Canada and Switzerland meet at BC Place in Vancouver in a Group B finale that could decide who tops the table at the FIFA World Cup 2026. Kick-off is at 8:00pm BST / 3:00pm ET on Wednesday, with Thursday morning viewing for fans in Australia (5:00am AEST).
Canada Face Switzerland in Group B Decider at World Cup 2026

Canada and Switzerland meet at BC Place in Vancouver in a Group B finale that could decide who tops the table at the FIFA World Cup 2026. Kick-off is at 8:00pm BST / 3:00pm ET on Wednesday, with Thursday morning viewing for fans in Australia (5:00am AEST).
How to watch for free
The match is available free of charge across a number of broadcasters worldwide. UK fans can stream live on ITV, while viewers in Ireland have RTÉ Player, Australians can use SBS On Demand, Swiss fans are served by SRF/RTS/RSI, and Brazilian audiences can tune in via CazéTV on YouTube. Further free options include NOS in the Netherlands, RTBF/VRT in Belgium, and TRT in Turkey. English commentary is available on ITV, RTÉ Player, and SBS On Demand.
In the US, Fox holds the rights. The channel is accessible through Fox One — the platform's own streaming service, which includes a 3-day free trial before moving to $19.99 per month — or via cord-cutting services such as YouTube TV, Hulu+Live TV, Fubo, Sling, and DirecTV.
Fans based outside their home country can use a VPN service such as Norton VPN, which offers a 60-day money-back guarantee, to access their preferred free stream from abroad.
What is at stake
Canada enter the match needing only a draw to guarantee top spot in Group B and remain in Vancouver for their first two knockout games. A defeat would hand Switzerland the group, though Canada's commanding goal difference — built in large part on a 6-0 victory over Qatar — should be enough to secure second place and a round of 32 fixture in California regardless.
The first tiebreaker between teams level on points is head-to-head record under current regulations, so a heavy defeat for either side could, in theory, complicate matters further — though that scenario would depend on a very particular set of results in the parallel match between Bosnia and Herzegovina and Qatar.
Team news and form
Canada manager Jesse Marsch is without midfielder Ismael Kone, who was forced off injured during the team's second group game against Qatar. Despite that loss, the co-hosts arrive in strong form: a late equaliser against Bosnia and Herzegovina in their opener set up a commanding win in the second match, giving Canada their first World Cup point and first World Cup victory on home soil.
Jonathan David and Cyle Larin have combined for five goals, while Tajon Buchanan and Alistair Johnston have caused problems on the right flank. Canada's goal is to reach the knockout stage for the first time — and to do so as group winners.
Switzerland, meanwhile, produced a dramatic second-half turnaround to defeat Bosnia and Herzegovina 4 goals to one, with substitutes Johan Manzambi and Ruben Vargas each making an immediate impact off the bench. The Swiss are chasing a place in the knockout rounds for the fifth time in their last six World Cups, though they know that a disciplined, full-strength Canada side will be a far sterner examination than the ten-man Bosnian outfit they faced previously.
FourFourTwo's prediction
FourFourTwo predicts Switzerland 2-2 Canada — an entertaining draw between two sides with plenty to play for and enough quality to keep neutrals engaged throughout.


