A lot of people hear “World Cup” and assume it’s a month-long marathon. The FIFA Club World Cup is a little different. How long it lasts depends on which version of the tournament you’re talking about.

For years, the older format was fairly short. Teams flew in, played a handful of matches, and the whole thing wrapped up in around ten days to two weeks. You could follow the entire event without rearranging your life.

The New Club World Cup Is Much Longer

FIFA has expanded the competition. The newer version includes far more clubs, which changes the schedule in a big way.

The tournament now runs for about a month. Think roughly four weeks from the opening match to the final. That’s much closer to the length people expect from a major international competition.

And honestly, that makes sense. More teams means more games. There isn’t really a shortcut around that.

Why the Schedule Grew

FIFA wanted a tournament that felt bigger and carried more weight. Instead of a small event featuring only a few champions, the expanded format brings together clubs from different continents on a much larger scale.

• More clubs involved, which naturally stretches the calendar beyond a quick week or two

• Group-stage matches take time because every team needs a fair shot before knockout rounds begin

• The final comes much later than fans of the older tournament might expect, and that’s deliberate

What Happens During Those Weeks?

The opening part of the tournament is usually the busiest. Teams play group matches over several days. After that, the field narrows and the knockout rounds begin.

Some days feel packed. Other days have fewer games. That’s part of why the month often feels quicker than it sounds. Once matches start stacking up, you stop noticing the calendar quite as much.

I actually prefer the longer format. Watching elite clubs from different regions face each other is the whole point. A tournament that ends almost as soon as it begins never felt completely satisfying.

A Small Example

Raj followed the competition while commuting to work last year. He’d check scores during a train ride and then catch highlights at night while eating leftover pav bhaji from the fridge.

The funny part was that he assumed it would be over in a week. A couple of rounds later, he was still talking about possible semifinal matchups.

Does Every Team Stay the Whole Time?

Not at all. Some clubs are eliminated fairly early. Others keep advancing and remain in the tournament until the final days.

Because of that, a fan’s experience can vary. If your team exits quickly, the event seems short. If they make a deep run, it suddenly feels like a full month of football.