
Seattle World Cup Matchday Guide: Stadium Transit, Fan Celebrations, and ORCA Tips
A practical Seattle matchday guide for World Cup fans: remaining Seattle Stadium fixtures, preferred Link station routing, official fan celebration sites, Seattle Soccer House, and ORCA transit payment tips.

Seattle has a rare advantage among 2026 World Cup host cities: the stadium sits in the city core, with light rail, commuter rail, ferries, buses, and four official public celebration sites clustered around downtown. That matters now because the next Seattle-hosted match is United States vs. Australia on Friday, June 19 at noon PT, followed by four more Seattle matchdays through July 6. 1
Use this as the practical version: where to go, which station to use, what to do if you do not have a ticket, and how to avoid turning a matchday into a parking problem.
The fast plan
| If you are... | Do this first | Why it works |
|---|---|---|
| Going to Seattle Stadium from north Seattle, Lynnwood, or central downtown | Exit Link at Pioneer Square Station and walk via Occidental Ave S. 2 | Sound Transit is routing north-side riders there to spread matchday crowds. 2 |
| Coming from south of SODO or Federal Way | Exit Link at Stadium Station and walk via Royal Brougham Way. 2 | It keeps southbound arrivals on the closest approach to the south side of the stadium. 2 |
| Coming from the Eastside on the 2 Line | Exit at International District/Chinatown Station and walk via South Jackson Street or the Weller Street Bridge. 2 | Sound Transit lists that station for Eastside arrivals and for reduced-mobility access. 2 |
| Watching without a stadium ticket | Pick one of the four official fan celebration sites: Pacific Place, Pier 62, Seattle Center, or Victory Hall. 3 | All four are free public celebration locations and are listed as available for at least Seattle's six home matches. 3 |
| Staying for multiple days | Use contactless tap-to-pay for quick rides, or buy an ORCA card and consider a $6 all-day PugetPass or $18 three-day PugetPass. 4 | ORCA covers most buses, trains, streetcar, and regional transit systems, with some ferry and monorail exceptions. 4 |
Seattle's remaining matchdays
Seattle Stadium hosts six tournament matches in total. The June 15 opener in Seattle has already passed; these are the remaining Seattle dates as of June 17. 5
| Date | Kickoff | Match | Practical note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Friday, June 19 | 12:00 pm PT | United States vs. Australia, Group D 1 | The highest-demand group match for local fans; arrive early and expect heavier transit loads. |
| Wednesday, June 24 | 12:00 pm PT | Bosnia and Herzegovina vs. Qatar, Group B 1 | Midday weekday match: useful for visitors staying downtown or near Link. |
| Friday, June 26 | 8:00 pm PT | Egypt vs. Iran, Group G 1 | The late kickoff makes the return route more important than the arrival route. |
| Wednesday, July 1 | 1:00 pm PT | Round of 32, Match 82 1 | Team names depend on group results; plan by date and station for now. |
| Monday, July 6 | 5:00 pm PT | Round of 16, Match 94 1 | A knockout-round evening match; build in more time for post-match crowding. |
Sound Transit says stadium gates open three hours before kickoff, and it advises fans to factor in stadium screening plus longer travel time on matchdays. 6
Getting to Seattle Stadium without guessing
Seattle's stadium plan is less about finding the closest station and more about using the station assigned to your direction of travel. Follow the routing below unless staff or live service alerts say otherwise.

For most visitors, the useful rule is simple:
- If you are on the 1 Line or 2 Line from Lynnwood City Center through Symphony, use Pioneer Square. 2
- If you are coming from SODO through Federal Way, use Stadium Station. 2
- If you are coming from Judkins Park through Downtown Redmond, use International District/Chinatown. 2
- If you use a mobility device or want the most level approach, Sound Transit points reduced-mobility riders to International District/Chinatown and the Weller Street Bridge. 2
Do not count on parking as the fallback. ORCA's visitor guide warns that parking around Seattle Stadium, also known as Lumen Field, is extremely limited and that heavy traffic is expected. 4
Where to watch if you do not have a ticket
Seattle's official celebration network gives non-ticketed fans several good choices. The best one depends on whether you want the biggest indoor screen, a waterfront setting, a family campus, or the closest stadium-adjacent atmosphere.

