World Cup 2026 is expected to turn watch parties, bars and host-city celebrations into a major summer occasion for tequila, beer, RTDs and no-alcohol drinks.
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World Cup 2026 drinks are already turning into a summer hosting question. What do people serve when the world’s largest sporting event becomes 39 days of watch parties, bar crowds and host-city celebrations?
According to FIFA’s official match schedule, the tournament runs from June 11 through July 19 across the United States, Canada and Mexico, with 104 matches in 16 host cities. For beverage companies, that makes it very different from a Super Bowl play. There is no single night to win.
Ishaan and Ali Reyna, founders of Malibu West, see that difference as the real prize.
“The Super Bowl delivers scale in one market for one night. The World Cup delivers scale across the world for an entire month,” they say. “That difference creates ongoing drinking occasions in homes, bars, and public spaces globally, which is far more valuable for beverage brands trying to drive consistent consumption, not just awareness.”
Beer still has the easiest path into soccer. But the 2026 watch party is starting to look wider than the old fridge and cooler setup. Tequila is moving closer to the center of celebration. Premixed cocktails are solving a real hosting problem. Nobody wants to miss a penalty kick because they are cutting limes. No-alcohol beer and cocktails are no longer sitting off to the side for the one guest who is not drinking.
Some of this will be planned. Much of it will not. Someone will bring the wrong beer. Someone will overbuy tequila. Someone will remember halfway through the second match that half the room wants something without alcohol.
The modern watch party looks less like a case of beer on ice and more like a summer bar cart.
Tequila gets a bigger role
Spirits have a strong case heading into the tournament. The Distilled Spirits Council’s 2025 annual economic briefing reported that tequila and mezcal reached $6.4 billion in sales, while premixed cocktails, including spirits-based RTDs, reached $3.8 billion and grew 16.4 percent year over year.
World Cup 2026 is arriving into a different drinking culture than the one that defined past soccer tournaments. The event may still look like a beer occasion from a distance. Up close, the table is more mixed.
Diageo has one of the clearest spirits plays around the tournament. FIFA and Diageo announced that the company would become the Official Spirits Supporter in North, Central and South America for FIFA World Cup 26, activating brands including Casamigos, Don Julio, Buchanan’s, Johnnie Walker and Smirnoff.
This range is key. Not every match is the final. Not every gathering is a luxury dinner. Some are house parties. Some are crowded bars. Some are late-night celebrations after a national team survives another round.
Casamigos and Don Julio show the two ends of the tequila opportunity. Casamigos is going for the home host. The brand’s World Cup campaign puts Gabrielle Union and Keegan-Michael Key into a simple match-day rivalry built around Classic Lime and Spicy margaritas.
“Bringing people together has defined Casamigos from day one, it’s right there in our name, amigos,” said Roderick Blaylock, vice president of marketing for Casamigos. “As a sports fan, I’ve seen how moments like the FIFA World Cup 2026 unite people in a way few things can.”
It is not a complicated idea, which is partly why it works. Soccer already runs on rivalry, loyalty and friendly argument. A margarita split gives people something to pick before the match starts. The more practical part is the product. Casamigos also introduced pre-mixed margaritas in Classic Lime and Spicy. A room full of people may love cocktails, but very few hosts want to spend the second half squeezing citrus.
Don Julio is taking the other lane. During finals week, from July 13 through July 19, the brand’s Port of Champions activation will take over Pier 59 at Chelsea Piers in New York. The centerpiece is a 200-foot-plus megayacht docked on the Hudson River, with match-day parties, late-night celebrations, luxury dining, tequila tastings and live entertainment.
It is hard to make the premium hospitality message more literal than putting Don Julio 1942 on a yacht during finals week. The brand is also tying the tournament to a limited-edition Don Julio 1942 bottle, with a gold design inspired by the FIFA World Cup trophy and a campaign featuring Thierry Henry.
The tequila play is not only about premiumization. It is about giving hosts and hospitality venues a reason to make tequila feel native to soccer, not borrowed from another holiday or nightlife occasion. One bottle belongs on ice at the house party. Another belongs at the final-week dinner, the rooftop table or the toast after the room finally stops shouting.
