Brazil doesn’t just host sporting events. It absorbs them into something louder, more colorful, and more emotionally charged than anywhere else on earth. The 2014 FIFA World Cup proved it. Now, for the first time in history, South America will host the Women’s World Cup, and Brazil 2027 is shaping up to be one of the most extraordinary international sports experiences of the decade.
The 2027 FIFA Women’s World Cup runs from June 24 to July 25, 2027, across eight host cities. It’s the first time a South American nation has hosted the women’s tournament, a milestone that means something beyond the scoreline. It means samba in the streets after a late equalizer. It means street food vendors outside every stadium, roaring crowds in venues with deep World Cup history, and the particular electricity of a country that treats soccer not as a sport but as a national religion.
If you’re planning a Women’s World Cup 2027 trip, this guide covers what you need to know, from the cities and stadiums to how to build a travel experience that’s worth the flight.
The Host Cities
FIFA selected eight host cities for WWC 2027, all of which hosted the 2014 men’s World Cup: Rio de Janeiro (Maracanã), São Paulo (Neo Química Arena), Belo Horizonte (Mineirão), Brasília (National Stadium), Fortaleza (Arena Castelão), Porto Alegre (Beira-Rio), Recife (Arena Pernambuco), and Salvador (Arena Fonte Nova).
That’s a remarkable lineup. These aren’t temporary venues; they’re iconic stadiums with World Cup DNA, in cities that each bring something completely different to a Brazil 2027 trip.
Rio de Janeiro is the obvious headline. The Maracanã is one of the most storied stadiums in world football, and the city around it, Copacabana, Ipanema, the Christ the Redeemer statue watching over it all, makes Rio the kind of place fans build entire trips around. There’s strong interest from Brazil’s soccer confederation in hosting the final here, which would make attending a match in Rio a potential bucket-list moment.
São Paulo is Brazil’s biggest city and its most cosmopolitan. The Neo Química Arena is slated as a likely venue for the opening match, and São Paulo’s restaurant scene, nightlife, and sheer urban energy make it the ideal base for fans who want to experience Brazil at full volume.
Salvador and Fortaleza deserve a spot in any fan’s itinerary for the beach culture alone. Both cities sit on the northeastern coast, with warm waters, vibrant local music scenes, and a pace of life that makes travel feel like a vacation even between matches.
Belo Horizonte, Porto Alegre, Recife, and Brasília round out the eight cities, each with its own character, and collectively covering enough of the country that fans who travel between venues get a genuine cross-section of what Brazil actually looks like.
Planning Your WWC 2027 Trip
Start with the tickets. Interest in Women’s World Cup tickets is expected to be high, particularly from Europe, and FIFA will announce official sales details with phased releases ahead of the group stage draw. The safest move is to register your interest on the official FIFA platform as soon as ticket sales open and prioritize your must-see matches early. Knockout round tickets and anything at the Maracanã will go fast.
Think about the city strategy. Brazil is a large country, and flying between host cities is the realistic option for most fans. São Paulo and Rio are a manageable 50-minute flight apart, but Fortaleza and Salvador in the northeast are a full flight from Porto Alegre in the south. Most fans attending multiple matches do better anchoring in one or two cities rather than chasing the schedule across the country.
Book accommodation early. This cannot be overstated. Rio, São Paulo, and any city with a late-stage match venue will see hotel inventory evaporate quickly once the schedule is confirmed. The best properties, the ones in the right neighborhoods, at the right distance from the stadium, with the kind of quality that makes the whole experience better, will be gone a year before the tournament kicks off. This is true for standard travel and especially true for luxury Brazil travel, where the top hotels have limited inventory at any time.
Don’t ignore the travel between matches. Some of the best Brazil 2027 experiences won’t happen inside the stadium. The boat trip out to Ilha Grande near Rio. The morning in the historic Pelourinho neighborhood in Salvador. A sunset at Lagoa da Conceição in Florianópolis if your routing takes you near the south. A well-planned WWC 2027 trip treats the time between fixtures as part of the experience, not dead time to be managed.
Why This Is the Trip to Take
The Women’s World Cup has grown into one of the biggest sporting events on the global calendar, and the 2023 tournament in Australia and New Zealand reset expectations for what the atmosphere could be. The 2027 edition will be the last to feature 32 teams before the field expands to 48 in 2031, which gives this tournament a specific, unrepeatable character, the last time it looks like this, in a country that was born to host it.
Brazil brings something no previous Women’s World Cup host has offered: the combination of elite facilities, iconic stadiums, extraordinary natural beauty, and a national football culture that turns every match into an event, regardless of who’s playing.
For fans who’ve watched the growth of the women’s game and wanted to be part of a landmark moment in person, this is that moment.
Plan Your Trip with Tasteful Voyages
Joan Qualls at Tasteful Voyages has built bespoke sports travel experiences for clients who want more than a ticket and a hotel room. WWC 2027 packages can be designed around your preferred cities, your match schedule, the experiences you want between games, and the level of comfort you want throughout, from accommodation and transfers to private city tours and restaurant reservations that don’t require waiting in line on match day.
Brazil travel 2027 at this scale rewards planning. The sooner you start the conversation, the more options stay open.
📩 Start Planning Your WWC 2027 Trip → tastefulvoyages.com/contact 🔗 Explore Brazil Travel → tastefulvoyages.com



