FIFA World Cup 2026 winds down with Kraken’s landmark crypto sponsorship stealing the show
The exchange's deal as official crypto supporter marks a first for the industry and could reshape how billions of sports fans encounter digital assets
The FIFA World Cup 2026 is down to its final two matches. But for the crypto industry, the real scoreline was settled weeks ago when Kraken secured a deal that no exchange had managed before.
On June 9, just two days before the tournament kicked off, FIFA announced Kraken as the Official Crypto Exchange Supporter of the 2026 World Cup. That title sounds bureaucratic. In practice, it means a crypto-native company is embedded in the biggest single sporting event on Earth, the kind of stage that reaches billions of eyeballs across every continent.
What the Kraken-FIFA deal actually looks like
Kraken’s partnership spans activations across all 16 host cities in the United States, Canada, and Mexico, the three nations co-hosting the first-ever 48-team World Cup.
The campaign launched with the FIFA World Cup 2026 Countdown Concert series on June 10, one day before the opening match. From there, Kraken rolled out educational initiatives and digital fan engagement programs designed to introduce casual sports viewers to crypto concepts.
The expanded 48-team format means more games, more host venues, and more total viewership than any previous World Cup. That translates directly into more impressions for Kraken’s brand across a tournament window stretching from June 11 to July 19.
How this compares to crypto’s World Cup history
Crypto.com served as an official sponsor for the 2022 Qatar World Cup, a deal that included NFT initiatives tied to the tournament.
Kraken earned a specific title, Official Crypto Exchange Supporter, that FIFA had never awarded to any exchange before. It’s a signal that these partnerships are moving from novelty marketing experiments to structured, category-level sponsorship deals.
What this means for investors
The 2022 tournament drew an estimated 5 billion viewers across its run. The 2026 edition, with more teams and games hosted across North American time zones, is expected to surpass that.
The risk, as always, is reputational. Crypto.com’s 2022 deal coincided with an industry-wide credibility crisis that made the sponsorship look tone-deaf in retrospect. If Kraken or any major exchange stumbles during or shortly after the tournament, the backlash would be amplified by the association.