Atlanta is taking the World Cup off the field and into the streets.
Mayor Andre Dickens and Showcase Atlanta announced a $150,000 Community Engagement Grant this week, a program designed to fund free, public watch parties and community festivals across the city’s six zones during the 2026 FIFA World Cup this summer. The goal is straightforward: no one in Atlanta should miss out on the tournament just because they don’t have a match ticket.
What the grant covers
Selected organizations in Atlanta Community will receive between $3,000 and $4,000 in direct funding to cover local programming costs, along with a professional outdoor screen and a sound system for the duration of their event. Events can run anywhere from one to three days, and all of them must be free and open to the public.
The program will support up to eight neighborhood-led events citywide. At least one local vendor must be included in every event, keeping the economic impact rooted in the community itself.
Which neighborhoods are being prioritized
Organizers say priority will go to areas farther from Mercedes-Benz Stadium, specifically parts of southwest and south Atlanta, the Westside, and the Buford Highway corridor. The reasoning is deliberate: these are the neighborhoods that tend to be left out of the cultural and economic ripple effects that come with hosting a global event at this scale.
That framing matters. Atlanta has spent years building toward this moment, and city leaders are now trying to make sure the benefits don’t cluster around a single zip code.
Who can apply
Eligible applicants include neighborhood associations, Neighborhood Planning Units, local nonprofits, faith communities, and civic organizations. Small businesses are also welcome to apply, provided they partner with a recognized neighborhood association. The application window is open now and closes April 30, with selected groups announced on May 10.
Events are expected to take place during the World Cup in June and July.
Why this is different from typical event funding
Showcase Atlanta Interim Executive Director Lamar Stewart framed the program as more than a check in the mail. The idea is to push resources directly into the hands of people already doing the work of keeping their communities active and engaged.
The program reflects a broader tension that cities often face when hosting mega-events: the cameras point at the stadium, the money flows toward downtown infrastructure, and the outer neighborhoods absorb the traffic without getting much in return. Atlanta is trying to redirect some of that energy.
Atlanta’s bigger World Cup picture
Atlanta is one of 16 host cities for the 2026 World Cup, which will be played across the United States, Canada, and Mexico. The city will host matches at Mercedes-Benz Stadium, and local officials have been working to extend the tournament’s footprint well beyond game days.
Georgia Tech recently announced it would open its dorms to visiting fans this summer, another sign that the city is thinking creatively about how to absorb the expected surge in visitors.
But the Community Engagement Grant is pointed inward rather than outward. It’s not about attracting tourists or filling hotel rooms. It’s about making sure that Atlantans who have lived in the city long before any bid was submitted actually get to feel like this moment belongs to them too.
Whether that ambition holds depends on which organizations apply, which ones get selected, and how well the events are executed. The funding is modest by event production standards, but it’s real money for neighborhood groups that typically run on volunteer labor and tight margins.
For organizations considering a submission, the application portal is live through Showcase Atlanta’s website. May 10 is the announcement date. The matches start in June.

