Philadelphia World Cup Matchday Guide: SEPTA, Fan Festival, and Next Fixtures

Philadelphia World Cup Matchday Guide: SEPTA, Fan Festival, and Next Fixtures

Practical Philadelphia guide for World Cup fans planning from June 19 onward: remaining Philadelphia Stadium fixtures, SEPTA B line/NRG Station routing, free rides home, Lemon Hill Fan Festival access, bag rules, CupPHL alerts, and July 4 crowd planning.

Host Cities Guide
19/6/2026 · 20:13
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Philadelphia is entering its busiest World Cup stretch: Brazil vs. Haiti tonight, then France, Curaçao, Croatia, Ghana, and a July 4 knockout game at Philadelphia Stadium. If you are going in person, build the day around SEPTA's B line to NRG Station, not around driving. If you do not have a match ticket, Lemon Hill is the main free public gathering point, but you still need online registration.
All match times below are shown first in local Philadelphia time, with UTC in parentheses for travel planning.

Quick scan

DecisionBest moveWhy it matters
Getting to Philadelphia StadiumTake SEPTA's B line to NRG Station. SEPTA says 10 extra B trains run to NRG before each match, with added post-game trains. 1It avoids stadium parking scarcity, FDR Park rideshare controls, and matchday road closures.
Getting homePay the normal $2.90 fare going to the match, then use the free ride home from NRG after halftime through two hours after the match ends and stadium doors close. 1The post-match crowd is the bottleneck; plan the return before kickoff.
Watching without a ticketRegister for the free FIFA Fan Festival at Lemon Hill. The official Fan Festival site says entry is free but managed through online registration. 2Free does not mean walk-up guaranteed; capacity is first come, first served.
Reaching Lemon HillUse PHLASH Stop 9, SEPTA routes 32 or 48 to Pennsylvania Avenue and Fairmount Avenue, or SEPTA routes 7 and 49 into Fairmount. 3The Fan Festival is designed mainly for walking, biking, and transit access.
What not to bringUse a clear bag no larger than 12 x 6 x 12 inches, or a small clutch no larger than 4.5 x 6.5 inches. One soft, sealed 20-ounce water bottle is allowed. 4Bag checks and magnetometers are part of both stadium and festival operations.

Remaining Philadelphia Stadium fixtures

Philadelphia has five remaining matchdays from June 19 onward. The host committee lists Philadelphia Stadium, the World Cup name for Lincoln Financial Field, as the venue for all six city matches. 5
DateLocal kickoffUTC kickoffMatch
Friday, June 198:30 p.m. ETSaturday, June 20, 00:30 UTCBrazil vs. Haiti, Group C 5
Monday, June 225:00 p.m. ET21:00 UTCFrance vs. Iraq, Group I 5
Thursday, June 254:00 p.m. ET20:00 UTCCuraçao vs. Côte d'Ivoire, Group E 5
Saturday, June 275:00 p.m. ET21:00 UTCCroatia vs. Ghana, Group L 5
Saturday, July 45:00 p.m. ET21:00 UTCRound of 16, teams to be determined 5
The July 4 match is unusual because it lands on the United States' 250th birthday celebrations. The city says July 4 will combine the Round of 16, Fan Festival activity, Wawa Welcome America events, and citywide Independence Day crowds. 1 Treat that day as a full-city event, not just a stadium trip.
Night match inside Lincoln Financial Field, branded as Philadelphia Stadium for the World Cup
Philadelphia Stadium is the tournament name for Lincoln Financial Field, shown here during a night soccer crowd. Image: Visit Philadelphia

Stadium route: use NRG Station as the anchor

For ticketed fans, the cleanest route is the B line south to NRG Station, the last southbound stop. SEPTA's World Cup guide also gives transfer paths for Regional Rail riders via Suburban Station or Jefferson Station, for Amtrak riders via Drexel Station at 30th Street, and for PATCO riders via the 12th-13th & Locust/Walnut-Locust connection. 1
SEPTA is adding late-night matchday service. The B and L lines will operate overnight on matchdays, with trains every 30 minutes from City Hall on the hour and half-hour, but only at selected late-night stations. 4 On June 19, SEPTA says all Regional Rail lines except Airport and Cynwyd will add late-night service in the 1 a.m. hour. 1
SEPTA routes serving Lemon Hill Fan Festival and nearby Center City stops
SEPTA's Fan Festival map shows routes 32, 48, 7, 49, and PHLASH access around Lemon Hill and Center City. 1
Driving is the fallback, not the default. The city says official stadium parking must be pre-purchased, is limited, and is available for match ticket holders. It also says there is no parking in FDR Park on matchdays, and rideshare pickup and drop-off will be directed to designated areas inside FDR Park at Broad Street and Pattison Avenue. 4

