Iran Shifts World Cup Training Base to Mexico Amid US Visa Concerns

Iran's national football team will prepare for the 2026 World Cup in Mexico rather than Arizona, after FIFA approved a request by the Iranian Football Federation to relocate its training base, federation president Shahrokh Shariatzadeh said on 23 May 2026. The decision ends weeks of speculation about whether Iran's planned facility in the southwestern United States would become operationally unviable due to travel restrictions affecting Iranian nationals.
The federation had originally selected a site in Arizona as the team's base for the tournament co-hosted by the United States, Mexico, and Canada. According to Shariatzadeh, the plan was revised after consultations with FIFA revealed that the visa situation confronting Iranian nationals entering the United States could not be resolved in time to ensure a smooth build-up for the squad. The governing body confirmed the Mexican alternative on Saturday, with Tijuana expected to host the team.
The Visa Complication
The timing is sensitive. Even though the United States and Iran reached a nuclear framework agreement in April 2025, the normalisation of consular operations — including the issuance of tourist and athlete visas to Iranian nationals — has proceeded unevenly. Several Iranian sports delegations reported extended processing delays and intermittent refusals in the months following the agreement, a pattern that made a US-based training camp difficult to guarantee logistically.
The Iranian federation declined to specify which visa category caused the blockage, but federation officials cited in Iranian state-aligned coverage suggested that the uncertainty around US entry permissions for Iranian citizens made a stateside base untenable for a World Cup squad that requires its full roster present weeks before the tournament begins. FIFA's approval of the alternative effectively resolves that uncertainty by relocating the problem to a jurisdiction where Iranian nationals face fewer entry barriers.
Mexico as a Pragmatic Alternative
Tijuana, just across the border from San Diego, offers Iran a location with direct US access — convenient for the team's group-stage fixtures, which will be played in US cities — while sidestepping the visa issue entirely. Mexico's consular processing for Iranian nationals operates under different criteria than the US system, and the country's membership in the Visa Waiver Programme does not apply to Iranian passport holders, but Mexico's bilateral visa arrangements with Iran are more settled than Washington's case-by-case approach.
The move leaves Iran without a training facility in the host country itself — a minor logistical disadvantage compared to other qualified teams that can base themselves within the tournament's footprint. Several Asian confederation teams have historically preferred Gulf-state or European base locations for World Cup preparation, so the approach is not without precedent. For Iran, the calculation appears straightforward: a reliable Mexican base with US access beats a theoretically closer Arizona facility that cannot be guaranteed.
The Geopolitical Shadow
The episode is a small but telling illustration of how the US-Iran diplomatic thaw, while genuine, has not automatically resolved the operational friction that accumulated over years of sanctions and restricted consular services. The nuclear agreement opened diplomatic channels and unblocked some financial transactions, but it did not retroactively fix the infrastructure of bilateral travel that the sanctions era degraded. For a football team, that infrastructure gap manifests practically: you cannot hold a training camp where your players may not be able to enter.
FIFA's willingness to sanction the relocation reflects the governing body's pragmatic approach to participation logistics — the federation wants all qualified teams to arrive in operational condition. But the episode also signals that the normalisation of US-Iran relations remains uneven across the bureaucratic layers that govern everyday movement. A World Cup training base is a minor matter in the broader context of the relationship, but it is precisely this category of minor operational matter that often reveals how far formal diplomatic progress has actually travelled into daily practice.
What Comes Next
Iran will now finalise arrangements in Tijuana and begin confirming logistics — accommodation, training facilities, security protocols — with Mexican authorities. The team is expected to arrive well ahead of the tournament to acclimatise. How the squad navigates the US border from Mexico for group-stage matches will depend on whatever entry documentation FIFA and the US authorities have agreed to for participating teams; those protocols have not yet been publicly detailed for Iran's squad specifically.
The move resolves one logistical problem but leaves a broader question open: how quickly the operational architecture of US-Iran normalisation — including consular processing, travel permissions, and institutional trust — catches up with the political architecture that the nuclear agreement established. For now, the football is finding its own path across that gap.
This article was filed by Monexus on 23 May 2026.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://x.com/reuters/status/1951968428374876210