Football is about to do something it has never done before. The FIFA World Cup final in 2026 will officially feature its first-ever halftime show, and honestly, it already feels like one of those “wait… is this real?” moments in sports history.

The final, happening on 19 July at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, will now include a Super Bowl-style performance break, marking a massive shift in how football’s biggest stage is presented. The idea is not small either — it’s being positioned like a global entertainment moment, not just a musical add-on.
And the names attached to it are absolutely huge.
We’re talking about Madonna, Shakira, and BTS as the main headliners of the halftime show. Three global icons from completely different eras and music worlds coming together on a football stage that has never had anything like this before. The show is expected to be short, around 11 minutes, but clearly designed to feel big, loud, and globally viral.
Behind the scenes, the whole thing is being shaped very carefully. The halftime show is being curated by Chris Martin from Coldplay, which is interesting in itself because he’s been pushing for something like this for years. On the direction side, Hamish Hamilton, who has worked on some of the biggest live global broadcasts including Super Bowl shows and Olympic ceremonies, is the one bringing the visual side together. So it’s not just a music lineup — it’s being treated like a full-scale production.
FIFA has also linked the performance to the Global Citizen Education Fund, which is aiming to raise funds for education and football access for children around the world. So there’s a bigger message running alongside the entertainment side of it too.
Now, if you’ve watched football long enough, this feels like a big cultural shift. Because traditionally, football doesn’t pause for spectacle like this. The 15-minute break is usually just players regrouping, managers shouting instructions, fans catching their breath. So this move definitely changes the rhythm a bit.
At the same time, we’ve already seen how massive halftime shows can be, we’re talking the Super Bowl, where performances have become almost as iconic as the game itself. From Michael Jackson redefining the format, to Prince performing in the rain, to Rihanna owning the stage in recent years, and even Bad Bunny this year, the Super Bowl has turned halftime into a global entertainment moment of its own.
Shakira, who already has her own World Cup legacy with Waka Waka (This Time for Africa), basically a tournament anthem on its own, is back in the mix again, also linked this year with her new track Dai Dai, keeping that World Cup connection very much alive on this global stage.
And that’s exactly why FIFA is doing this now.
But as a football fan, there’s also that little question sitting in the back of your mind. Football is different. The flow matters. The tension matters. The 90 minutes is sacred in its own way. So while this halftime show is exciting and honestly very “wow” on paper, it also makes you wonder: will it actually elevate the World Cup final experience, or will it slightly interrupt the natural feel of the game?
Maybe it becomes iconic. Maybe it becomes a yearly tradition. Or maybe football fans end up missing the simplicity of just… football.
Either way, for the first time ever, the World Cup final won’t just be about what happens on the pitch. It will also be about what happens in those 11 minutes in between. And that alone is enough to grab everyone’s attention.
Sources: Billboard, AP News, BBC