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Quebec City to host women's world hockey championship in 2027, world juniors in 2029

QUÉBEC — Quebec City will host the 2027 women’s world hockey championship and co-host the 2029 world junior hockey championship, Hockey Canada said Thursday. The nearby city of Trois-Rivières, Que.
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Canada's women's national team stands for their national anthem as flags are raised after their win against the United States in the final of the IIHF Women's World Hockey Championships in Utica, N.Y., Sunday, April 14, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Adrian Kraus

QUÉBEC — Quebec City will host the 2027 women’s world hockey championship and co-host the 2029 world junior hockey championship, Hockey Canada said Thursday.

The nearby city of Trois-Rivières, Que., will share the world juniors hosting duties with the Quebec capital for the annual holiday-season tournament.

The women’s worlds, meanwhile, will be held exclusively in Quebec City with most games played at the 18,000-seat Videotron Centre.

"We are thrilled that our national women’s team and our national junior team will be competing for medals on home soil in front of passionate crowds, and we look forward to welcoming hockey fans to Quebec in 2027 and 2029," Hockey Canada president and CEO Katherine Henderson said in a statement.

It will mark the first time Quebec City hosts the women’s world championship. The event was last held in Canada in 2023 in Brampton, Ont.

“Hockey is our national sport and a great source of pride for Quebec, and we are proud to have the opportunity to host these two major world championships,” said Isabelle Charest, the provincial minister responsible for sport, recreation and the outdoors.

The host of the 2026 tournament is expected to be announced at the Oct. 3-4 IIHF semi-annual congress.

Quebec City last held the world juniors in 1978, when it co-hosted with Montreal.

The 2026 tournament will be held in Minneapolis and Saint Paul, Minn., and the 2027 edition will take place in Alberta — host cities have not been named — before the event moves to Finland in 2028.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 4, 2025.

The Canadian Press