
Dallas World Cup Matchday Guide: Stadium Shuttle, Fair Park Fan Festival, and Next Fixtures
A practical Dallas World Cup guide for fans planning from June 18 onward: remaining Dallas Stadium fixtures, DART/TRE matchday routing, Fair Park Fan Festival access, Arlington shuttle options, and between-match Dallas ideas.

Dallas is the highest-volume 2026 World Cup stop on the current host-city slate: nine matches, a stadium in Arlington, and a Fan Festival base at Fair Park in Dallas. The practical move is to treat this as a two-node trip: Fair Park for non-ticketed atmosphere, Dallas Stadium for matchday, with DART, TRE, and dedicated shuttles linking the pieces. 1
The source pages list several kickoff times in Dallas local time. In the fixture table below, the first time is the channel display time; the Dallas local equivalent appears in parentheses.
The short version for Dallas matchdays
- Stadium: Dallas Stadium, 1 AT&T Way in Arlington, with FIFA's ticketing help center listing capacity at 70,649 for the tournament configuration. 2
- Fan Festival: Fair Park is the main Dallas fan base, with Visit Dallas describing 34 days of free admission, giant screens, concerts, food, and international fan experiences. 1
- Best car-free stadium route: use DART to reach Victory Station or Union Station, take TRE toward CentrePort/DFW Airport Station, then use the matchday shuttle to the Dallas Stadium bus hub. 3
- Best non-matchday base: Downtown Dallas keeps you close to DART rail, Union Station, Victory Station, Fair Park access, restaurants, and arts-district events. 1

Remaining Dallas Stadium fixtures
Dallas has already hosted the June 14 Netherlands-Japan match and the June 17 England-Croatia match. For fans planning from June 18 onward, these are the remaining Dallas Stadium dates listed by Visit Dallas:
| Date | Fixture | Stage | Planning note | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| June 22, 17:00 (12 p.m. Dallas local) | Argentina vs. Austria | Group stage | A midday local kickoff; build in heat, hydration, and a longer postmatch return window. | Visit Dallas |
| June 25, 23:00 (6 p.m. Dallas local) | Japan vs. Sweden | Group stage | Evening local start; useful for fans who want Fair Park or downtown Dallas before heading toward Arlington. | Visit Dallas |
| June 28, 02:00 (June 27, 9 p.m. Dallas local) | Jordan vs. Argentina | Group stage | Late local kickoff; confirm return service alerts in GoPass before leaving for the stadium. | Visit Dallas |
| June 30 | TBD vs. TBD | Round of 32 | Teams are still to be determined after the group stage. | Visit Dallas |
| July 3 | TBD vs. TBD | Round of 32 | Teams are still to be determined after the group stage. | Visit Dallas |
| July 6 | TBD vs. TBD | Round of 16 | Teams are determined after the Round of 32. | Visit Dallas |
| July 14 | TBD vs. TBD | Semifinal | Dallas's biggest remaining stadium date; expect the heaviest travel demand. | Visit Dallas |
For tickets, maps, and team updates, keep the FIFA and local pages open rather than relying on copied fixture graphics. Knockout-stage teams and some timing details can change as the bracket fills in. 1
Getting to Dallas Stadium without driving
The stadium is in Arlington, not in downtown Dallas. That matters because Arlington does not work like a typical downtown rail stadium. The main public-transport path is a rail-and-shuttle chain:
- Start on DART rail if you are staying in Dallas. DART says it is running expanded World Cup service from June 8 through July 19, including 20-minute service on all light rail lines, three-car Green Line trains, and added Green Line frequency. 3
- Reach Victory Station or Union Station for the TRE connection. Visit Dallas points fans to Victory Station and Union Station for the matchday route toward CentrePort. 1
- Ride TRE to CentrePort/DFW Airport Station. DART lists 30-minute TRE frequency on match days, with different frequencies on non-match days. 3
- Use the stadium shuttle. DART says special shuttles run from CentrePort/DFW Airport Station to the Bus Hub at Dallas Stadium, about a 10-minute walk to the gates, and that riders need a match ticket to use the shuttle. 3
Two caveats are worth building into your day. First, DART warns that Victory Station has no dedicated parking and CentrePort/DFW Airport Station parking is extremely limited, so park-and-ride stations are the safer starting point if you are driving to rail. 3 Second, Visit Dallas says that if TRE reaches capacity, free direct FIFA shuttles may move fans from Union Station and Victory Park Station straight to Dallas Stadium, bypassing CentrePort. 1

Fair Park is the easier no-ticket day
If you do not have a match ticket, Fair Park is the cleaner plan than trying to hover near the Arlington stadium. Visit Dallas describes FIFA Fan Festival Dallas as open daily for 34 days with free admission, giant screens, concerts, food, and international fan experiences. 1
Transit is also simpler. For the Fan Festival, Visit Dallas recommends taking the DART Green Line toward Buckner and exiting at Fair Park Station or Martin Luther King Jr. Station, with Martin Luther King Jr. Station noted as closer. 1 DART's own World Cup page also marks Fair Park Station as the Fan Festival station. 3

The practical split: choose Fair Park for public viewing, food, concerts, and a lower-friction arrival. Choose Dallas Stadium only when you have a ticket and enough time for the rail-to-shuttle transfer.
Arlington options if you are already near the stadium
If your hotel is in Arlington's Entertainment District, local shuttles may beat the regional rail chain. Arlington's visitor bureau lists J. Gilligan's Bar & Grill shuttle service at $26 per person for all match days, Grease Monkey at $25 per adult and $18 for children 12 and under, and an Arlington Highlands shuttle with free service on select match days. 6
The same Arlington guide says the Arlington Trolley can connect visitors with Dallas Stadium, Six Flags Over Texas, Globe Life Field, Hurricane Harbor, and other Entertainment District attractions, but it also warns that routes and operating hours can change. 6 If you plan to use a local shuttle or trolley, confirm the pickup point before you leave the hotel; the region is big enough that a wrong pickup can become an expensive rideshare fix.
Between matches: what to do in Dallas
Visit Dallas is pushing fans toward downtown and the Arts District for the days between stadium trips. Its World Cup page highlights the Perot Museum's Soccer: More Than a Game, the Bush Center's Game Changer: United By Sports, the traveling RedBall Project, Crow Museum programming, Flora Street Live, and a long arts-and-culture calendar. 1
For a light itinerary, pair one fixed event with one flexible neighborhood:
- Museum slot: Perot Museum, Bush Center, or Crow Museum if you want an air-conditioned daytime block. 1
- Night slot: Deep Ellum, Lower Greenville, Uptown, or the Arts District, all listed by Visit Dallas as neighborhoods worth using for dining, nightlife, or culture. 1
- Transit-friendly fan base: Downtown Dallas keeps you closest to Union Station, Victory Station, and Green Line access toward Fair Park. 1
A matchday checklist
- Buy or confirm your match ticket before counting on the stadium shuttle; DART says the CentrePort-to-stadium shuttle is for match-ticket holders. 3
- Download GoPass if you plan to use DART or TRE; DART says the app supports passes, real-time train tracking, and service alerts. 3
- Do not assume you can park at the transfer point; DART specifically warns that Victory Station has no dedicated parking and CentrePort parking is extremely limited. 3
- For no-ticket days, default to Fair Park rather than the Arlington stadium district; Visit Dallas describes Fair Park as the free, daily Fan Festival home base. 1
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