Seattle World Cup Matchday Guide: Light Rail, Shuttles, Fan Celebrations, and Remaining Fixtures

Seattle World Cup Matchday Guide: Light Rail, Shuttles, Fan Celebrations, and Remaining Fixtures

A practical Seattle World Cup guide for the four remaining stadium dates, covering kickoff times, preferred light-rail stations, Metro shuttles, no-car rules, and official fan celebration sites.

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June 21, 2026 · 6:11 AM
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Start with the four remaining Seattle dates

Seattle has already opened its World Cup run at Seattle Stadium, the tournament name for Lumen Field, and the city still has four stadium dates after June 20: Bosnia-Herzegovina vs. Qatar on June 24 at 19:00 UTC (12:00 p.m. Seattle time), Egypt vs. Iran on June 27 at 03:00 UTC (June 26, 8:00 p.m. Seattle time), a Round of 32 match on July 1 at 20:00 UTC (1:00 p.m. Seattle time), and a Round of 16 match on July 7 at 00:00 UTC (July 6, 5:00 p.m. Seattle time). 1
For fans arriving after the USA-Australia match, the practical rule is simple: stay downtown or near a light-rail corridor, choose your stadium station before you board, and treat the fan celebrations as part of the transport plan rather than an afterthought.
Remaining Seattle stadium dateWhat it isBest first move
June 24, 19:00 UTC (12:00 p.m. Seattle time)Bosnia-Herzegovina vs. QatarUse the Sound Transit match listing to confirm event service before leaving your hotel. 2
June 27, 03:00 UTC (June 26, 8:00 p.m. Seattle time)Egypt vs. IranPlan a late return; Sound Transit says match-day service is extended until 08:00 UTC the next day (1:00 a.m. Seattle time). 1
July 1, 20:00 UTC (1:00 p.m. Seattle time)Round of 32Build in screening time because Sound Transit tells fans gates open three hours before kickoff. 2
July 7, 00:00 UTC (July 6, 5:00 p.m. Seattle time)Round of 16Make this a full downtown day: Pacific Place runs through the last Seattle match on July 6, and Seattle Center is set up as a tournament-long gathering point. 3

The stadium is easy to reach, but pick the right station

Sound Transit is using preferred station routing to spread crowds around Seattle Stadium. If you are coming from Lynnwood City Center through Symphony, use Pioneer Square Station and walk via Occidental Avenue South. If you are coming from SODO through Federal Way, use Stadium Station and walk via Royal Brougham Way. If you are coming from Judkins Park through Downtown Redmond, use International District/Chinatown Station and walk via South Jackson Street or the Weller Street Bridge. 4
Map showing preferred rail stations around Seattle Stadium
Sound Transit routes fans to Pioneer Square, Stadium, or International District/Chinatown depending on travel direction; reduced-mobility riders are directed to International District/Chinatown via the Weller Street Bridge. 4
For passengers with reduced mobility, Sound Transit recommends International District/Chinatown Station because the Weller Street Bridge gives the most direct level path into the stadium area and avoids the steep grades and heavier crowds at Pioneer Square. 4
Seattle's official transport page makes the bigger point: this is a downtown stadium, so buses, trains, ferries, walking, biking, and rolling all feed into the same compact matchday zone. 5 That is good news, but it also means one bad choice, especially trying to drive into the stadium area, can cost you the calmest hour of the day.
SeattleFWC26 matchday map showing the stadium district, mobility zones, and fan routes
SeattleFWC26's Know Before You Go map is the morning-of-match reference for the stadium district; check it alongside live transit alerts before you leave. 5

