As the 2026 World Cup gets underway across Canada, Mexico and the United States, the drama of the group stage is gripping the world. Yet, thousands of miles away in Italy, there is a distinct magic to how the tournament is being consumed. Nowhere is this truer than in Rome.
This summer, World Cup fever in the Eternal City is a blend of classic Italian passion with a quiet, contemplative longing for a tournament that left them behind.
Following years of mixed fortunes – from the ultimate highs of Euro 2020 and the devastating blow of failing to qualify for the 2026 finals – the Azzurri are absent from the grandest stage. Because of this, you won’t find dedicated Nazionale fan zones taking over the historical centre of Rome. Instead, Roman football fandom has gone underground, and, in one spectacular case, 17 meters up into the sky.
To find the true, beating heart of World Cup fever in the Eternal City right now, you have to leave the Colosseum behind and head east to the multicultural district of Alessandrino.
The World Cup on the Roof: Casilino Sky Park

Perched on the fourth floor of a formerly disused multi-storey car park, Casilino Sky Park has transformed a concrete eyesore into a vibrant 4,000-square-metre community piazza. This summer, under the defiant local slogan Cevojocrede (You’ve got to believe), this open-air rooftop has become the ultimate Roman hub for the 2026 World Cup.
Because of the massive time difference between Italy and the North American host cities, matches kick off late into the balmy Roman evening. The Sky Park has adapted, opening from 6:00 PM until 2:00 AM, allowing locals to swap the street-level heat for a cooler breeze and a giant screen showing the tournament under the stars.
But what makes this venue uniquely Roman is how it reflects the changing face of the city. The Sky Park’s “Mondiali sul Tetto“ (World Cup on the Roof) initiative isn’t just about watching the games; it is a celebration of football as a universal language.
Because Italy is watching from the sidelines, the Roman crowd will be adopting second teams and cheering on global stars.
No doubt the Giallorossi will be celebrating Roma’s Wesley and Manu Kone, but Lazio supporters sadly won’t spot any of their stars on the world stage, for the first time in forty years.
As the matches play out on the giant screen, local foreign communities will take over the rooftop kitchens to serve dishes from around the world alongside classic Roman food. You can watch a crucial group stage match while pairing a cold beer with Kurdish-fusion cuisine, artisan dumplings from a local gyozeria, or fresh pasta from the neighbourhood’s historic Pastificio Secondi, a pasta workshop much loved by locals since 1985.
An Eternal Passion
Ultimately, World Cup fever in Rome this year will be the same as the previous two. The Azzurri are still missing, and the usual chaotic, horn-blaring scooter processions toward Piazza del Popolo remain absent. But places like Casilino Sky Park prove that the Roman passion for calcio cannot be extinguished.
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