VAR will be allowed to intervene in two additional situations at World Cup 2026

FootballSports
2 Jun 2026 • 11:30 PM MYT
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Image from: VAR will be allowed to intervene in two additional situations at World Cup 2026
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VAR will have a bigger role at the 2026 FIFA World Cup, but its influence will still be tightly controlled.

The technology has always divided fans. Everyone wants clear mistakes corrected, but nobody wants matches constantly interrupted for long reviews.

That is the balance FIFA is trying to protect before the tournament begins across the United States, Canada, and Mexico.

Image from: VAR will be allowed to intervene in two additional situations at World Cup 2026
Photo by Joe Prior/Visionhaus via Getty Images

VAR can now step in on corner kicks and second yellow cards at FIFA World Cup 2026

An ESPN explainer detailed how video review will work at the World Cup, including two additional situations where officials can now intervene.

The first change involves corner kicks. If a corner has been awarded incorrectly, VAR can step in before play restarts to help correct the decision.

The second change concerns second yellow cards. If a player receives a second booking that leads to a red card, VAR can review whether the referee clearly got it wrong.

That is a major adjustment because second yellows can completely change a match, yet they were previously outside the normal VAR safety net.

FIFA World Cup 2026 VAR change still leaves most referee decisions untouched

Even with the new powers, VAR will not be able to review every controversial decision. Most fouls, throw-ins, first yellow cards and routine restart disagreements will still stay with the referee on the field.

That limit is intentional. FIFA does not want matches dragged into endless review stoppages, so the expansion focuses only on specific moments that can have a serious impact on the result.

A wrongly awarded corner can immediately lead to a goal, especially in knockout football where set pieces often decide tight games.

A wrong second yellow can be even more damaging because it removes a player and forces a team to play short-handed.

That is the key takeaway for teams and fans. VAR will have more reach at the 2026 World Cup, but it is still designed to correct selected match-changing errors, not referee the entire game from a screen.

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