
World Cup fan festival transit guide: six host cities where the train or shuttle beats the car
A practical car-light fan festival guide for Los Angeles, Toronto, Houston, Vancouver, Philadelphia, and Atlanta, with official watch sites, rail or shuttle moves, registration cautions, and crowd-flow tips.

You do not need a match ticket to make a World Cup day feel full. In several host cities, the best fan experience is outside the stadium: official fan festivals, neighborhood fan zones, big-screen watch parties, local food vendors, and transit routes that keep you out of event-day traffic.
This guide focuses on six cities where the public viewing plan is especially usable without a car: Los Angeles, Toronto, Houston, Vancouver, Philadelphia, and Atlanta. It is not a replacement for the same-day official schedule. Treat it as a route-planning layer before you open the host-city app, transit alerts, or ticketing page.
Fast picks for car-light fan days
| City | Best no-car fan plan | Watch site | Transit move | Check before leaving |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Los Angeles | Pick the fan zone by date, then build the day around its nearest rail or bus link. | Rotating Los Angeles World Cup 26 Fan Zones across LA County. LA Fan Zones | Examples include Metro D Line to Fairfax plus bus 217 for The Original Farmers Market, Metro C Line plus bus 266 for Downey, and Union Station via Metro A, B, D, and J Lines. LA Fan Zones | The fan-zone page lists different dates, ticket links, and routes for each site. |
| Toronto | Use Fort York and The Bentway as the main fan festival anchor, then move by streetcar. | FIFA Fan Festival Toronto at Fort York National Historic Site and The Bentway. Toronto Fan Festival | TTC points fans toward 509 Harbourfront from Union Station, 511 Bathurst from Bathurst Station, and Dufferin buses on match days. TTC World Cup guide | Same-day general admission may depend on capacity, and tickets must be secured online before lining up. |
| Houston | Split the city into two rail targets: Red Line for the stadium, Green or Purple Line for the fan festival. | FIFA Fan Festival Houston in East Downtown near Shell Energy Stadium. Houston Fan Festival | METRO says the Fan Festival is served by EaDo / Stadium Station on the Green or Purple Line; Red Line riders transfer at Central Station. METRO World Cup guide | The Houston festival opens before the first match shown that day, so check the daily schedule before arriving. |
| Vancouver | Treat Hastings Park/PNE as a separate destination from BC Place. | FIFA Fan Festival Vancouver at the PNE Grounds at Hastings Park. Vancouver Fan Festival access | Vancouver is running the 11 Fan Festival Express between 29th Avenue Station, Renfrew Station, and the festival site. Vancouver Fan Festival access | High-demand days include opening day, Canada match days, weekends, and knockout rounds. |
| Philadelphia | Walk, PHLASH, bus, or bike to Lemon Hill; do not assume stadium transit and fan festival transit are the same trip. | FIFA Fan Festival Philadelphia at Lemon Hill in East Fairmount Park. Philadelphia Fan Festival | SEPTA routes 32 and 48 serve Lemon Hill, and PHLASH Stop 9 is about 0.4 miles from the entrance. Philadelphia transport guide | Registration is required for the free Fan Festival, and the official entrance is at Kelly Drive and Sedgley Drive. |
| Atlanta | Use MARTA into downtown, then expect managed walking conditions around Centennial Olympic Park. | FIFA Fan Festival Atlanta at Centennial Olympic Park. Atlanta Fan Festival | Atlanta's matchday guide says MARTA is the best public transportation option for Atlanta Stadium and downtown, with five stations within one mile of the stadium. Atlanta matchday guide | Free general admission requires registration and is first-come, first-served subject to capacity. |
Los Angeles: choose the fan zone first
Los Angeles is the opposite of a single-festival city. The official host committee is running a countywide fan-zone program, with different sites active on different date blocks. That means the best plan is not "go downtown and figure it out." It is "pick the right fan zone for the day, then follow that site's transit note."
The first useful split is timing. The Original Farmers Market runs June 18-21, Downey is listed for June 20, Union Station runs June 25-28, Hansen Dam Lake runs July 2-5, Magic Johnson Park runs July 4-5, Whittier Narrows runs July 9-11, Venice Beach runs July 10-11, and several final-weekend sites are listed for July 14-19. The official page ties each location to ticket links and suggested transit, so use the page as the routing hub rather than a generic maps search. 1
The practical takeaway: LA is good if you want a fan day near a neighborhood you already plan to visit. It is less forgiving if you simply ask a rideshare to drop you near a crowd.
Toronto: the tightest stadium and festival pairing
Toronto's fan festival is at Fort York National Historic Site and The Bentway, with more than 30 food vendors, match broadcasts, live entertainment, and premium ticket options. General admission is free, but the page warns that same-day GA may depend on capacity and that fans must get tickets online before joining the line. 2
The TTC routing is unusually clear because the stadium and festival sit in the same Exhibition Place/Fort York corridor. TTC lists 504 King, 509 Harbourfront, and 511 Bathurst streetcars at five-minute service during the tournament, with 509 from Union Station to Fleet Hub and 511 from Bathurst Station to Fleet Hub. It also points Dufferin Station riders toward 29 Dufferin, 929 Dufferin Express, or 829 Dufferin Gate Express buses on match days. 3
If you are trying to combine a stadium match with the fan festival, Toronto is one of the easier cities on this list. The caution is crowd flow, not distance. Build a post-match route before kickoff, especially if you need Line 1 or Line 2 connections after the final whistle.
Houston: two rail lines, two different jobs
Houston's car-light plan is simple once you separate the destinations. Houston Stadium at NRG is a Red Line trip. FIFA Fan Festival Houston is in East Downtown near Shell Energy Stadium, and METRO points fans to EaDo / Stadium Station on the Green or Purple Line. Red Line riders should transfer at Central Station to reach the festival. 4

