Morocco, Spain and Portugal have been named hosts of the 2030 FIFA World Cup, while Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay will host the opening matches to mark the tournament's centenary.
It marks the first time the World Cup will be staged across three continents and six countries.
FIFA said on Wednesday that the joint bid from Morocco, Portugal and Spain was the sole candidate to host the tournament.
The inaugural World Cup in 1930 was held in Uruguay and won by the hosts.
"The FIFA Council unanimously agreed that the sole candidacy will be the combined bid of Morocco, Portugal, and Spain, which will host the event in 2030 and qualify automatically from the existing slot allocation," FIFA said in a statement.
"Additionally, having taken into account the historical context of the first-ever FIFA World Cup, the FIFA Council further unanimously agreed to host a unique centenary celebration ceremony in the country's capital, Montevideo... as well as three World Cup matches in Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay respectively."
📷
— FIFA Media (@fifamedia) October 4, 2023
FIFA Council takes key decisions on FIFA World Cup™ editions in 2030 and 2034: Morocco, Portugal and Spain joint bid is the sole candidate to host FIFA World Cup 2030™
➡️https://t.co/cKJec1tIE4 pic.twitter.com/mwLRerCIlg


Bayern late show sinks Real Madrid in epic quarter-final
Arsenal scrape past Sporting to reach Champions League semi-finals
Alcaraz withdraws from Barcelona Open due to wrist injury
Kohli and Dar shine as Bengaluru ease past Lucknow in IPL
Man United's Maguire to miss Chelsea trip after one-match ban for misconduct
