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Venues, schedule and an emblem revealed for FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup – Friends of Football

Plans are building for the 2024 FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup in the Dominican Republic to be attended by 16 nations, including New Zealand.
Tournament organisers have confirmed match venues, a fixture schedule and an emblem to be used to promote the event.
The 2024 tournament will be held from October 16 – November 3, 2024, with games played in the cities of Santiago and Santo Domingo, which are only 150kms apart.
The Cibao University Stadium in Santiago de los Caballeros will be the venue for 15 of the 32 matches, including the first semi-final on Wednesday October 30, 2024.
The Felix Sanchez Stadium in Santo Domingo will host 17 matches, including the second semi-final on Thursday October 31, along with the third-place match and final, both on Sunday November 3.
A match schedule is available here but groups and matchups will be determined in June when the draw takes place in the Dominican Republic.
The tournament emblem has been inspired by ‘batún’, a game played by Taíno people on a central court or plaza using a rubber ball, and the ‘Bachata’ and ‘Merengue’ dances traditional to the host country.
FIFA says the design aims to unite football, dance and local customs to celebrate the world’s best U-17 footballers arriving in the Dominican Republic.
Main photo: The emblem for the 2024 FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup. Photo credit: FIFA.
Thirteen nations, including New Zealand, have now booked their places at the tournament.
The only remaining spots are reserved for three African sides who are yet to complete their qualifying tournament.
The New Zealand team, whose head coach will be Canterbury’s Alan Gunn, will represent Oceania and have qualified for all eight editions of the tournament.
READ MORE: Late winner gets New Zealand through to FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup >>>>
The three remaining places at the tournament will go to African teams through the 2024 African U-17 Women’s World Cup Qualifying Tournament.
The tournament started in December 2023 and concludes in June 2024. Of the 25 African nations that entered the qualifiers, only six are left with a chance of reaching the World Cup.
They are Burundi, Kenya, Zambia, Morocco, Liberia and Nigeria.
Three nations will be making their first-ever appearance at the U-17 Women’s World Cup — Dominican Republic, Ecuador and Poland.
The U-17 tournament will become an annual event for 24 nations in 2025 and will be held in Morocco from 2025-29.
Oceania will have two qualifying teams. Other slot allocations will be AFC (4), CAF(5), Concacaf (4), CONMEBOL(4), UEFA (5).
READ MORE: Key decisions made as FIFA releases women’s international calendar >>>>
READ MORE: New Zealand’s pathway to future FIFA U-17 World Cups gets easier >>>>
Main photo credit: FIFA.
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Click on links for more information
June 14-20: OFC U-16 Women’s Championship, qualifying tournament, Auckland (click here for details)
June 15-30: OFC Men’s Nations Cup, Vanuatu (click here for details)
Tuesday June 18 (4pm NZT): All Whites v Solomon Islands, OFC Nations Cup, Vanuatu (click here for details)
Friday June 21 (4pm NZT): All Whites v Vanuatu, OFC Nations Cup, Vanuatu (click here for details)
July 5-7: Round 4, Chatham Cup
July 5-7: Quarter-finals, Kate Sheppard Cup
July 7-20: OFC U-19 Men’s Championship, Samoa (click here for details)
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Thursday July 25 (3am NZT): OlyWhites v Guinea, Paris Olympics (click here for details)
Friday July 26 (3am NZT): Ferns v Canada, Paris Olympics (click here for details)
July 26-28: Quarter-finals, Chatham Cup
July 28-August 10: OFC U-16 Men’s Championship, Tahiti (click here for details)
Sunday July 28 (5am NZT): OlyWhites v United States, Paris Olympics (click here for details)
Monday July 29 (3am NZT): Ferns v Colombia, Paris Olympics (click here for details)
Wednesday July 31 (5am NZT): OlyWhites v France, Paris Olympics (click here for details)
Thursday August 1 (7am NZT): Ferns v France, Paris Olympics (click here for details)
August 16-18: Semi-finals, Chatham Cup and Kate Sheppard Cup
August 18-24: OFC Futsal Women’s Nations Cup, Solomon Islands (click here for details)
August 31-September 22: FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup, Colombia (click here for details)
September 2-10: FIFA World Cup 2026 — Oceania Qualifiers Matchdays 1 and 2, Samoa (click here for details)
Tuesday September 3 (1pm NZT): New Zealand v Japan, El Techo Stadium, Bogotá, Colombia, FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup (click here for details)
Friday September 6 (1pm NZT): New Zealand v Austria, El Techo Stadium, Bogotá, Colombia, FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup (click here for details)
Sunday September 8 (12.30pm NZT): All Whites v Mexico, Rose Bowl Stadium, California (click here for details)
Sunday September 8: Finals, Chatham Cup and Kate Sheppard Cup
Monday September 9 (11am NZT): New Zealand v Ghana, Pascual Guerrero Stadium, Cali, Colombia, FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup (click here for details)
September 8-21: OFC U-16 Women’s Championship, Fiji (click here for details)
September 14-October 6: FIFA Futsal World Cup, Uzbekistan (click here for details)
Sunday September 15 (10pm NZT): Futsal Whites v Libya, FIFA Futsal World Cup, Uzbekistan (click here for details)
Thursday September 19 (1am NZT): Futsal Whites v Spain, FIFA Futsal World Cup, Uzbekistan (click here for details)
Saturday September 21 (10.30m NZT): Futsal Whites v Kazakhstan, FIFA Futsal World Cup, Uzbekistan (click here for details)
September 28-29: Round one of men’s and women’s National Leagues
October 7-15: FIFA World Cup 2026 — Oceania Qualifiers Matchday 3, New Zealand and Vanuatu (click here for details)
October 16-November 3: FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup, Dominican Republic (click here for details)
October 20-26: OFC Beach Soccer Men’s Nations Cup, Solomon Islands
November 11-19: FIFA World Cup 2026 — Oceania Qualifiers Matchdays 4 and 5, New Zealand and Papua New Guinea (click here for details)

June 15-July 13: FIFA Club World Cup, United States (click here for details)
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