At every World Cup, goals make the headlines but referees decide history. And with the 2026 FIFA World Cup expanding to 48 teams across the United States, Canada and Mexico, the men and women with the whistle now face the toughest assignment football has ever seen. More matches. More tension. More VAR checks. More moments where a single decision can swing the fate of nations.
Scheduled from 11 June to 19 July 2026 across three countries and 16 stadiums, the expanded tournament will feature a record 104 matches. It will be the largest, longest and most demanding FIFA World Cup in history not only for the players but also for the officials charged with controlling it.
Referees play a decisive role in every football match, but at the FIFA World Cup, their influence is entirely on another level. One delayed whistle, one missed handball, one controversial VAR intervention can change careers, tournaments and national histories. That is why FIFA places enormous responsibility on its match officials and selects only the very best referees available for the world’s biggest sporting event.
For the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the FIFA Referees Committee has officially appointed the complete team of referees, assistant referees and VAR officials. In total, 170 match officials have been selected, including 52 main referees, 88 assistant referees and 30 Video match officials. Below, you’ll find the referee list by confederation, detailed discipline statistics, and a full breakdown of how cards, suspensions and VAR will work in 2026.
⚖️ How FIFA Selects World Cup Referees
In many ways, it is more difficult to become a World Cup referee than a player who qualifies for the World Cup. FIFA‘s selection process for referees is very extensive and officials must be on the official FIFA International Referees List 2026 in order to be considered.
- Referees must regularly officiate in elite competitions such as the UEFA Champions League, Copa Libertadores, AFC Asian Cup and AFCON, among others.
- They undergo repeated fitness, sprint and endurance testing, including heat-management protocols for North American summer conditions.
- All candidates must be fully VAR-certified and trained in on-field review procedures.
- Psychological screening and multilingual communication tests are mandatory.
Only those referees who fulfil every aspect of the technical, physical and performance tests are selected for the final World Cup list.
📋 Official Referees at the 2026 FIFA World Cup (By Confederation)
On April 9, 2026, FIFA unveiled the official list of referees, assistant referees and VAR officials for the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The table below displays the main referees confirmed from the six FIFA confederations, sorted by confederation for easy reference.
| Referee | Country | Confederation |
|---|---|---|
| Abdulrahman Al Jassim | Qatar | AFC |
| Khalid Al Turais | Saudi Arabia | AFC |
| Yusuke Araki | Japan | AFC |
| Alireza Faghani | Australia | AFC |
| Ning Ma | China | AFC |
| Adham Makhadmeh | Jordan | AFC |
| Omar Al Ali | UAE | AFC |
| Ilgiz Tantashev | Uzbekistan | AFC |
| Omar Abdulkadir Artan | Somalia | CAF |
| Pierre Atcho | Gabon | CAF |
| Dahane Beida | Mauritania | CAF |
| Mustapha Ghorbal | Algeria | CAF |
| Jalal Jayed | Morocco | CAF |
| Amin Mohamed | Egypt | CAF |
| Abongile Tom | South Africa | CAF |
| Ivan Barton | El Salvador | CONCACAF |
| Juan Calderon | Costa Rica | CONCACAF |
| Ismail Elfath | USA | CONCACAF |
| Drew Fischer | Canada | CONCACAF |
| Katia Garcia | Mexico | CONCACAF |
| Hector Said Martinez | Honduras | CONCACAF |
| Oshane Nation | Jamaica | CONCACAF |
| Tori Penso | USA | CONCACAF |
| Cesar Ramos | Mexico | CONCACAF |
| Juan Gabriel Benitez | Paraguay | CONMEBOL |
| Raphael Claus | Brazil | CONMEBOL |
| Yael Falcon Perez | Argentina | CONMEBOL |
| Cristian Garay | Chile | CONMEBOL |
| Dario Herrera | Argentina | CONMEBOL |
| Kevin Ortega | Peru | CONMEBOL |
| Ramon Abatti | Brazil | CONMEBOL |
| Andres Rojas | Colombia | CONMEBOL |
| Gustavo Tejera | Uruguay | CONMEBOL |
| Facundo Tello | Argentina | CONMEBOL |
| Jesus Valenzuela | Venezuela | CONMEBOL |
| Wilton Sampaio | Brazil | CONMEBOL |
| Campbell-Kirk Kawana-Waugh | New Zealand | OFC |
| Espen Eskas | Norway | UEFA |
| Alejandro Hernandez | Spain | UEFA |
| Istvan Kovacs | Romania | UEFA |
| Francois Letexier | France | UEFA |
| Danny Makkelie | Netherlands | UEFA |
| Szymon Marciniak | Poland | UEFA |
| Maurizio Mariani | Italy | UEFA |
| Glenn Nyberg | Sweden | UEFA |
| Michael Oliver | England | UEFA |
| Joao Pinheiro | Portugal | UEFA |
| Sandro Schaerer | Switzerland | UEFA |
| Anthony Taylor | England | UEFA |
| Clement Turpin | France | UEFA |
| Slavko Vincic | Slovenia | UEFA |
| Felix Zwayer | Germany | UEFA |
📊 Referee Discipline Stats – Yellow Cards, Red Cards & Fouls
Referees and their strictness level are usually one of the first things fans want to know before a big match. Which referee will be officiating, and how strict will he be? The discipline patterns of a referee can determine the pace of a game, impact tactical decisions and sometimes even decide knockout ties. Right here, you can see our live referee discipline tracker, based on the 2026 World Cup data. This table shows:
- Matches officiated by each referee
- Total and per-game yellow cards
- Red card frequency
- Total fouls and fouls per match
The data will be available from 11 June 2026 onwards.
🟥 Yellow Cards, Red Cards & Suspensions
The FIFA World Cup 2026 regulations define discipline in precise detail and referees are granted sweeping authority.
- Referees control discipline from pre-match inspection until leaving the field after the final whistle.
- Two yellow cards in different matches result in an automatic one-match suspension.
- A direct red card carries an automatic ban, with possible additional sanctions.
- Single yellow cards are wiped after the quarter-finals.
FIFA also makes it clear that referee decisions on facts connected with play are final and not subject to protest. Teams may challenge only procedural errors and not penalties, offsides or handball interpretations.
🧠 VAR & Semi-Automated Offside Technology in 2026
Technology will play a bigger role than ever at the 2026 World Cup.
- Upgraded Semi-Automated Offside Technology (SAOT) with real-time skeleton tracking.
- Faster VAR checks as most offside decisions are expected in under 20 seconds.
- Expanded high-speed camera coverage in all 16 stadiums.
VAR is still keeping an eye on the above four situations (goals, penalties, red cards, and mistaken identity). FIFA is also keeping an eye out for holding and blocking inside the penalty area, as this has been one of the most controversial areas in recent tournaments.
At the biggest World Cup ever staged, referees won’t just manage matches, they’ll shape legacies. With stricter discipline rules, faster VAR and unprecedented global scrutiny, the officials at the 2026 FIFA World Cup may carry more pressure than the players themselves.
Want to follow every match live in your local time? Check out our complete 2026 World Cup match schedule by time zone and never miss a decision.