FIFA World Cup 2026 New Rules Explained: 3-Minute Hydration Breaks, In-Game Ads, and IFAB Law Changes
FIFA confirms mandatory 3-minute hydration breaks with TV ads for World Cup 2026, plus 8-second goalkeeper rule, 5-second restarts, and major IFAB changes.
The Big Change: Football Gets Its First Official "TV Timeout"
For the first time in 96 years, FIFA is breaking a World Cup match into quarters — not for tactics, for water and commercials.
From 1 July 2025, the IFAB Laws 2025/26 apply, and FIFA confirmed they will be used at the 2026 World Cup in USA-Mexico-Canada. The headline is the mandatory hydration break:
- 3 minutes in each half, in every one of the 104 matches, regardless of weather, stadium roof, or air-conditioning
- Taken around the 22nd minute (referees have flexibility if there's an injury)
- Official reason: player welfare
But the break is also a commercial break. FIFA will allow broadcasters to cut away for 2 minutes 10 seconds of advertising, starting 20 seconds after the whistle and ending 30 seconds before restart. That creates 208 ad windows across the tournament.
Two formats are allowed:
- Split-screen – pitch stays visible, only FIFA sponsors can advertise
- Full-screen cutaway – broadcaster can sell to any brand
All 9 New IFAB Rules Coming With It
FIFA Refereeing Chief Pierluigi Collina said the changes target "less time-wasting, fewer controversies, faster game". Here’s the full list:
1. 8-Second Goalkeeper Rule
Goalkeepers holding the ball over 8 seconds concede a corner kick, not an indirect free-kick. Referees give a visual 5-second countdown.
2. 5-Second Restarts
- Throw-in not taken in 5 seconds → turnover to opponent
- Goal-kick not taken in 5 seconds → corner to opponents
3. 10-Second Substitutions
Player must leave at nearest point within 10 seconds, or the replacement waits 1 minute on the sideline and team plays short.
4. 1-Minute Treatment Rule
Any outfield player treated on pitch must stay off for 1 minute after restart. Exceptions: goalkeeper injuries, head injury, teammate collisions.
5. No "Tactical Timeouts"
When a goalkeeper is down injured, outfield players cannot leave the pitch to talk to coaches.
6. Captain-Only Communication
Only captains may approach referees in certain situations – now a formal guideline.
7. VAR Expansion
VAR can now intervene for fouls before a corner/free-kick is taken, wrongly awarded corners, red card from clearly wrong second yellow, and mistaken identity.
8. "Vinicius Rule" – Mouth Covering
Covering mouth in a confrontational exchange = direct red card.
9. Protest Walk-Off = Forfeit
Leaving the pitch to protest a referee decision = red card, and team causing abandonment forfeits the match.
Why This Matters
- Game rhythm: FIFA wants to kill time-wasting but adds 6 guaranteed minutes of stoppage per game
- Broadcasting: It's the first World Cup designed for in-game ad breaks, not just halftime
- Player welfare vs. money: Officially for heat safety, but the format was designed with US broadcasters
These rules are already live at the FIFA Club World Cup and become mandatory worldwide from the 2025/26 season.