Beer still owns the first round
Beer remains the easiest World Cup drink to imagine, and AB InBev is not giving up that advantage. The company extended its FIFA partnership, becoming the Official Beer Sponsor of the FIFA World Cup through 2030 and the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2027.
Beer does not need to out-premium tequila. It needs to stay unavoidable.
Budweiser is leaning into memory. Its Let It Pour platform features Erling Haaland and Jürgen Klopp and is planned across more than 40 countries, with a global film, limited-edition apparel and fan experiences. The campaign works because nostalgia is already baked into soccer fandom. People remember where they watched a goal. They remember the jersey. They remember who they were with. A bottle can become a souvenir without pretending to be the main event.
Michelob ULTRA is taking a different route through access. The brand unveiled the FIFA World Cup 2026 Superior Player of the Match trophy, designed with artist Victor Solomon, and later added a fan-facing role at the final with Kevin Hart attached.
It is playful, a little absurd and built to travel socially. It also gets at something real about modern fandom. People do not only want to watch the World Cup. They want a role, even a temporary one. They want a story better than simply saying they watched it at a bar.
Stella Artois is leaning into another reality of the tournament. Its Work From Bar campaign nods to the fact that a global tournament does not fit neatly into American prime time or weekend drinking habits.
Beer’s advantage is still duration. It can sit through extra time, a second match and a crowded table without asking anyone to stop and make a drink. It also has a growing moderation lane. The Beer Institute has pointed to non-alcohol beer as a growth area for the category, giving beer another role as fans look for cold, repeatable drinks across long afternoons.
Beer still gets the first pour. It just has more company now.
RTDs and no-alcohol make the cooler more flexible
Ready-to-drink cocktails and no-alcohol options have an obvious path into the World Cup summer. The tournament will create busy, social, high-traffic drinking occasions. Hosts want fewer steps. Bars want faster service. Guests want something cold that does not require a long conversation with the person making drinks.
The RTD category already has momentum. According to the Distilled Spirits Council, premixed cocktails, including spirits RTDs, grew 16.4 percent to $3.8 billion in 2025. Casamigos is already playing in that space with its pre-mixed margaritas, while NÜTRL is entering the tournament as the Official Hard Seltzer Sponsor of FIFA World Cup 2026. RTDs are the drinks people grab when they are late to the party, when the cooler is already crowded, or when nobody wants to ask who is making the next round. A canned cocktail or hard seltzer does not make the occasion more formal. It just makes it easier to join.
No-alcohol belongs in the same cooler. NIQ reports that 92 percent of non-alcohol buyers also purchase alcohol-containing products. Moderation is not only about quitting. Often, it is about pacing, switching, driving, working the next morning or staying in the room without having another drink.
Some fans will watch two matches in a day. Some will watch on weekdays. Some will be with family. Some will be standing in hot fan zones. Some will want the ritual of a drink without the alcohol.
For brands and retailers, that makes flexibility the point. A better watch party gives everyone something to hold.
The room has to feel alive before the first drink
The brands that win the World Cup will not only be the ones with the biggest logos near the match. They will be the ones that understand how people want to gather now.
Craig Reynolds, co-founder of Locomotive, says premium nightlife expectations have moved beyond the bottle itself.
“Brands winning in the luxury space right now understand that people want to enter a room that feels alive before the first drink is ordered,” Reynolds says.
The World Cup already has built-in participation. Fans dress for it. They sing through it. They talk to strangers. They make small rituals out of flags, scarves, chants and lucky shirts.
A good drinks activation should not try to overwrite that. It should give the feeling somewhere to go.
The winning drink makes the match feel closer
The World Cup will not replace the Super Bowl as America’s biggest one-night drinking event. It does not need to.
Its power is slower, wider and more social. A reason to stock the fridge again, text the group chat again, meet at the bar again and keep the summer gathering going long after the opening match.
For beverage brands, that may be the real opportunity. Not one perfect ad. Not one perfect pour. A month of small decisions. What to bring, what to open, what to order, where to meet and which World Cup 2026 drinks make everyone feel closer to the match.