Fan Festival plan: Lemon Hill, registration, and transit first

The official Philadelphia Fan Festival runs June 11 to July 19 at Lemon Hill in East Fairmount Park. The site lists Lemon Hill Park, 1 Lemon Hill Drive, as the location and says the secured entry point is Kelly Drive and Sedgley Drive. 2
For the next Philadelphia matchdays, the Fan Festival schedule currently lists:
DatePosted Fan Festival hoursMain broadcast draw
Friday, June 192:00 p.m. to midnight ET, 18:00 to 04:00 UTCUSA vs. Australia, Scotland vs. Morocco, Brazil vs. Haiti 2
Monday, June 22noon to 11:00 p.m. ET, 16:00 to 03:00 UTCArgentina vs. Austria, France vs. Iraq, Norway vs. Senegal 2
Thursday, June 253:00 p.m. to midnight ET, 19:00 to 04:00 UTCSix-match broadcast window, including Curaçao vs. Côte d'Ivoire and Türkiye vs. USA 2
Saturday, June 274:00 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. ET, 20:00 to 02:30 UTCCroatia vs. Ghana plus the paired Group L and Group G matches 2
Saturday, July 4noon to 4:00 p.m. ET, 16:00 to 20:00 UTCThe posted schedule shows W74 vs. W77 at 1:00 p.m. ET, so check the same page before assuming it covers the 5:00 p.m. Philadelphia Stadium match. 2
Entrance arch at Philadelphia's FIFA Fan Festival in Lemon Hill
Philadelphia's Fan Festival is a fenced, security-screened event at Lemon Hill, with free registration required before entry. 2
PHLASH is the simplest tourist shuttle for Lemon Hill. The official transportation page says riders can use Stop 9 at Pennsylvania Avenue and Fairmount Avenue, about 0.4 miles from the Lemon Hill entrance. PHLASH runs daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. from Memorial Day to Labor Day, with extended service when the Fan Festival runs beyond 6 p.m. 3 SEPTA routes 32 and 48 also serve the Pennsylvania and Fairmount drop-off, with route 32 running every 15 minutes or less on weekdays from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. 1
If you are taking rideshare to the Fan Festival, the host committee lists drop-off zones on Fairmount Avenue between 22nd and 23rd streets and outside the Philadelphia Zoo on 34th Street. 3 If you are biking, the Schuylkill River Trail remains open across from the festival area, with bike parking at Lloyd Hall and near the Indego station hub. 3

Entry rules that will save time at the gate

For stadium entry, the city says gates open three hours before kickoff and parking opens five hours before kickoff. 6 Pack for security, heat, and a long return queue.
The stadium clear-bag rules are strict: transparent plastic, vinyl, or PVC bags can be no larger than 12 x 6 x 12 inches, while small clutches or wallets can be no larger than 4.5 x 6.5 inches. 4 The city also says fans may bring one soft, plastic, factory-sealed 20-ounce water bottle into matches in the U.S. and Canada. 4
Once inside, do not plan on leaving and coming back. The host committee says re-entry is not allowed, and smoking and vaping are prohibited. 6

Where to base yourself between matches

For first-time visitors, Center City is the safest default base because it gives you B line access to the stadium, L line access toward 30th Street Station, and walking access to the Parkway corridor. DiscoverPHL recommends Center City for fans who want restaurants, parks, shopping, and rail access in one place. 7
Old City works better if your downtime plan is Independence Hall, the Museum of the American Revolution, Penn's Landing, and historic streets. You can take the L west and transfer to the B at City Hall/15th Street for the stadium. 7
For Fan Festival days, Fairmount and the Parkway corridor are the easy walking zones. The city says pop-up visitor centers and hospitality hubs are planned along the Center City to Lemon Hill walking path, including City Hall, LOVE Park, Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Logan Circle, Eakins Oval, and Lloyd Hall. 6

Pick your plan

If you are...Build the day like this
A ticketed fan staying in Center CityEat early, take the B line to NRG, enter when gates open, and use the free B ride home after the match.
A non-ticketed fanRegister for Lemon Hill, use PHLASH Stop 9 or SEPTA 32/48, and check the Fan Festival hours for the exact date before leaving.
Coming from New York, New Jersey, or D.C. by railArrive at 30th Street Station or PATCO, transfer through the L/T or Walnut-Locust connection to the B for the stadium, or use Center City as your base for Lemon Hill.
Driving because you mustPre-purchase official stadium parking if you have a match ticket, expect no FDR Park parking, and do not assume neighborhood parking near Lemon Hill is available.
Traveling with kids or mobility needsUse the official accessibility pages and arrive earlier than you think; both stadium and Fan Festival plans include accessibility services, but crowd movement will be slow on matchdays. 4
The short version: B line for the stadium, PHLASH or bus for Lemon Hill, registration for Fan Festival, and no casual driving assumptions. That plan will handle most Philadelphia World Cup days, including the crowded July 4 finish.

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