The car-light plan

Use this as your default sequence unless your hotel or accessibility needs point elsewhere.
  1. From the airport or north-south rail corridor: take Link toward downtown, then follow the preferred station guidance for your direction of travel. Sound Transit lists Seattle Stadium as one of the tournament destinations and tells riders to use its preferred-station guide for match access. 2
  2. From Seattle Center, Belltown, or downtown hotels: use the King County Metro Match Day Shuttle. Metro says the SEA26 Match Day Shuttle operates only on Seattle's six match days, runs an eight-hour loop, and comes every 3 to 7 minutes. 6
  3. From the waterfront or ferry side: use the Waterfront Shuttle. Metro says it runs May 21 through September 7, seven days a week, from 17:00 to 05:00 UTC the next day (10:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Seattle time), every 10 minutes on match days and every 15 minutes on days without local soccer matches. 7
  4. For bus-first riders: start from Metro's SEA26 hub, which points fans to buses, special Match Day Shuttles, the Waterfront Shuttle, Link, Sounder, Water Taxi, Metro Flex, and trip planning tools. 8
A few constraints matter. SeattleFWC26 says there is no publicly available parking at Seattle Stadium on match days, and rideshare pickup and drop-off are geofenced away from the venue. 1 The stadium also follows a clear-bag policy, and fans may bring factory-sealed water bottles up to 20 ounces. 1

Where to watch if you do not have a ticket

Seattle's official celebration map is unusually useful because the four core sites form a north-south line through the same downtown zone fans are already using for transit: Seattle Center, Pacific Place, Waterfront Park, and Victory Hall. 3
Map of Seattle fan celebration locations from Seattle Center to Victory Hall
The four official fan celebration sites are Seattle Center, Pacific Place, Waterfront Park, and Victory Hall, each close to the matchday transit corridor. 3
SiteBest forTransit note
Seattle CenterFamilies, citywide cultural programming, and a larger civic festival atmosphereSeattleFWC26 says the Seattle Center celebration is anchored by the Armory and includes match viewing, a Global Marketplace, cultural programming, community activations, and daily fan experiences. 1
Pacific PlaceIndoor viewing, food, all-ages activities, and weather protectionSeattle Soccer House has 27,000 square feet across six themed zones, a 70-by-40-foot viewing screen, and free all-ages entry with no tickets or preregistration. 9
Waterfront Park / Pier 62Waterfront atmosphere, Sounders-Reign-RAVE programming, and pre- or post-match wanderingThe official fan-celebration page identifies Seattle Soccer Celebration at the waterfront as a Pier 62 experience hosted by Seattle Sounders FC, Seattle Reign FC, and RAVE Foundation. 3
Victory Hall in SODOStaying close to the stadium without entering itSeattleFWC26 says Victory Hall, hosted by the Mariners, runs tournament watch energy on a 23-foot screen within earshot of Seattle Stadium. 1
If you are choosing one base for a full matchday, Pacific Place is the easiest rainy-day call. It sits downtown at 600 Pine Street, connects to Westlake Station and nearby Metro service, and the official Seattle Soccer House page says the experience continues through the last Seattle match on July 6. 9

A sample day plan for the June 24 and July 1 noon-style matches

For the June 24 match, treat the 19:00 UTC kickoff (12:00 p.m. Seattle time) like a morning travel event. Be near your rail line or shuttle stop at least three hours before kickoff, since Sound Transit tells fans stadium gates open three hours before each match. 2
If you have a ticket, ride to your preferred station, walk the final stretch, and keep your bag choice conservative. If you do not have a ticket, start at Seattle Center or Pacific Place, then move south by shuttle or light rail only if you want to feel the stadium district before kickoff. Metro's Match Day Shuttle is built for exactly that north-south downtown movement between Seattle Center, the stadium area, and central stops. 6
After the match, do not assume the closest station is the fastest. Sound Transit's station split is designed for departure too: riders headed north go to Pioneer Square, southbound riders go to Stadium, and eastside 2 Line riders go to International District/Chinatown. 4

What to check the morning of the match

  • SeattleFWC26 transportation page: Use it for shuttle routes, street-closure windows, rideshare zones, and stadium-area maps before leaving. 5
  • Sound Transit soccer page: Use it for match-specific service listings, station guidance, fares, and alert signup. 2
  • King County Metro SEA26 hub: Use it for buses, shuttles, trip planning, and service advisories. 8
  • Official fan celebrations page: Use it to decide whether your no-ticket day is better at Seattle Center, Pacific Place, Waterfront Park, or Victory Hall. 3
Seattle is one of the easier World Cup cities to do without a car. The catch is that easy still requires a choice: pick the station, shuttle, or fan site before the crowd does it for you.

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