Dallas World Cup knockout-week guide: TRE shuttles, Fair Park, and semifinal planning
2026. 6. 23. · 22:15

Dallas World Cup knockout-week guide: TRE shuttles, Fair Park, and semifinal planning

A practical Dallas plan for the remaining World Cup stadium dates, covering TRE-to-shuttle routing, DART service, Fair Park Fan Festival access, road-closure checks, and how to prepare for the July 14 semifinal.

Dallas still has the tournament's biggest remaining venue load: six Dallas Stadium dates after June 23, including two Round of 32 matches, a Round of 16, and the July 14 semifinal. The practical mistake is treating it like a normal NFL trip to Arlington. For World Cup days, plan it as a rail-plus-shuttle operation with Fair Park as the no-ticket fan base.

Quick decision map

If your main plan is...Best moveWatch-out
You have a stadium ticketUse DART or TRE to reach CentrePort/DFW Airport Station, then the matchday shuttle to the stadium bus hub. DART says the Dallas Stadium shuttle is for match-ticket holders and is about a 10-minute walk from the gates. 1Do not count on parking at Victory Station or CentrePort; DART says Victory has no dedicated parking and CentrePort parking is extremely limited. 1
You want the public viewing partyTake the DART Green Line to Fair Park Station for the FIFA Fan Festival. DART lists Fair Park Station as the Fan Festival rail stop. 1Fair Park is easier by train than by car on peak days; road changes around the grounds can slow rideshare pickups. 2
You are staying in ArlingtonUse local stadium-area shuttles or walk inside the Entertainment District if your hotel is close enough. Arlington's visitor bureau lists local matchday shuttle options, including J. Gilligan's and Grease Monkey. 3Check schedules before matchday; Arlington notes trolley routes and hours can change. 3
You are drivingUse the official road-closure maps and expect I-30, SH 360, and TRE corridors to feel the pressure before and after kickoff. 2Your GPS may not match the assigned FIFA parking route; Visit Dallas warns drivers not to blindly follow navigation apps on game day. 4

The remaining Dallas Stadium dates

Dallas Stadium in Arlington was assigned a tournament-high nine matches, including five group-stage matches, two Round of 32 matches, one Round of 16 match, and a semifinal. 5 After the Argentina-Austria match on June 22, the dates still relevant for fans planning from June 23 onward are:
Stadium dateStageWhat to plan around
June 25Group stage: Japan vs. SwedenThis is the first remaining Dallas match after June 23, so expect the transit pattern to be fresh for visiting fans who missed opening week. 6
June 27Group stage: Jordan vs. ArgentinaLate matchdays are when post-game queues matter most; pick a return plan before entering the stadium zone. 6
June 30Round of 32Teams are still to be determined, so book flexible transport and avoid non-refundable tight transfers after the match. 6
July 3Round of 32This lands inside a holiday travel window in the United States; add airport and road buffer time. 6
July 6Round of 16By this point, neutral fans may be following a team across cities; use Dallas as a rail-to-shuttle day, not a stadium parking experiment. 6
July 14SemifinalThis is the biggest Dallas date left. Treat hotel checkout, baggage storage, and late-night return transport as part of the match plan. 5

Stadium route: rail first, shuttle second

The cleanest no-car stadium route is not a single train. It is DART or TRE into the regional rail network, then a dedicated shuttle from CentrePort/DFW Airport Station to the Dallas Stadium bus hub. DART says the shuttle is for match-ticket holders, the bus hub is about a 10-minute walk from the gates, and riders may be directed to extra or backup buses at Victory Station if trains are full. 1
DART fan-zone transit map
DART's World Cup transit map centers matchday movement on Victory Station, CentrePort/DFW Airport Station, and the Dallas Stadium shuttle bus hub. 1
DART is also running expanded tournament service from June 8 through July 19. Its World Cup page lists 20-minute light-rail service on all lines all day, Orange Line service to Parker Road on all days, three-vehicle Green Line trains, increased Green Line frequency, and TRE matchday service every 30 minutes. 1
If you are coming from downtown Dallas, the practical path is to start from Union Station or Victory Station and transfer to TRE. Visit Dallas says matchday transportation to the stadium is included with the match ticket, with fans using Union Station or Victory Park Station to reach CentrePort and then the free shuttle to Dallas Stadium. 6
Two small rules will save pain:
  1. Do not arrive at CentrePort assuming you can park. DART says CentrePort parking is extremely limited. 1
  2. Do not cut your arrival close. Visit Dallas says the full public-transit trip can take about 90 minutes and officials recommend leaving up to four hours before kickoff. 4

