World Cup knockout travel planner: dates, cities, and transit moves from Round of 32 to the final

World Cup knockout travel planner: dates, cities, and transit moves from Round of 32 to the final

A practical knockout-stage planner for World Cup fans: which cities host each round, where to base yourself for the late-stage matches, and which official transit or fan-event pages to check before you move.

Host Cities Guide
2026/6/21 · 1:12
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The knockout rounds are still a week away, but travel decisions are already becoming bracket decisions. If you wait until the Round of 32 field is complete, the teams will be clearer and the hotel map will be worse. Use this guide to lock the practical pieces now: which cities matter after the group stage, where public transit is the safer default, and which fan sites are worth using as your backup plan if tickets fall through.

Fast scan: the knockout route by round

FIFA's published knockout schedule puts the Round of 32 across 13 host cities from June 28 to July 3, then concentrates the final week into seven cities: Boston, Los Angeles, Miami, Kansas City, Dallas, Atlanta, and New York/New Jersey. 1
RoundDatesHost cities to watchPlanning read
Round of 32June 28-July 3Los Angeles, Boston, Monterrey, Houston, New York/New Jersey, Dallas, Mexico City, Atlanta, San Francisco Bay Area, Seattle, Toronto, Vancouver, Miami, Kansas CityThis is the hardest travel window because multiple cities host on the same day; book by corridor, not by dream matchup. 1
Round of 16July 4-7Philadelphia, Houston, New York/New Jersey, Mexico City, Dallas, Seattle, Atlanta, VancouverGood window for a two-city plan. Dallas and Atlanta both stay alive for later rounds. 1
Quarter-finalsJuly 9-11Boston, Los Angeles, Miami, Kansas CityFour cities, three dates. This is the moment to stop assuming you can improvise stadium transport. 1
Semi-finalsJuly 14-15Dallas, AtlantaBoth are transit-managed stadium cities; plan the return trip before you plan the pre-match meal. 1
Bronze final and finalJuly 18-19Miami, New York/New JerseyMiami gets the bronze final; New York/New Jersey gets the final. Treat both as reservation-first travel days. 1

The seven late-stage cities: what to lock in first

Boston: buy the stadium train, then plan the city day

Match: Quarter-final, July 9 at Boston Stadium. 1
Transit move: Use the Boston Stadium Trains if you are staying in central Boston. MBTA says Boston Stadium Train tickets must be purchased in advance on the mTicket app, riders need match tickets to board, and return trains start leaving Foxboro Station after the match. 2
Base idea: Stay near South Station if your priority is the least complicated match-day chain. That keeps the stadium train check-in, Amtrak, intercity buses, and downtown hotels in the same mental map.
Risk to watch: Do not assume a normal commuter-rail pattern. The World Cup service is a ticketed event train with boarding groups, not a casual tap-and-go ride. 2

Los Angeles: treat rail as the spine, not the whole trip

Match: Quarter-final, July 10 at Los Angeles Stadium. 1
Transit move: Metrolink is adding special service for all local Los Angeles match days, including July 10, with late-night options for evening matches and transfers to LA Metro's direct bus service between Union Station and Los Angeles Stadium. 3
Base idea: If you are coming from outside the county, Union Station is the cleanest hub. If you are already in the basin, check whether a Metro shuttle pickup or a fan zone closer to your hotel saves a cross-town ride.
Risk to watch: Los Angeles rewards early routing. A hotel that looks close in miles can still be a slow match-day choice if it is not aligned with a shuttle, Metro rail line, or Metrolink corridor.

Miami: use the Game Day Express for the stadium; separate that from Fan Festival plans

Matches: Quarter-final, July 11; bronze final, July 18 at Miami Stadium. 1
Transit move: Miami-Dade describes the Miami Game Day Express as free round-trip shuttle service for verified ticket holders between confirmed transit hubs and Miami Stadium. 4
Base idea: Choose your hotel based on which hub you can reach calmly, not on the straight-line distance to the stadium. Downtown Miami may work better for fan activity; a transit-hub hotel may work better for match day.
Risk to watch: Miami can feel deceptively simple on a map. Stadium day and waterfront fan activity are different trips, so avoid building your entire day around one rideshare assumption.

Kansas City: check the operations page before every move

Match: Quarter-final, July 11 at Kansas City Stadium. 1
Transit and fan move: KC2026's operational updates page has already carried live notices for ConnectKC26 Region Direct service and FIFA Fan Festival Kansas City weather changes; use it before leaving your hotel, especially if storms are in the forecast. 5
Base idea: Stay where you can make the official bus plan without adding a fragile last-mile hop. Kansas City is not a rail-first World Cup city, so your shuttle pickup plan matters more than your distance to the stadium.
Risk to watch: Weather can change the fan festival day even when match transport continues. Build an indoor backup near your pickup point.

