On April 16, 2026, the New York City Council rolled out a package of pre-considered introductions designed to guide neighborhoods and small businesses through the tourism surge expected when the 2026 FIFA World Cup hits town. The bundle mixes promotional programs, consumer protections and crowd management measures, all aimed at steering visitor dollars into local storefronts and cutting down on headaches for residents.
What the package includes
In a press release via New York City Council, leaders said the pre considered package would require a cultural passport program to push visitors into all five boroughs, publish a citywide calendar of World Cup viewing parties, festivals and performances, and direct agencies to expand temporary bathroom capacity and maintenance during the tournament. It also lays out a slate of ceremonial co namings and a resolution celebrating the World Cup’s arrival.
Economic stakes and the host committee’s forecast
The New York metro area is scheduled to host eight World Cup matches next summer, and the New York/New Jersey Host Committee projects the games and related tourism could generate about $3.3 billion in economic activity, including roughly $1.7 billion in projected visitor spending, $431.9 million in state and local tax revenue and support for more than 26,000 jobs.
How the plan aims to help small businesses
Council leaders are pitching the measures as a way to make sure visitor spending reaches neighborhood merchants instead of clustering only around stadium precincts. Majority Leader Shaun Abreu and Deputy Speaker Nantasha Williams sponsored preconsidered introductions that would require the Department of Small Business Services to run targeted outreach and promotion tied to the cultural passport and the citywide World Cup event calendar, according to the Council’s announcement
Bathrooms, maintenance and quick deployments to deal with crowds and long lines, city agencies have already moved on modular restroom pilots, and the New York City Economic Development Corporation released a $4 million RFP in February to source and install modular public bathrooms across neighborhoods, with a rollout expected by summer 2026. Officials say that temporary units, higher maintenance levels and extended hours will be part of the World Cup readiness plan as agencies coordinate with Parks and DOT.
Street co names, consumer protections and scams outreach. The package includes co names such as “Thierry Henry Way” in Manhattan and “Pelé Way” in Queens, and it would require the Department of Consumer and Worker Protection to launch outreach and education about scams that commonly target tourists. Council materials say the moves follow oversight work this winter to prepare the city for an influx of visitors.
The preconsidered introductions were filed at the Council’s stated meeting and will move through committee review in the coming weeks. The City Council Committee on Economic Development, chaired by Virginia Maloney, has been leading oversight of the city’s World Cup preparation efforts. Implementation, from the cultural passport to restroom siting and small business outreach, will depend on coordination among EDC, SBS, DCWP, Parks and DOT as the city counts down to the July 19, 2026 final at MetLife Stadium.

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