Fan Festival route: Fair Park is the simpler day

The FIFA Fan Festival Dallas is the public option for fans without stadium tickets. Visit Dallas says it is open daily for 34 days with free admission, giant screens, concerts, food, and international fan experiences. 6 Its cultural-events guide identifies the official Fan Festival at Fair Park from June 11 through July 19 and says peak days may draw 30,000 fans. 7
For transit, keep it simple: take the Green Line. Visit Dallas tells fans to ride toward Buckner and get off at Fair Park Station or Martin Luther King Jr. Station, with the latter closer to the event. 6 DART's own World Cup page also lists Fair Park Station for the Fan Festival. 1
NCTCOG Fair Park road-closure map
NCTCOG's Fair Park map is useful if you are driving or using rideshare near the Fan Festival instead of arriving by DART. 2
If you plan to split the day between the Fan Festival and Deep Ellum, this is one of Dallas's better no-car combinations. Visit Dallas points to Deep Ellum as a practical base near Fair Park, with Green Line access and a walkable food-and-music cluster. 4

Driving and rideshare: where the friction is

NCTCOG warns that World Cup matchdays in Arlington will concentrate travel before and after kickoff, especially on I-30, SH 360, and the Trinity Railway Express corridor. It also tells residents and visitors to expect heavier roadway traffic, higher transit ridership, and longer travel times near Arlington and surrounding corridors. 2
NCTCOG stadium road-closure map
NCTCOG's stadium road-closure map is the page to check before driving toward Arlington on a matchday. 2
Rideshare is not a door-to-gate shortcut. Visit Dallas says the designated rideshare drop-off and pickup zone is at the eSports Stadium Arlington lot, and its local advice is to tell the driver to use Ballpark Way rather than AT&T Way. 4
If you stay in Arlington, local shuttles can be useful. Arlington's visitor bureau lists J. Gilligan's Bar & Grill at $26 per person for all matchdays, an Arlington Highlands free shuttle on select matchdays, and a Grease Monkey shuttle at $25 per adult and $18 for children 12 and under. 3 Those are local visitor-board listings, not a promise that a seat will be waiting. Check each operator before you commit your return plan.

Best bases for different fans

Downtown Dallas is the most balanced base if you want Fan Festival access, restaurants, hotels, and a straightforward rail start toward Arlington. Visit Dallas calls downtown the smartest central hub because it has hotels and DART access for both the Fan Festival and TRE to Arlington. 4
Deep Ellum works for fans without stadium tickets or anyone building the day around Fair Park. It has the Green Line connection and a dense evening scene, but it is not the simplest base for a stadium match unless you are comfortable transferring.
Arlington Entertainment District works if the stadium is your whole trip. Visit Dallas describes the district as walkable inside its stadium bubble, with Dallas Stadium, Globe Life Field, and Texas Live! in a tight radius. 4 Outside that bubble, you will still need a shuttle, rideshare, or car.

A same-day plan that actually works

For a stadium ticket: sleep in downtown Dallas, load GoPass before breakfast, leave for Union or Victory Station with a large buffer, transfer through CentrePort, ride the shuttle, and do not schedule anything tight immediately after the final whistle. DART says GoPass can buy passes, plan trips in real time, and provide service alerts. 1
For a no-ticket matchday: choose Fair Park first, not a scattered bar crawl. Take the Green Line, enter through the station that matches your gate plan, and use Deep Ellum or downtown for food before or after. The Fan Festival has the scale; your job is to avoid turning a free public viewing day into a parking search. 6
For July 14 semifinal travelers: do the dull logistics early. Pick a base, settle your bags, download apps, and decide whether your post-match return is rail-shuttle, local shuttle, or a delayed rideshare after the stadium crowd thins. Dallas has the matches. Arlington has the stadium. Your day goes well when you treat the space between them as the main event.

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