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FIFA World Cup 2026: What Spreadshirt Designers Need to Know

Major sporting events drive demand for fan apparel, and the FIFA World Cup 2026 will be no exception. For independent designers, that creates real opportunities: soccer-inspired designs, supporter graphics, and game-day visuals can perform especially well during the tournament period.

At the same time, it’s important to stay aware of trademark rights.

If you want to publish soccer-related designs in your shop or on the Spreadshirt Marketplace, it’s important to understand where general inspiration ends and protected branding begins.

Soccer-inspired designs: what’s generally allowed

As excitement around the tournament builds, many designers create sporty graphics, fan slogans, and soccer-themed apparel.

In general, that’s fine. However, designs that directly reference the official tournament, its branding, or protected terms may infringe on trademark rights if they’re used without permission from the rights holder.

What you should not use

Without authorization, do not use official protected elements connected to the tournament. This may include:

  • official event logos
  • official emblems, trophies, mascots, or branded visuals
  • official tournament names or protected word marks
  • official partner or sponsor branding
  • combinations of words or visuals that suggest an official connection

Please also be careful with combinations involving host countries, host cities, the year 2026, or football championship language if the overall design creates a clear association with the official event.

“Inspired by” can still be too close

Even if you do not use the exact official logo or wording, your design can still create legal risk if it closely imitates protected branding.

This applies especially to designs with:

  • visuals that strongly resemble official event branding
  • symbols or layouts modeled on official assets
  • wording that suggests endorsement or affiliation
  • near-identical reinterpretations of protected logos or marks

A design does not need to be an exact copy to create legal risk.

What you can do instead

There is still plenty of room for original soccer-inspired designs. Safer directions may include, for example:

  • general soccer slogans
  • fan culture and game-day themes
  • country color-inspired designs without official insignia
  • supporter designs for watch parties or group events
  • soccer typography, humor, and general tournament excitement

The key is to keep your designs generic, original, and clearly independent from official branding.

If you’re unsure, research first

Please note that these examples are not exhaustive. If you’re unsure whether certain terms or visual elements are legally protected, you can consult the following resources:

When in doubt, play it safe

Soccer-inspired designs can be a strong opportunity around the FIFA World Cup 2026, as long as they stay original and avoid protected branding.

Our recommendation is simple: design for fans, not official brands.

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