The 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off on June 11 in Mexico City. It is the first edition to feature 48 teams across 12 groups. The top two from each group advance, along with the eight best third-place finishers, so every opening-day result matters more than in any previous tournament.
For participants on XT Exchange, XPredict on XT lets users trade on the outcomes of real-world events using USDT from their spot accounts. Instead of watching from the sidelines, users can take positions on match-level and group-level outcomes when markets are available.
This guide covers the verified Group A–D matchups, how prediction-market mechanics apply to the World Cup, and a practical framework for evaluating opening-day markets.

All teams and schedules verified against FIFA’s official tournament page, CBS Sports, Wikipedia, and Livescore.

Opening Day (June 11): Mexico vs South Africa at 3:00 PM in Mexico City, then South Korea vs Czechia at 10:00 PM in Guadalajara. Mexico has host-nation advantage. South Korea brings knockout-stage experience from 2002 and consistent qualification form. No match outcome here is foregone.


Opens June 12 with Canada vs Bosnia and Herzegovina in Toronto, another host-nation fixture. Qatar vs Switzerland follows on June 13. Canada’s home advantage is real but untested at World Cup level. Switzerland is the most tournament-tested side in the group, with four straight Round of 16 runs.


Starts June 13. Brazil remains a perennial contender, but Morocco’s 2022 semifinal proved reputation alone doesn’t decide group results. Haiti and Scotland both carry the hunger of sides with something to prove.


Features the third co-host. The USMNT faces Paraguay at 9:00 PM in Los Angeles. Türkiye adds European qualifier strength, Australia brings Asian-confederation consistency. Three competitive sides fighting for two automatic spots, plus the third-place safety net, makes this one of the more open groups.

XPredict is XT Exchange’s prediction-market feature, built on Polymarket infrastructure. Users trade binary Yes or No contracts on real-world events, settled in USDT from their spot account.
Core mechanics in a match-market context:
If World Cup markets appear on XPredict, expect questions on match winners, group advancement, and possibly broader tournament outcomes. Always verify availability on the live interface before taking any position.
Before committing USDT:
Market question clarity. Read the exact wording. “Will Mexico win their opening match?” is different from “Will Mexico finish top of Group A?” Settlement criteria are embedded in the question. Misread it and you misunderstand the trade.
Settlement timing. Match-winner markets typically settle after the final whistle. Group-stage markets may not resolve until all three matchdays are done. Check terms on XPredict.
Price and implied probability. A Yes share at $0.72 means roughly 72% crowd confidence. Compare this against your own assessment. If you think the real probability is higher, Yes may be value. If lower, consider No.
Volume and liquidity. Higher-volume markets have tighter spreads. Low-volume markets can move sharply on small orders.
Position size. Only risk what won’t hurt your broader portfolio if the position goes to $0.00.
National bias, recency bias, and narrative thinking are the three biggest distortions in World Cup markets.
Compare price to base rates. Host nations win their opener about 67% of the time. If a host’s match-winner market sits at $0.80, the crowd may have already priced in the edge and then some.
Watch lineup news. Lineups drop 60 to 90 minutes before kickoff. Prices shift on starter changes, injuries, and formation switches. Monitoring lineups gives a timing advantage over those who set positions hours early.
Ignore narrative. “Brazil always wins their opener” is not a probability. Brazil has lost World Cup opening matches. Markets reward probability assessment, not storytelling.
Check both sides. If Yes at $0.60 looks right, check whether No at $0.40 also makes sense. If both feel reasonable, the market is probably efficient and the edge isn’t there.
New to event-based trading? XT’s guide to prediction markets covers the fundamentals.
Every XPredict position can go to zero. Before you confirm:
Overweighting the first goal. An early goal moves prices fast, but football is 90 minutes. A goal in the 8th minute leaves 82 minutes to play. Buying after an early goal often means paying inflated prices for an unsettled outcome.
Ignoring the draw. Group-stage matches regularly end level. Both teams may be content with a point. Don’t treat every market as a two-horse race.
Chasing too many markets. Four groups can mean dozens of open positions. Spreading thin dilutes focus. Selectivity beats volume.
Confusing this with sports betting. Prediction-market prices reflect aggregated crowd probability. They are event-based trading instruments on XT Exchange, not betting products. The mechanics and settlement differ.
The Group A–D matches on June 11 to 13 start a six-week arc. A surprise loss reshuffles advancement odds. A dominant win compresses the group. A draw keeps all four teams alive.
Opening day is both an opportunity and a calibration event. How prices move during and after the first matches tells you something real about crowd accuracy and market efficiency.
If you haven’t tried XPredict yet, create an XT account, fund it with USDT, and start with markets where you have genuine context. Not markets where your only input is which jersey you own.
The World Cup rewards preparation. So do prediction markets.
XPredict is XT Exchange’s prediction-market feature, powered by Polymarket. Users trade on real-world event outcomes, including sports when available, using USDT from their spot account.
Between $0.01 and $0.99. The price reflects the crowd’s probability estimate. A Yes share at $0.70 means roughly 70% confidence the outcome will happen.
Group A: Mexico, South Africa, South Korea, Czechia. Group B: Canada, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Qatar, Switzerland. Group C: Brazil, Morocco, Haiti, Scotland. Group D: USA, Australia, Paraguay, Türkiye.
Group A opens June 11 (Mexico vs South Africa, Mexico City). Group B starts June 12 (Canada vs Bosnia and Herzegovina, Toronto). Groups C and D begin June 13. Verify times against FIFA’s official schedule.
Yes. Losing shares settle at $0.00. You lose the full amount committed. Only participate with what you can afford to lose.
No. It is an event-based prediction-market feature on XT Exchange. Prices reflect crowd probability estimates. Settlement, mechanics, and regulatory framework differ from traditional betting.
Go to the XPredict page on XT Exchange. Confirm market availability, settlement rules, and event coverage on the live interface before taking any position.
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