22 Jun
Mon
•8:00pm
Levi's Stadium • San Francisco
24 Dec
Wed
•4:00pm
Stade Prince Moulay EL Hassan • Rabat
28 Dec
Sun
•6:30pm
Stade Prince Moulay EL Hassan • Rabat
31 Dec
Wed
•5:00pm
Stade Prince Moulay EL Hassan • Rabat
16 Jun
Tue
•8:00pm
Arrowhead Stadium • Kansas City
22 Jun
Mon
•8:00pm
Levi's Stadium • San Francisco
16 Jun
Tue
•9:00pm
Levi's Stadium • San Francisco
22 Jun
Mon
•8:00pm
Levi's Stadium • San Francisco
27 Jun
Sat
•9:00pm
AT&T Stadium • Arlington
Algeria showcases the classic North African school of football: finding pockets between the lines, a left-footed winger who can unbalance any defense, and tons of creativity in the final third, all backed by a team that already knows how to go toe-to-toe with world champions — as they proved with that unforgettable 2–1 extra-time win over Germany at Brazil 2014. They now arrive as one of the top 40 national teams in the FIFA ranking, with players established across Europe’s and Asia’s elite leagues.
Jordan, on the other hand, embodies the organized, hard-fought football of West Asia: a compact block, aggressive pressing and direct transitions, fully capable of competing at the very highest level, as shown by their historic runners-up finish at the 2023 Asian Cup. They’ve met before in friendlies, but never at a World Cup — so this group-stage showdown comes with no World Cup precedents and maximum tension: every single point could decide who reaches the knockout rounds.
Watching it live at Levi’s Stadium, right in the heart of the San Francisco Bay Area, with more than 70,000 fans roaring for every tackle and every run, turns this Algeria–Jordan into a genuine final in all but name.
Algeria already boasts five World Cup appearances and a serious track record: two-time African champions (1990 and 2019) and winners of the 2021 Arab Cup, a résumé that commands respect in any dressing room. On the pitch, the team’s heartbeat is still the magical left foot of Riyad Mahrez, Al-Ahli star and legendary figure of the “Desert Foxes”, supported by top-level midfielders such as Ismaël Bennacer.
Jordan arrive as a rising force: finalists at the latest Asian Cup and now firmly inside the world’s top 70, driven by the flair of Mousa Al-Taamari, Rennes winger and the standout star of Jordanian football. This game at Levi’s Stadium is your chance to be in the stands as an established African powerhouse takes on an ambitious debutant determined to write its own chapter in football history.
Levi’s Stadium is an open, state-of-the-art football arena with around 68,500 seats, expandable to over 70,000, and a huge lower bowl that brings most fans closer to the pitch — very much in line with the great European stadiums. Its brand-new giant 4K videoboards at the north and south ends, plus full connectivity, turn every replay and every stat into part of the show.
If you’re after an experience similar to a big Premier League or LaLiga ground, the lower sideline seats are perfect to follow tactical movements and Algeria’s technical quality; the ends feel like the best European singing sections, ideal to dive into the Jordanian atmosphere.
For the 2026 World Cup group stage, current benchmarks suggest tickets starting at around $60 and going well above $300, with significantly higher prices in premium and hospitality areas. Converted to euros, you can roughly expect €70–160 in the upper tiers and behind the goals, €160–260 in mid-level sidelines and €250–450 in lower central sidelines, while VIP packages easily exceed €500. All these prices are indicative and may vary depending on demand, opponent and exact location, but the key is to lock in your seat and make sure you experience this Algeria–Jordan live.