Add The New York Post on Google This summer’s most unexpected New York adventure starts at the library and ends in a neighborhood you didn’t know existed.
Longtime New Yorkers and tourists alike are racing across the five boroughs in pursuit of a different collectible this month: World Cup passport stamps.
A free “NYC Neighborhood Passport” launched ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup is turning Gotham into one giant scavenger hunt, with residents documenting their quests on social media as they try to collect all 12 elusive stamps hidden at libraries, museums, festivals, cultural institutions and neighborhood events across the city.
Since June 11, a day before the soccer festivities kicked off, the pocket-sized passport booklets have been flying off shelves at public library branches citywide, with some locations already running low as stamp-hungry Big Apple explorers embark on borough-hopping adventures.
Styled like a classic US passport, the 32-page booklet encourages participants to venture beyond their own neighborhoods and discover immigrant communities that mirror the countries competing in this year’s tournament.
The first page sets the tone: “Every country playing in the World Cup already has a home in immigrant communities that have been building NYC for generations,” it reads.
“This is your chance to explore the vibrant humanity and cultural abundance of NYC’s 300+ neighborhoods.”
Participants can snag stamps at more than 60 locations throughout the city.
While some places are household names — like Carnegie Hall and the American Museum of Natural History — others introduce New Yorkers to lesser-known institutions such as Little Caribbean NYC, the Lewis Latimer House, the Bronx River Art Center and Historic Richmond Town, transforming the passport into a guidebook for discovering NYC’s overlooked corners.
But the passport is about much more than stamps. Each borough includes dedicated journal pages where participants can record “Who I met and what I did, saw, ate, and learned” while exploring.
Another page invites New Yorkers to preserve their own World Cup memories.
“Is it a memory, a moment, a feeling? Scan below, post a video, and become a part of something big — a nationwide effort to tell our story.”
The booklet also encourages users to seek out the city’s famed immigrant enclaves — from Little Senegal in Harlem to Little Colombia and Little India in Queens — while learning how communities from around the globe helped shape modern New York.
A section titled “How To Use This Passport” urges residents to think beyond the matches themselves.
It says that the World Cup is “about watch parties and so much more,” as it encompasses “exhibits, dance performances, films, book talks, block parties, street soccer clinics, and anything else our communities organize.”
The initiative was launched in partnership with Mayor Mamdani and Team Wonder as part of the city’s broader World Cup programming.
World Cup Czar Maya Handa said affordability was central to the program’s design.
The collectible stamps themselves have become part of the appeal.
Each was created by a New York City artist with roots spanning the globe, including artists connected to India, Peru, Nicaragua, Ukraine, Argentina, Ghana, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Poland and more.
The stamps are randomly distributed, meaning participants never know exactly what they’ll find at each stop.
TikTok user Debbie, who posts as @daaliart, recently showed off her booklet online, saying in a recent video,”I’m so happy that NYC tourism for the World Cup includes this stampbook. I love collecting stamps. The more places you go, the more likely you can collect all 12 stamps.”
Another creator, @its_mabster, said the passport was inspiring her to leave her comfort zone this summer and go outside more: “I want to push myself to visit as many locations as possible.”
After snagging her first stamp at the Museum of Arts and Design near Columbus Circle, she praised the booklet’s design and journaling features, noting that it allows users to record memories from each borough while exploring the city.
Andrea, who posts as @andreas_journey, called the challenge a perfect warm-weather activity.
“I also got one for my husband and son. If you need a summer activity, how cute is this?” She also described the passport hunt as a “super fun thing to do in New York this summer.”
Meanwhile, @thatsannaadventure documented her quest to collect eight of the 12 stamps in a single day, then turned to followers for help locating the remaining four.
“If you see any of these stamps, let me know where to get one!” she pleaded, showing how popular and coveted this activity has become among Gen Zers in the Concrete Jungle.
The booklet even doubles as a crash course in soccer culture.
For Gothamites who couldn’t explain an offside call to save their lives, the passport offers an unexpected soccer education.
Some participants are using their library stops to pick up books on the sport, learn the rules and get acquainted with World Cup history before backing a team.
One section highlights countries competing in the World Cup that either have immigrant enclaves recognized by the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs or will be playing matches in the New York-New Jersey region, including Brazil, England, France, Germany, Morocco, Panama, Senegal and Ecuador.
Another page notes that with more than 3 million immigrants living in New York City, all 48 countries participating in the tournament will feel right at home here this summer.
And if New Yorkers needed another reason to embrace the challenge, the passport offers perhaps the most irresistible prize of all: an excuse to get out of their own borough.