Dallas: two different Dallas trips, one airport rail-and-shuttle logic

Matches: Round of 16 on July 6; semi-final on July 14 at Dallas Stadium. 1
Transit move: Visit Dallas tells fans to use TRE from Union Station or Victory Park Station to CentrePort, then take the free shuttle to Dallas Stadium; it also points fans to Fair Park Station or MLK Jr. Station for the FIFA Fan Festival Dallas. 6 DART's World Cup page adds that match-day shuttles run from CentrePort/DFW Airport Station to the stadium bus hub, about a 10-minute walk to the gates, and notes limited parking at CentrePort/DFW Airport Station. 7
DART fan-zone and stadium transit map
DART's World Cup map separates the Fair Park fan-festival stop from the stadium shuttle path through CentrePort/DFW Airport Station. 7
Base idea: Downtown Dallas works if you want Fair Park, nightlife, and rail access in one plan. If you are flying in and out around a late-stage match, build the airport leg into the same DART/TRE decision.
Risk to watch: Do not drive to CentrePort expecting abundant parking. DART says parking there is extremely limited, so start from a Park & Ride or a downtown rail station if you can. 7

Atlanta: downtown is the plan, MARTA is the pressure valve

Matches: Round of 16 on July 7; semi-final on July 15 at Atlanta Stadium. 1
Transit and fan move: Atlanta's matchday guide says Centennial Olympic Park is the FIFA Fan Festival site and describes MARTA as the best public-transportation option for Atlanta Stadium and downtown, with five stations within one mile of the stadium. 8
Atlanta MARTA matchday map
Atlanta's host-city matchday map puts MARTA at the center of the stadium-and-downtown plan. 8
Base idea: Stay downtown if you want to walk between the stadium, the fan festival, and hotels. Stay on a MARTA rail line if you want a calmer exit after the semi-final.
Risk to watch: The fan festival and stadium sit close together, which is convenient until pedestrian controls and road changes slow the area down. Give yourself a buffer even for short walks. 8

New York/New Jersey: final day is a ticketed transit operation

Matches: Round of 32 on June 30; Round of 16 on July 5; final on July 19 at New York New Jersey Stadium. 1
Transit move: The NYNJ host committee says there will be no general spectator parking on stadium property on match days and that stadium access will be limited to official transportation options. NJ TRANSIT service connects through Secaucus Junction to matchday-only rail or bus service, and official stadium shuttles run from major New York and New Jersey pickup points. 9
NYNJ official stadium shuttle map
NYNJ's official shuttle map shows the color-coded stadium shuttle lines that fans must book in advance if they choose that option. 9
Fan backup: If you do not have a final ticket, the NYNJ fan-events page lists late-tournament sites including Rockefeller Center from July 6-19 and Brooklyn Bridge Park on select dates through July 19. 10
Risk to watch: A final ticket does not equal a parking plan. Buy the transport product that matches your starting point before you build the rest of the day.

How to choose your knockout base

If you are following a specific team, wait for the bracket only if you can tolerate expensive changes. For most fans, a better plan is to choose one of three routes now:
  1. Northeast finish: Boston quarter-final, New York/New Jersey Round of 16 or final, and Philadelphia or New York fan events in between. This is the best route if rail access matters more than warm-weather downtime.
  2. Sun Belt finish: Miami quarter-final or bronze final, Atlanta semi-final, and a possible Dallas semi-final if your itinerary allows a flight. This route needs more airport discipline.
  3. West-to-final swing: Los Angeles quarter-final, then fly east for either Atlanta, Dallas, or New York/New Jersey. This works only if you keep luggage light and do not schedule a same-day airport-to-stadium sprint.
The common rule: book a hotel that matches the official stadium transport, then choose restaurants and watch parties around that. Reversing the order is how fans end up with a perfect brunch reservation and a miserable exit.

Final checklist before the bracket locks

  • Save the official schedule page and re-check the match number, not just the city name. The knockout bracket uses winner placeholders until earlier rounds are complete. 1
  • Buy or reserve transport where required. Boston Stadium Trains, NYNJ official shuttles, and several stadium shuttle systems are not casual walk-up services. 2 9
  • Separate match-day transit from fan-zone transit. Dallas makes this obvious: Fair Park is the fan festival move, while CentrePort is the stadium shuttle move. 6
  • Check live host-city updates on the day. Kansas City has already used its operational page for weather and ConnectKC26 service notices, which is exactly the kind of page you want open before leaving. 5
  • Assume the final will be transit-controlled. NYNJ says no general spectator parking on stadium property on match days; the final is not the day to test a private-car workaround. 9

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