
Boston World Cup Matchday Guide: Foxboro Trains, Fan Festival, and Next Fixtures
A practical Boston guide for World Cup fans planning from June 18 onward: remaining Boston Stadium fixtures, South Station to Foxboro train routing, City Hall Plaza Fan Festival registration and alerts, stadium entry rules, neighborhood watch parties, and between-match Boston ideas.

Boston’s remaining World Cup run is split between two places: matches at Boston Stadium in Foxborough, and public viewing in the city at City Hall Plaza and neighborhood watch parties. The planning mistake to avoid is treating those as the same trip. They are different journeys, different ticket rules, and, on some days, different weather calls.
Boston.gov posted a June 18 notice that the FIFA Fan Festival was closed for the day because of high winds, and pointed fans toward neighborhood businesses instead. Check the city or Fan Festival page before you leave, even if your plan seemed settled in the morning. 1
The quick plan
| If you are doing this | Best first move | Watch-out |
|---|---|---|
| Going to Boston Stadium | Buy the dedicated Boston Stadium Train ticket in advance through MBTA mTicket or the linked reservation flow. FIFA says the train runs express from South Station to Foxboro Station for each match, and MBTA says riders need a match ticket to board. 2 3 | Do not assume regular commuter rail will work on matchday. FIFA describes the special train as the match service, and MBTA separately flags World Cup service changes. 2 |
| Going to the Fan Festival | Register before you go. Boston.gov says the City Hall Plaza Fan Festival is free and open to the public, but passes are required because of space limits. 1 | Weather can close the site. The June 18 closure notice is the warning sign to keep checking the official page. 1 |
| Watching without stadium tickets | Use City Hall Plaza or the neighborhood watch-party list. Boston.gov lists Mayor Wu watch parties on June 19, June 27, July 14, July 15, and July 19. 1 | Some watch-party locations for later knockout rounds are still to be announced. 4 |
Next Boston Stadium fixtures
Times below are shown in UTC, converted from the Boston Stadium Express match-time listing.
FIFA’s Boston host-city page also lists Boston as a seven-match host, with Haiti vs. Scotland and Iraq vs. Norway already completed before this guide’s June 18 publication time. 6
Getting to Boston Stadium
Boston Stadium is the World Cup name for the Foxborough venue at 1 Patriot Place, Foxborough, MA 02035. FIFA’s stadium guide says gates open three hours before kickoff, and general and hospitality parking open one hour before gates. 7
The cleanest public-transit plan is the special event train. FIFA says MBTA will run round-trip service from Boston’s South Station to the improved Foxboro Station for each match, with no intermediate stops, and that Foxboro Station is adjacent to Boston Stadium. Round-trip tickets for the five group-stage matches were listed at $80 and sold through mTicket. 2
MBTA adds three operational details that matter after the match: Boston Stadium Train tickets must be bought in advance, match tickets are required to board, and return trains start leaving Foxboro Station 30 minutes after the final whistle, then roughly every 15 minutes until all trains have departed. 3

If you are driving, do not leave parking to chance. FIFA’s A-Z guide points fans to the official FIFA World Cup 2026 parking page for prepaid general and accessible parking, and it tells accessible-parking users to bring the prepaid parking ticket plus a valid license plate or placard. 7
Stadium rules that can slow you down
The clear-bag rule is strict. FIFA says approved stadium bags must be clear plastic, vinyl, or PVC and no larger than 12 inches x 6 inches x 12 inches, or 30 cm x 30 cm x 15 cm. Small clutch purses or wallets can be non-clear, but they must be no larger than 4.5 inches x 6.5 inches, or 11 cm x 16.5 cm. 7
Bring payment cards, not cash. FIFA lists Boston Stadium as cashless, with only card and contactless payment accepted. It also says fans may bring one soft, plastic, factory-sealed disposable water bottle up to 20 ounces, or 590 ml, for World Cup matches in the USA and Canada. 7
For accessibility, FIFA says audio descriptive commentary is available for all matches in English and Spanish through the FIFA Audio Description app, and closed captioning plus sign-language commentary are available across all 104 matches. 7
Fan Festival and watch-party choices
The official FIFA Fan Festival Boston is at City Hall Plaza, 1 City Hall Square. FIFA says it runs for 16 days during the group stage, from June 12 through June 27, with live match broadcasts, interactive games and activities, and a food and beverage program. 9

Boston.gov adds the practical capacity note: the Fan Festival is free and open to the public, but advance registration is required because of space limits. 1 The registration page repeats the core promise: live World Cup viewing on the big screen at City Hall Plaza, free to attend. 10
For a less central, more neighborhood-based plan, the city’s watch-party list is useful. Boston.gov says the six city-hosted watch parties are free, family-friendly events with a large screen, live music, activities, face painting, food vendors, and community programming. 4
The next fixed watch-party dates are Brazil vs. Haiti at Parkman Bandstand on Boston Common on June 19, Colombia vs. Portugal at East Boston Memorial Stadium on June 27, then semifinal and final watch parties on July 14, July 15, and July 19 with later-round locations to be announced. 4
Between matches: easy Boston plans
If you are staying downtown for the Fan Festival, you can build a low-friction day around City Hall Plaza. Boston.gov’s visitor guide points fans toward the Freedom Trail, Faneuil Hall, the U.S.S. Constitution, the State House, public art, parks, and the city’s neighborhood pages. 11

The simplest pairing is City Hall Plaza plus the Freedom Trail and Faneuil Hall, because all three sit in the downtown visitor zone. If heat or storms cut into outdoor time, Boston.gov’s Summer 2026 page links to public amenities, libraries, food trucks, parks, the neighborhood business guide, and more soccer watch parties. 1
July visitors should watch the broader event calendar. Boston.gov says Boston is also marking Boston 250 during the summer, and Sail Boston brings tall ships to Boston Harbor from July 11 through July 16. That overlaps the days after Boston’s July 9 quarter-final and before the semifinal watch parties. 12
A matchday checklist
- Before leaving: check whether the Fan Festival or watch-party plan has a same-day alert, because Boston.gov posted a June 18 high-wind closure for the Fan Festival. 1
- For stadium matches: buy the correct dedicated train or parking product for the exact match date. FIFA says each special event train ticket must be purchased for the corresponding match. 2
- At South Station: arrive according to the boarding group shown on your Boston Stadium Train ticket. MBTA says the boarding group is printed on the ticket. 3
- At the stadium: use a compliant clear bag, plan for cashless payments, and arrive with enough time for screening before gates open three hours ahead of kickoff. 7
- After the whistle: go straight to Foxboro Station if you are using the train. MBTA says return service starts 30 minutes after the final whistle and then departs about every 15 minutes. 3
참고 출처
- 1Summer in Boston 2026
- 2Getting there, Boston Stadium
- 3Boston Stadium Trains
- 4Mayor Michelle Wu Announces Community Watch Parties
- 5Match Schedule, Boston Stadium Express
- 6Boston, FIFA World Cup 2026 Host City
- 7A-Z Guide, Boston Stadium
- 8World Cup Guide, MBTA
- 9Boston FIFA Fan Festival
- 10FIFA Fan Festival Events
- 11Visiting Boston
- 12Mayor Michelle Wu Kicks Off Historic Summer of Global Events Across Boston
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