Sixteen host cities. Three countries. Three different sets of gluten-free labelling rules — and one question every coeliac fan is quietly working out behind the ticket prices and flight times: what am I actually going to eat?
We’ve been mapping exactly that, city by city, for the whole tournament. Here’s the short version of how to travel to a World Cup match without leaving your safety to chance.
The one thing to understand first: the rules change at the border
“Gluten-free” does not mean the same thing in Dallas, Toronto and Mexico City. The threshold is broadly similar; the enforcement is not.
- United States: the FDA sets gluten-free at under 20 parts per million — but using the label at all is voluntary. A dish with no “gluten-free” claim isn’t necessarily unsafe; it just hasn’t been held to that standard.
- Canada: Health Canada also uses under 20 ppm, and here it’s mandatory once a product makes a gluten-free claim. A little more reassurance on packaged goods, though restaurants are still restaurants.
- Mexico: a “Sin Gluten” certification exists but is less standardised than in the US or Canada. Treat it as a helpful signal, not a guarantee, and ask the same questions you’d ask anywhere.
None of this replaces the only rule that actually keeps you safe: confirm with the kitchen, every time, before you order. Menus and prep routines change without notice, and a “gluten-free option” prepared next to a wheat station is not a coeliac-safe meal.
Plan in three layers, not one
The mistake is treating “food” as a single problem. On a match trip it’s really three, and they’re solved separately.
1. Where you’ll eat in the city
This is the part you can actually research in advance. For every host city we’ve identified the genuinely promising spots — dedicated gluten-free kitchens where they exist, and careful cross-contact-aware venues where they don’t — and flagged exactly what to confirm before you rely on any of them. Build your trip around two or three of these as anchors, not one, so a closed kitchen or a fully-booked Saturday doesn’t leave you stuck.
2. The stadium itself
Treat matchday food as a completely separate question. Stadium concessions and fan-festival vendors operate under their own policies, and those policies are frequently “we can’t confirm.” Until a venue tells you otherwise in writing, assume the stands are atmosphere, not a meal — and plan accordingly.
3. Your backup
Every coeliac traveller’s quiet superpower: sealed, packaged, certified food in your bag and a small reserve in the hotel room. Late kick-offs, long queues and a city you don’t know yet are exactly when a safe snack stops a good day going sideways. Buy it early, before you’re hungry and out of options.
A few host-city realities worth knowing now
Some cities are genuinely strong for coeliacs — Toronto, the New York/New Jersey area and Philadelphia all have real, multiple options worth planning around. Others are thinner on verified ground and lean harder on the retail-backup plan. That’s not a reason to skip them; it’s a reason to arrive knowing which is which, rather than finding out at 9pm after the final whistle.
Pack the questions, not just the kit
Wherever you land, the script is the same. Before you eat anywhere: name coeliac disease clearly (not “a preference”), ask whether gluten-free dishes are prepared separately from wheat, barley, rye and regular soy sauce, and ask them to confirm their process before you sit down. A kitchen that answers confidently is worth more than any label.
We’ve done the legwork — city by city
Our live World Cup 2026 hub covers all 16 host cities: what’s promising, what to confirm, the matchday risk panel and a retail-backup plan for each. It’s free, and we update it as policies firm up through the tournament.
For the full picture in your pocket — complete venue write-ups, the coeliac contact script in the right language, and stadium-area notes for all sixteen cities — our published World Cup guide is available on Amazon.
One tournament, three countries, a lot of football. You should get to enjoy the football. Hey — we’ve been there.
How to Gluten Free provides travel intelligence, not medical advice. For medical questions about coeliac disease, speak to your gastroenterologist or your national coeliac society. Always confirm gluten-free safety directly with any venue at the time of your visit.

