
With the 2026 FIFA World Cup now underway in Mexico, the United States, and Canada, millions of fans are making their way to the three Mexican host cities — Mexico City, Guadalajara, and Monterrey. But the tournament arrives against a backdrop of social unrest that any traveler heading to Mexico should understand before they go.
What the U.S. Government Is Saying
The U.S. State Department reissued its Mexico travel advisory on May 29 with World Cup-specific guidance, maintaining a Level 2 warning — "Exercise Increased Caution" — citing concerns about terrorism, crime, and kidnapping.
Six Mexican states are labeled as Level 4 "Do Not Travel" zones: Colima, Guerrero, Michoacán, Sinaloa, Tamaulipas, and Zacatecas. None of those states are hosting World Cup matches. Mexico City (Estado de México) and Monterrey (Nuevo León) are both at Level 2, while Guadalajara's state of Jalisco carries a Level 3 "Reconsider Travel" rating, though the city's official event areas are considered safer.

For anyone traveling to any of the three host cities, federal guidance includes: avoid travel between cities after dark, use app-based ride services like Uber or Cabify rather than hailing street taxis, avoid traveling alone in unfamiliar areas, and comply with any security checkpoints. The U.S. Embassy also strongly recommends enrolling in the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP), which allows the Embassy to send security alerts and make contact in an emergency. Additionally, travelers should be aware that Medicare, Medicaid, and most standard U.S. health insurance plans do not cover services outside the United States, making travel health insurance a worthwhile investment.
The Protests: What's Happening on the Ground
The social movements converging on Mexico City this week are real, longstanding, and deeply rooted — not tourist-adjacent noise.
The CNTE, Mexico's dissident teachers' union, has been on indefinite strike for over ten days, with marches regularly disrupting major roads in the capital. Their demands — pension reform, salary increases, and direct dialogue with President Claudia Sheinbaum — remain unresolved. Protests have been concentrated on Insurgentes and Paseo de la Reforma, two of Mexico City's busiest boulevards, generating traffic gridlock across the capital.
Joining them are families of Mexico's 130,000 disappeared, a number that reflects decades of unresolved violence, enforced disappearances, and cartel activity. The most internationally recognized case remains the 43 student teachers who disappeared from the Ayotzinapa rural college in Guerrero in 2014 — a case still officially unresolved after 12 years and multiple administrations. Families of those students, alongside broader collectives of madres buscadoras (mothers searching for missing children), are using the World Cup's global spotlight to demand accountability.
A range of other movements — animal rights groups, agricultural workers, health sector unions — are also capitalizing on the international attention to press their own long-delayed demands. A large multi-coalition march is planned for June 11, the day of Mexico's inaugural match against South Africa.
These are not anti-tourist demonstrations. They are domestic political movements that happen to be concentrated in the same urban core where fan activity is centered.
How Mexico Is Responding
The Mexican government has framed security as its top priority for the tournament. Mexico announced plans to deploy nearly 100,000 security personnel to protect fans across its three host cities, with a coordinated operation involving federal, state, and local forces focused on stadiums, fan zones, and transportation corridors.

The primary objective, according to officials, is to shield events from organized crime, guaranteeing the safety of international visitors and athletes. President Sheinbaum has said the tournament's opening will be peaceful and has called on protesting groups to avoid confrontations.
What Travelers Should Actually Do
The picture is complex but navigable. For those attending matches or visiting fan events:
Stay within official event perimeters and well-trafficked areas. Monitor local news for any planned marches that could affect mobility — particularly around Reforma, Insurgentes, and Tlalpan in Mexico City. Use regulated transportation only. Keep embassy contact information saved, and enroll in STEP before departure. Purchase travel health insurance. And if caught near a protest, stay calm, don't film police interactions, and move away from the crowd rather than toward it.

Mexico has hosted the World Cup before — in 1970 and 1986 — and its security apparatus knows how to manage large international events. The demonstrations reflect real grievances that predate the tournament. As one security analyst noted, transportation remains one of the most significant logistical challenges in a metropolis of nearly 22 million people — and getting around safely requires planning, not improvisation.
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