmed 4K coverage. If you intend to follow every group-stage game, this is the package for you.
For everyone else, there is a free option. Free-to-air channel ViuTV has sub-licensed a selection of matches and is showing them at no cost — crucially including the opening match, both semi-finals and the final. That covers the marquee moments most casual viewers care about, with no subscription required.
Now TV vs ViuTV at a Glance
| Broadcaster | What you get | Cost | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Now TV (PCCW) | All 104 matches, 4K, streaming, replays | Paid | Following every game |
| ViuTV | Selected matches — incl. opener, both semis & final | Free-to-air | Casual viewers & big games |
Confirm the latest packages and pricing on Now TV and ViuTV closer to kick-off.
One practical note: streaming has quietly become the default way Hong Kong watches football. With Now TV's app working across mobiles, tablets and connected TVs, plenty of fans will catch the live game in bed, then watch the replay or highlights on the MTR the next morning. For a 3am kick-off on a work night, that flexibility is the difference between seeing the goals and missing the tournament entirely.
Where to Watch the World Cup in a Hong Kong Sports Bar
Watching alone in your living room at 3am has its charms, but a World Cup is built for a crowd. Hong Kong's football pubs cluster on Hong Kong Island — densest in Wan Chai (灣仔), with more in Central and Soho — and the best of them run extended hours and special screenings for big tournaments. For the small-hours kick-offs, the venue that opens latest is your friend.
Wan Chai Stadium
If you are committing to a 3am World Cup kick-off, Wan Chai Stadium is the obvious choice. It is the most dedicated pure sports bar on the island, with seven screens — including two enormous 100-inch monitors — angled so you get a clean view from anywhere in the room. Crucially, it stays open until 3am every day of the week, so it is set up for exactly the kind of overnight viewing this tournament demands. On a big match it is loud, busy and exactly where you want to be.
It is far from the only option. The Globe in Central — Hong Kong's original gastropub — is a long-standing home for live football, and Trafalgar in Wan Chai has eight indoor screens plus projectors on its beer-garden balcony, ideal for a warm summer evening. For the full rundown with addresses, MTR exits and what each bar does best, see our complete guide to where to watch live football in Hong Kong.
Tips for Surviving a North American World Cup
Pick your matches. With 104 games, many in the Hong Kong small hours, no one watches everything. Star the fixtures that matter to you and let the rest go to highlights — your work week will thank you.
Use the free games wisely. ViuTV's free-to-air selection covers the opener, both semi-finals and the final, so the moments most worth staying up for cost nothing. Save the late-night alarms for those, and stream the group-stage curiosities on Now TV when you can.
Plan the trip home. If you are heading to Wan Chai for a 3am match, the MTR won't be running when you leave. Line up a taxi or a night bus, and keep the morning after light. A dawn quarter-final and a 9am meeting are not natural allies.
Make a weekend of the big ones. The final falls on a Sunday night into Monday morning here. If you can, keep the Monday clear — and if the tournament has left you wired rather than wrecked, our roundup of five new Hong Kong bars is a fine place to toast or drown the result.
And once the World Cup hangover fades, the city's own sporting calendar rolls on. A midweek night at the races is the easiest reset there is — our Happy Valley horse racing guide lays out the best-value night out in town, while summer is prime time to get on the water with our pick of the best watersports in Hong Kong.
Frequently Asked Questions
Don't Sleep Through a Goal
From the 3am opener to a 3am final, YumChaNow is tracking every 2026 World Cup kick-off in Hong Kong Time, plus where to watch each match across the city. Subscribe for the full HKT fixture guide.