The 2026 FIFA World Cup will be the largest and most complex tournament ever staged, spanning three countries, 16 host cities, and an expanded 48-team format. For global payroll, mobility, and HR compliance teams, this scale brings significant movement of athletes, coaches, analysts, medical staff, media crews, commercial partners, and operational personnel.
With the UK and USA acting as major hubs for training, commercial activity, and global sports talent pipelines, understanding the immigration routes that support compliant mobility is essential. This article outlines the key UK and U.S. pathways relevant to sports professionals and their support teams.
The tri-nation format introduces increased short-term travel, multiple immigration systems, and heightened scrutiny around work authorisation and cross-border payments. Coordinated planning across HR, legal, tax, and mobility functions is critical to ensuring compliant and uninterrupted movement of talent.
Although the UK is not hosting matches, it remains a central base for clubs, training facilities, sponsorship activity, and media operations. Three routes are most relevant to sporting talent.
The UK’s primary route for elite athletes and coaches joining UK clubs or participating in major events. It requires endorsement from the relevant sport's governing body and sponsorship from a UK club. The visa supports multi-year contracts, allows dependants, and can lead to settlement after five years.
Some individuals qualify for UK work rights through broader categories, including the UK Ancestry Visa for Commonwealth citizens with a UK-born grandparent and the Private Life Route for long-term UK residents. Both allow full work rights, including professional sport.
For short stays of up to six months for competitions, trials, training camps, or promotional activity. This route does not permit professional employment.
As the primary host nation, the United States will see the highest volume of athlete and staff movement. Two visa families dominate the sports landscape: P-1 for internationally recognised athletes and teams, and O-1 for individuals with extraordinary ability.
Covers individual athletes, internationally recognised teams, professional athletes in major U.S. leagues or affiliated minor leagues, and certain amateur athletes linked to foreign leagues. This category is tied to specific competitions or seasons and requires evidence of international reputation. Family members may accompany under P-4 status.
For staff whose expertise is integral to a P-1 athlete or team’s performance, such as coaches, trainers, equipment managers, interpreters, and technical specialists. The role must require skills not readily available in the U.S. labour market and be directly linked to performance or competitive readiness.
Reserved for individuals who have risen to the very top of their field. Eligibility may be demonstrated through major internationally recognised awards or a combination of achievements, media coverage, leadership roles, and high remuneration. A U.S. employer or agent must act as the petitioner. Initial stays are up to three years, with extensions available.
For individuals whose skills are critical to the O-1A principal’s performance, such as personal trainers, technical staff, or specialist coaches. Family members may accompany under O-3 status but cannot work.
Some athletes, coaches, trainers, and support staff can enter the U.S. for defined competitions using B-1 visitor status or the Visa Waiver Program (ESTA) instead of a work visa. This is only permitted where activities are strictly limited and no U.S. sourced compensation is involved.
Individuals may compete or support an athlete in the U.S. as B-1 visitors when:
ESTA allows eligible nationals to enter for up to 90 days under the same rules as B-1 visitors. Stays cannot be extended or converted to another status, and frequent travel may trigger scrutiny. Key Risks:
A P-1A, P-1S, O-1A, or O-2 visa is needed when the individual will be paid by a U.S. entity, perform services for a U.S. organisation, or engage in activity beyond a single defined event.
Across both jurisdictions, several themes stand out. Early planning is essential, as visa lead times and evidence requirements can be significant. Support personnel are as important as athletes, with both the UK and U.S. systems recognising the critical role of coaches, trainers, and technical staff. Payroll compliance must align with immigration status, ensuring work authorisation, tax residency, and payment structures are coordinated across borders. Finally, mobility teams must manage obligations across three host nations, each with its own travel patterns, tax triggers, and reporting requirements.
With the scale of World Cup 2026 and the volume of talent moving across borders, immigration and payroll compliance cannot be left to chance. Whether supporting elite athletes, specialist coaches, or essential performance staff, organisations must ensure the right visa routes are in place and that work authorisation, tax obligations, and reporting requirements are aligned from day one.
To ensure your cross-border workforce is fully supported and compliant, speak to activpayroll’s Global Mobility specialists.