The Fan Festival itself is free, open every match day, and does not require a ticket or registration. The host committee says the site has two public entrances, at Polk Street and Walker Street, and that METRORail riders have about a five-minute walk from EaDo / Stadium Station to the north entrance on Walker Street. 5
This is the city where a $1.25 local fare can do a lot of work. METRO lists $1.25 for Red Line stadium trips and also for the Green/Purple Line fan festival connection. It also lists a 10-day commemorative transit pass for fans staying across multiple match windows. 4
Vancouver: do not confuse Hastings Park with BC Place
Vancouver's official fan festival is at the PNE Grounds at Hastings Park, not at BC Place. The host committee recommends transit, walking, biking, rolling, taxis, ride-share, or carpooling because parking is limited. It also names several pressure days: opening day, Canada match days, weekends, and knockout rounds. 6

The easiest public-transit headline is the 11 Fan Festival Express, which runs between 29th Avenue Station on the Expo Line, Renfrew Station on the Millennium Line, and the festival grounds, with increased service during peak periods. TransLink also says it is adding roughly 600 extra bus trips per day during the Vancouver tournament, including a dedicated shuttle to connect the event grounds to both the Expo and Millennium lines. 7
One more Vancouver-specific point: if you plan to do both the Fan Festival and a BC Place match, do not treat them as adjacent venues. The host committee says they are separate sites and estimates BC Place is roughly 15-30 minutes away depending on route and mode. 6
Philadelphia: Lemon Hill is its own fan-festival trip
Philadelphia's FIFA Fan Festival is free and open to the public for the full tournament at Lemon Hill in East Fairmount Park, with online registration used to manage entry. The official location is Lemon Hill Park at 1 Lemon Hill Drive, and the secured entry point is Kelly Drive and Sedgley Drive. 8
The main trap is assuming that the stadium plan solves the fan festival plan. SEPTA's B Line to NRG Station is the stadium move for Philadelphia Stadium, but Lemon Hill is served differently. The host-city transport page points fans to PHLASH Stop 9 at Pennsylvania Avenue and Fairmount Avenue, about 0.4 miles from the festival entrance, and SEPTA routes 32 and 48 to Pennsylvania Avenue and Fairmount Avenue. 9
SEPTA has also announced extra service for the six Philadelphia matches and the Lemon Hill Fan Festival. For Fan Festival service, it says bus routes 32 and 48 will provide frequent weekday service, every 15 minutes or less, from morning through evening. 10
This is a strong city for walkers, cyclists, and fans who want a visitor-center style route. The official guide says pop-up visitor centers will sit along a recommended walking path from Center City through City Hall, Love Park, Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Sister Cities Park, Eakins Oval, and Kelly Drive. 9
Atlanta: MARTA first, then a managed downtown walk
Atlanta's official Fan Festival is at Centennial Olympic Park. The host page lists free general admission, but advance registration is required, entry is first-come, first-served, and visitors should bring the digital QR code or wristband plus a valid ID. 11
For movement, the current matchday guide is blunt: MARTA is the best public transportation option for Atlanta Stadium and the downtown area. It lists trains every five minutes from early morning to late night, free parking at 23 stations, five stations within one mile of Atlanta Stadium, and a $2.50 one-way fare. 12

Downtown will not feel like a normal event day. The same guide says pedestrian protection barriers are being used around Centennial Olympic Park, including along Centennial Olympic Park Drive and Marietta Street, and that parking availability downtown will be extremely limited. The better move is to ride MARTA into the core, then follow the posted walking route rather than trying to improvise a curbside drop-off. 12
The quick decision rule
If you are choosing between these six cities for a no-car fan day, use this order:
- For easiest stadium-plus-festival pairing: Toronto.
- For clean rail separation between stadium and fan festival: Houston.
- For a dedicated festival shuttle network: Vancouver.
- For a walking-and-transit city day: Philadelphia.
- For a downtown stadium and festival plan with heavy crowd control: Atlanta.
- For neighborhood choice and variety: Los Angeles.
Before you leave, open three things: the official fan festival or fan-zone page, the transit agency's live alerts, and the ticket or registration page for that specific day. The best World Cup plan is not the one with the shortest drive. It is the one that still works when the final whistle, security screening line, and street closure all arrive at once.
참고 출처
- 1Los Angeles World Cup 26 Fan Zones
- 2FIFA Fan Festival Toronto
- 3Take the TTC to FIFA World Cup 2026
- 4Ride METRO to the World Cup
- 5FIFA Fan Festival Houston
- 6Getting to FIFA Fan Festival Vancouver
- 7TransLink World Cup transit guide
- 8FIFA Fan Festival Philadelphia
- 9Philadelphia transportation and parking
- 10SEPTA infrastructure and World Cup service announcement
- 11FIFA Fan Festival Atlanta
- 12Atlanta matchday guide
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