World Cup Creators Get a U.S. Visa Warning
Foreign influencers travelling to the United States for the 2026 FIFA World Cup have been warned that tourist entry does not cover paid content creation. U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the Department of Homeland Security told EL PAÍS that entering mainly to produce posts that generate income can count as work. Creators using visitor status could breach the terms of entry.
The warning affects creators planning to film World Cup trips for platforms such as TikTok, YouTube, Facebook or Instagram while earning money from U.S.-based activity. A tourist visa or visa-waiver visit can cover holidays, social events and unpaid amateur participation, but not employment. Violations can lead to visa cancellation, removal from the country and future travel restrictions, according to U.S. visa guidance.
What Creators Should Check
Creators should review their plans before travelling, especially if the trip includes:
- sponsored posts or paid brand work;
- U.S.-source income;
- filming as the main travel purpose;
- FIFA, platform or media access deals.
Some creators may need a work-linked visa, including an O-1 route for people with documented extraordinary ability, rather than standard visitor entry.
The rule does not stop ordinary fans from attending matches, sightseeing or posting holiday content without paid work attached. It matters most for creators building business trips around U.S. host cities such as New York, New Jersey, Los Angeles, Miami, Dallas, Seattle and Atlanta. With the right status, World Cup travel can still include stadium visits, fan events and city breaks around match days.
Anyone whose trip depends on monetised content should sort the visa question before flights, hotels and match tickets become non-refundable. Save contracts, platform invitations and sponsorship details, then check them with an immigration adviser or the official visa pages. Posting the trip is not the issue on its own; earning from work carried out in the U.S. is where problems begin.