| Site | Address | Best fit |
|---|---|---|
| Seattle Soccer House at Pacific Place | 600 Pine St 3 | Indoor, all-ages viewing with a large screen, food, drinks, kids' activities, retail, and accessibility features. 7 |
| Seattle Center | 305 Harrison St 3 | Free campus-style programming with large screens, music, art, food, fitness, and community events from June 11 through July 19. 8 |
| Waterfront Park / Pier 62 | 1951 Alaskan Way 3 | Waterfront watch-party energy with a floating mini pitch, music, food, and culture programming. 3 |
| Victory Hall in SODO | 1201 1st Avenue South 3 | Stadium-adjacent viewing on a 23-foot screen, close enough to feel the matchday pulse. 3 |
Pacific Place is the most weather-proof option. Seattle Soccer House runs June 15-July 2 and July 6-7, requires no ticket or preregistration, and lists a 70-foot by 40-foot screen as its main viewing feature. 7

For the next two days, the schedule lines up neatly: Seattle Soccer House is open 8 am-8 pm PT on June 18 for four matches, then 9 am-8 pm PT on June 19, including the USMNT vs. Australia match in Seattle at noon. 7
Paying for transit: the simple version
If you are flying into Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, the easiest move is to buy an ORCA card at the airport Link light rail station, then load value or a pass before you ride. ORCA says cards are available at station ticket machines for $3. 4
For shorter trips, ORCA Tap to Pay lets riders use a contactless Visa, Mastercard, Discover, American Express card, or a card in a phone or watch wallet across much of the region's transit network. 4
For repeated rides, the math is straightforward: ORCA lists a $6 All-Day PugetPass for unlimited trips on most regional buses and Link light rail, and an $18 three-day PugetPass for longer weekends. Some services cost more or do not accept transfer credits, so keep a few dollars of extra value on the card if you plan to use ferries, Sounder, the monorail, or the water taxi. 4
Families should note one friendly rule: ORCA says riders 18 and younger ride free on Seattle-area public transit. 4
Accessibility and comfort notes
Ticketed fans can use FIFA's audio descriptive commentary app; the Seattle matches page says ADC is available for all World Cup matches in the United States in English and Spanish. 1
For public viewing, Seattle Soccer House lists ADA-accessible viewing areas, closed captioning, audio-descriptive commentary, and a dedicated sensory room. 7 Seattle Center also says it has a FIFA-authorized public viewing event license and will run public viewing experiences across multiple campus locations. 8
One more comfort detail: Seattle's official transportation page links Know Before You Go PDFs in multiple languages, including English, Spanish, German, French, Farsi, Dutch, Bosnian, and Arabic. 9 If you are traveling with a group, send that page around before everyone lands.
A clean June 19 matchday itinerary
If you have a ticket for USA vs. Australia, aim for downtown by midmorning. Eat or meet friends before entering the stadium area, then head to your assigned approach station rather than simply following the biggest crowd. Sound Transit's station split is the best available crowd-control clue. 2
If you do not have a ticket, start at Seattle Soccer House for the noon Seattle match, then decide whether to stay downtown for the later games or move to Seattle Center or the waterfront. Pacific Place lists June 19 hours of 9 am-8 pm PT and four televised match windows that day. 7
The main thing to avoid is treating the stadium as a drive-up destination. Seattle's matchday setup is built around walking and transit: light rail to three different stations, Sounder to King Street Station, ferries and water taxi connections from Colman Dock, and public celebrations that are close to downtown transit. 2 That is the plan that will age best as the crowds get bigger.
参考来源
- 1Matches - Seattle FIFA World Cup 26
- 2Preferred station routing - Sound Transit
- 3Seattle Fan Celebrations
- 4Visitor's Guide - Seattle Soccer 2026 - myORCA
- 5FIFA Men's World Cup 2026 - Seattle.gov
- 6Take Sound Transit to summer's big soccer tournament
- 7Seattle Soccer House at Pacific Place
- 8Let's Play SEA '26 - Seattle Center
- 9Transportation - Seattle FIFA World Cup 26
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