Women's football · the road to 2027

The women's game, told with the care it deserves.

From a clubroom in Wellington to the floodlights of the World Cup, Women of the Cup follows the players, the tactics and the stories shaping the most exciting era women's football has ever known. The 2027 FIFA Women's World Cup — hosted by Brazil, the first ever staged in South America, with 32 teams — is the backdrop to everything we cover.

32
Teams at the 2027 finals
8
Host cities in Brazil
90+
Years of women's football
What we cover

Four threads we pull on, week after week

Profiles, history, the development of the game, and long-form reporting — all written from a New Zealand perspective for readers who want depth, not just scores.

Women footballers training on a pitch
The Game

How the sport keeps growing

Professional leagues, pathways for girls, equal-pay battles and broadcast deals — the off-pitch work that turns talent in Norway or the Netherlands into world-class teams.

See what's changing
Why it matters now

A bigger tournament, a wider world

Brazil 2027 will be the first Women's World Cup staged in South America — and the second and last to feature 32 teams before the tournament expands to 48 in 2031. Expect debutants and surprises alongside familiar giants.

Europe still sends the favourites — Spain, England, France and Germany — but the gap is closing fast as investment spreads across the continent.

For the southern hemisphere, the legacy of 2023 lingers. New Zealand and Australia proved the women's game can fill stadiums and headlines alike.

Follow the road to the 2027 finals with us

New profiles, history features and long reads land regularly. Get to know the project and the people behind it.

About Women of the Cup