Kickoff: Monday, July 6, 2026 · 3:00 PM ET (19:00 UTC)
Venue: AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas
Stage: Round of 16 · 2026 FIFA World Cup
A genuine heavyweight clash. Both Portugal (world #8) and Spain (world #7) rank among the tournament's elite, and in a Round of 16 tie there is no margin for error — one of these contenders is going home tonight.
Portugal arrive in strong form — drew 1–1 with Congo, D.R., beat Uzbekistan 5–0, drew 0–0 with Colombia and beat Croatia 2–1 (8 pts, 8 scored, 2 conceded).
Spain arrive in strong form — drew 0–0 with Cape Verde, beat Saudi Arabia 4–0, beat Uruguay 1–0 and beat Austria 3–0 (10 pts, 8 scored, 0 conceded).
🇵🇹 Portugal — 🇪🇸 Spain
FIFA ranking — #8 — #7
Confederation — Europe (UEFA) — Europe (UEFA)
World Cup titles — 0 — 1
World Cup appearances — 9 — 16
Portugal are seasoned tournament regulars; Spain are 1-time world champion.
Based purely on the FIFA-ranking gap, a model favors Spain to win roughly 52% of the time — with the balance split between a Portugal result and a draw. That's a ranking-implied estimate, not a prediction of how the 90 minutes will actually unfold: form, tactics, and a single moment routinely override the math, and this tournament has served up several reminders already.
This is a Round of 16 tie in the first 48-team World Cup — straight knockout football. There are no second chances and no points to make up: the winner moves a step closer to the final on July 19, the loser is out. If it's level after 90 minutes it goes to extra time and, if needed, penalties. See where both sides sit in our live title odds and how the Round of 32 format works.
*Preview auto-generated ahead of kickoff from first-party tournament data (FIFA rankings, World Cup history, confederation). Updated results land in our match recaps within minutes of full-time. Spanish translation follows within ~10 minutes.*
Portugal vs Spain is scheduled for Monday, July 6, 2026 at the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
The 2026 FIFA World Cup is hosted across 16 cities in the United States, Mexico, and Canada, running from June 11 to July 19, 2026 — the first 48-team World Cup.