England crossed a continent while Iran’s shortest World Cup trip took five hours

World Cup aircraft with England, Argentina, Spain and France flags and travel routes across Canada, the United States and Mexico

England traveled nearly 13,000 miles through the quarterfinal stage of the 2026 World Cup. Iran traveled fewer than 3,000, yet one of its shortest journeys became one of the tournament’s longest days.

England entered the World Cup semifinals having traveled farther than any remaining nation. Stadio United’s route estimates put England at 12,998 miles through the quarterfinal stage before facing Argentina. Spain followed with 12,200 miles, Argentina had covered 5,654, and France had logged 2,016.

The contrast reflects the unique geography of the 2026 World Cup, the first tournament shared across the United States, Canada and Mexico. England’s route stretched across multiple regions as it continued advancing through the knockout stage, while France’s schedule remained comparatively compact.

Mileage totals should be viewed as estimates because different organizations measure travel differently. Some calculate airport-to-airport distances, others use stadium locations or team base camps. Some count only movement between match cities, while others include every return trip to a team’s headquarters. The exact figures vary, but the pattern doesn’t. England and Spain have carried the tournament’s heaviest travel burden, while France has remained among the lightest.

Iran offers perhaps the most interesting example. Although it ranked near the bottom of the travel table, its experience showed that miles alone don’t tell the entire story.

Iran actually saved miles by moving to Mexico

Iran originally planned to base itself in Tucson, Arizona. Before the tournament, FIFA approved a move to Centro Xoloitzcuintle in Tijuana, Mexico.

Because two of Iran’s three group matches were played in the Los Angeles area, relocating west reduced the team’s estimated travel. Using straight-line air distances and assuming the team returned to its base after each match, the move lowered Iran’s projected tournament mileage from approximately 4,236 miles to 2,662 miles, a reduction of about 1,600 miles.

The move reduced flying, but it didn’t remove the logistical strain. Captain Mehdi Taremi criticized the tournament arrangements and described immigration checks around Iran’s journeys from Tijuana as taking as long as five hours. Iran also dealt with entry restrictions affecting members of its delegation before those rules were eased later in the tournament.

Iran’s experience illustrates something England’s mileage total cannot. Distance measures geography. It doesn’t always measure the physical and logistical demands of tournament travel.

Complete World Cup travel rankings

The table below shows Stadio United’s estimated mileage through the quarterfinal stage using team base camps and match locations.

RankTeamMiles
1England12,998
2Spain12,200
3Paraguay11,142
4Switzerland10,912
5Colombia10,860
6Morocco8,764
7Portugal8,480
8Egypt8,366
9Canada8,142
10Norway7,578
11Bosnia and Herzegovina7,050
12South Africa6,542
13Curaçao6,318
14Austria6,250
15Algeria6,172
16Japan5,964
17Argentina5,654
18Ecuador5,566
19Senegal5,538
20Jordan5,406
21Brazil5,220
22Czechia5,168
23Germany5,154
24New Zealand4,958
25United States4,750
26Türkiye4,552
27Australia4,544
28Qatar4,464
29DR Congo4,406
30Uruguay4,356
31Sweden4,318
32Scotland4,194
33Netherlands4,174
34Saudi Arabia4,156
35Belgium4,124
36Uzbekistan4,088
37Croatia4,040
38Ghana3,856
39Ivory Coast3,316
40Cape Verde3,236
41Iran2,662
42Iraq2,606
43France2,016
44Haiti2,004
45Tunisia1,998
46Panama946
47South Korea792
48Mexico572

England’s route through the quarterfinal stage totaled an estimated 12,998 miles, more than twice Argentina’s 5,654 and over six times France’s 2,016. These figures use team base camps and match locations consistently across all 48 teams.

Whether measured by distance, flight time or border crossings, no team experienced the tournament in exactly the same way. England’s journey demonstrates the scale of crossing a continent in pursuit of a World Cup, while Iran’s experience shows why the shortest route on a map isn’t always the easiest one to travel.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top