Belgium is wearing pink and blue because it is using a special away kit, not its traditional red home kit, for this match. The switch is part of FIFA’s kit-clash rules and also supports color-blind-friendly viewing, since red- versus-green combinations can be hard to distinguish on the field.

What the kit means

The pink-and-blue shirt is a one-off or alternate design tied to Belgium’s tournament apparel, sometimes described as a Magritte-inspired look. It’s meant to avoid a visual clash with the opponent’s colors while still giving Belgium a distinct identity.

Why this happens

  • FIFA can require teams to change kits when there’s a color conflict.
  • Color accessibility matters, especially for red-green color blindness.
  • Belgium’s alternate jersey is designed to be more usable in those situations and also stands out visually on TV.

In plain terms

So the short answer is: Belgium isn’t changing its national colors permanently ; it’s wearing a special away shirt because the match setup and visibility rules make that kit the better choice.