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Fan Houses at the FIFA Club World Cup 2025: A Strategic Model for Global Brand Expansion.

  • Writer: Roger Hampel
    Roger Hampel
  • Jun 22
  • 3 min read

Roger Hampel

Fan Houses FIFA Club World Cup 2025

Botafogo House in Venice Beach, LA / Photo Credit: Botafogo


As the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 unfolds across the United States, a number of participating football clubs have adopted a parallel strategy: leveraging the tournament to establish a stronger foothold in the U.S. market through localized fan engagement hubs.


Several clubs—including Atlético de Madrid, Paris Saint-Germain, Flamengo, Palmeiras, Fluminense, Botafogo, Juventus, Borussia Dortmund, and Manchester City—have launched their own branded fan houses, pop-ups, or touring activations in major cities such as Los Angeles, New York, Orlando, Miami, Atlanta, and Toronto. Fan Houses FIFA Club World Cup 2025


These initiatives represent a clear shift: from passive participation in global tournaments to active, on-the-ground internationalization of the club’s brand.


Fan Houses FIFA Club World Cup 2025

Botafogo House in Venice Beach, LA / Photo Credit: Botafogo


Characteristics of Modern Fan Houses


The term “fan house” in this context refers to dedicated, physical club-branded spaces designed to engage supporters across multiple days of the tournament. These are not limited to match-day presence but often serve as temporary cultural and commercial embassies.


Key components typically include:

  • Branded environments: club shops, themed installations, club memorabilia, and immersive décor

  • Daily programming: match screenings, meet-and-greet sessions with club legends, music, fitness, or football clinics

  • Cultural integration: partnerships with local artists, musicians, food vendors, and fan communities

  • Commercial activation: sponsor visibility, exclusive merchandising, limited-edition products, and fan CRM collection

These fan experiences create multi-sensory, high-frequency contact points between clubs and their global audiences, especially in strategically important markets such as the United States.


Fan Houses FIFA Club World Cup 2025

Casa Atleti in Los Angeles / Photo Credit: Atletico de Madrid


Selected Examples of Fan Houses – Club by Club Fan Houses FIFA Club World Cup 2025

🇪🇸 Atlético de Madrid – Casa Atleti (Los Angeles)

Multi-day pop-up experience including rooftop football, live music, retail space, coaching clinics, and cultural activations. Positioned in the heart of Hollywood.


🇫🇷 Paris Saint-Germain – PSG House (Melrose Avenue, LA)

A lifestyle-focused venue combining fashion, technology, wellness zones, podcast studios, and club activations in partnership with brands like EA Sports and Qatar Airways.


🇧🇷 Flamengo – Casa Flamengo (Orlando)

Located at ICON Park, this hub featured match screenings, samba music, local food, and ambassador appearances. Aimed at mobilizing Flamengo’s diaspora fan base in Florida.


🇧🇷 Palmeiras – Palmeiras Village (New Jersey & Miami)

Two-site engagement campaign featuring exhibitions, family zones, and live watch parties. Designed to reinforce Palmeiras’ presence in areas with strong Brazilian communities.


🇧🇷 Fluminense – Casa Fluminense (New York City)

Urban fan hub near Times Square offering screenings, themed décor, Brazilian cuisine, and meetups for the Tricolor fan base in the northeast U.S.


🇧🇷 Botafogo – Botafogo House (Venice Beach, Los Angeles)

Concerts, beachside football activities, and watch parties created a relaxed, community-driven engagement model for one of Brazil’s most historic clubs.


🇮🇹 Juventus – Juventus Village – North America Fan Tour

A touring concept across five cities: Toronto, Boston, DC, Philadelphia, and Orlando. Included interactive installations, appearances by club legends, and fan community events.


🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿Manchester City – City Fan Zone (Atlanta)

A one-day event with Shaun Wright-Phillips and Joleon Lescott, designed as a hybrid fan festival combining games, family activities, and direct sponsor activations.


🇩🇪 Borussia Dortmund – BVB Fan Embassy (Brooklyn, NY)

A fan zone located in BK Backyard, offering live music, Dortmund-themed décor, and appearances from Roman Weidenfeller. Strong integration with U.S.-based BVB fan clubs.


Fan Houses FIFA Club World Cup 2025

BVB Fan Embassy (Brooklyn, NY) / Photo Credit: BVB


Business Value: Why Fan Houses Matter


From a commercial perspective, these initiatives are not just about presence—they represent a strategic investment in fan development, monetization, and brand globalization.

Key business drivers include:


  • U.S. Market Penetration: The United States is a primary growth market ahead of the FIFA World Cup 2026. Fan houses allow clubs to build authentic relationships and brand recognition within local communities and diasporas.


  • Sponsor Activation in Physical Environments: Clubs and their commercial partners benefit from face-to-face engagement. Sponsors gain visibility not only through signage, but through

    experiential integration—e.g. product tastings, photo zones, games, and co-branded merchandise.


  • Fan Lifecycle Monetization: These venues serve as acquisition and retention points. From first-time walk-ins to lifelong supporters, clubs convert casual interest into CRM data, merchandise sales, and digital memberships.


  • Localized Storytelling: Each fan house is an opportunity to localize the club’s global identity—connecting heritage with local culture, creating relevance, and building emotional affinity far from the home stadium.


Fan Houses FIFA Club World Cup 2025

PSG House (Melrose Avenue, LA) / Photo Credit: PSG


The FIFA Club World Cup 2025 has shown that international tournaments are not only sporting competitions, but also platforms for global brand expansion. The emergence of fan houses as structured, branded environments marks a new phase in football marketing.


Clubs that invest in such experiences position themselves more effectively for long-term success in global markets. As the sport continues to grow commercially, the value of physical fan engagement infrastructure will likely become a core component of international strategy—not a side initiative.

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