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World Cup could cost employers as workers tune into matches, survey finds

By Thomson Reuters Jun 2, 2026 | 4:08 PM

June 2 (Reuters) – As the soccer World Cup is set to take over water cooler chats, employers may have trouble keeping workers focused during the ​tournament – and even getting them to the office ‌in the first place, a new survey published on Tuesday suggests.

Research from UKG estimates that the World Cup, which runs from June 11 to July 19, could cost global employers some $17 billion in ‌lost ​productivity, with 37% of workers planning ⁠to adjust their schedule because ⁠of the tournament.

The survey found 27% of employees are likely to miss work by showing up late, leaving early or skipping entirely, while 11% admitted they would work ​while hungover and 14% said they would secretly stream matches and highlights while on the clock.

UKG, an AI ⁠platform for HR, pay, and ⁠workforce management, surveyed 8,000 employees across Australia, ​Canada, France, Germany, Mexico, the Netherlands, Britain and the United States ​to assess the World Cup’s impact on workplaces.

This ‌year’s expanded tournament, co-hosted by the U.S., Canada and Mexico, will feature 48 nations and 104 games.

The tournament could lead to some $11.7 billion in lost productivity costs in the ⁠U.S. alone, with Germany next at $1.34 billion, according to UKG.

“When absenteeism and presenteeism hit at scale, the effect is immediate and ⁠expensive,” said Suresh ‌Vittal, chief product officer at UKG. “Productivity ⁠drops, customer experience suffers, and morale takes a ​hit ‌as the rest of the team is ​left to ⁠cover the gaps.”

And managers are not immune to the lure of a mouthwatering match-up. The survey found 42% of managers would likely to plan a day off and 45% ask for last-minute flexibility.

(Reporting by Nicole Fernandes in Toronto, Editing ​by Rosalba O’Brien)