Seattle World Cup matchday guide: Link stations, shuttles, and fan celebration sites

Seattle World Cup matchday guide: Link stations, shuttles, and fan celebration sites

A practical Seattle guide for the four remaining World Cup stadium dates, covering which Link station to use by travel direction, when to use King County Metro's matchday shuttle, how to choose an official fan celebration site, and the pre-entry checks fans should finish before heading to Seattle Stadium.

Host Cities Guide
2026/6/22 · 15:13
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Seattle has moved past its first two World Cup dates. The planning question now is narrower: how do you handle the four remaining Seattle Stadium matchdays without getting trapped in the Pioneer Square crush?
All primary times below are shown in this channel's display time first, with Seattle local time in parentheses for fans on the ground.
Remaining Seattle Stadium dateMatchWhy it changes your plan
June 24, 19:00 (12:00 p.m. Seattle local)Bosnia-Herzegovina vs. Qatar, group stageMidday kickoff means airport arrivals, downtown lunch traffic, and stadium screening all overlap. 1
June 27, 03:00 (8:00 p.m. Seattle local on June 26)Egypt vs. Iran, group stageThis is the late Seattle group-stage slot, so your return plan matters more than your arrival plan. 1
July 1, 20:00 (1:00 p.m. Seattle local)Round of 32Knockout football plus weekday downtown movement puts extra pressure on Link stations and shuttles. 1
July 7, 00:00 (5:00 p.m. Seattle local on July 6)Round of 16This is Seattle's last stadium match, and the post-match trip home will coincide with evening movement around downtown. 1

Start with the stadium, then choose your station

Seattle Stadium is unusually central for a World Cup venue: SeattleFWC26 describes it as a downtown stadium reachable by walking, biking, buses, trains, and ferries, with Link light rail and Metro buses dropping fans close to the gates. 2 That convenience has a catch. The closest station is not always the best station.
Sound Transit is routing match crowds by direction of travel: riders coming from Lynnwood City Center through Symphony should use Pioneer Square Station; riders from SODO through Federal Way should use Stadium Station; riders from Judkins Park through Downtown Redmond should use International District/Chinatown Station. 3 Sounder riders should use King Street Station, and ferry or water-taxi riders can walk from Colman Dock or use the Waterfront Shuttle. 3
Seattle stadium transit map
SeattleFWC26's downtown map shows the stadium, fan celebration sites, Link stations, shuttle routes, and matchday pedestrian zone in one view. 2
For fans with reduced mobility, the clearest official routing is International District/Chinatown Station via the Weller Street Bridge. Sound Transit says that route offers the most direct, level pathway to the stadium and avoids the steeper grades and heavier crowding at Pioneer Square. 3

Use the free shuttle for the city loop, not as a last-minute rescue

King County Metro's SEA26 Match Day Shuttle runs only on Seattle matchdays, loops through downtown for eight hours, and operates every three to seven minutes. 4 The route links Seattle Stadium with Seattle Center and stops along the way, including Third Avenue downtown stops and 1st Avenue stops near the stadium area. 4
Match Day Shuttle route map
King County Metro's shuttle map shows the downtown loop between Seattle Center, Westlake, Pioneer Square, and Seattle Stadium. 4
That makes the shuttle best for two situations: moving between a fan celebration and the stadium before gates get busy, or getting out of the stadium area toward Seattle Center after the match. It is a weaker plan if you are already late and standing in a crowd outside a closed street.
King County Metro's tournament hub also points fans to regular buses, the Waterfront Shuttle, Link light rail, Sounder, the Water Taxi, park-and-rides, secure bike parking, Metro Flex, and a trip planner. 5 Metro says light rail service is increased on all matchdays, with trains running every four to eight minutes, and Sounder game trains are added for all six Seattle matches. 5
Passengers boarding Sound Transit Link light rail
Link light rail is the backbone of Seattle matchday travel, but Sound Transit is steering fans to different stadium-area stations by direction of travel. 3
Payment is one of the easiest things to fix before matchday. ORCA says visitors can tap a contactless credit or debit card on many regional services, or buy an ORCA card and load a $6 all-day PugetPass or an $18 three-day PugetPass; the same guide notes that Seattle Monorail, Washington State Ferries, and some regional services have exceptions. 6

Pick a watch spot before you pick a restaurant

Seattle's official fan celebration network gives you several ways to spend the hours before kickoff. The choice depends less on distance and more on whether you want the biggest screen, the broadest city festival, the waterfront, or the closest stadium-adjacent atmosphere.
Watch spotBest fitWhat to know before you go
Seattle Soccer House at Pacific PlaceFans who want a downtown indoor hub and a large screenSeattleFWC26 describes a 27,000-square-foot experience across six themed zones, anchored by a 70-by-40-foot viewing screen; it is free, all ages, and does not require tickets or preregistration. 7
Let's Play SEA '26 at Seattle CenterFamilies, first-time visitors, and fans building a full day around the Space Needle areaSeattle Center is hosting free programming across the tournament, with the Armory, Global Marketplace, cultural programming, match viewing, and expanded Mural Amphitheatre watch parties on Seattle matchdays and selected featured matches. 7
Pier 62 and The BargeWaterfront walkers and fans who want a scenic pre-match baseThe Seattle Soccer Celebration at Pier 62 includes free watch parties and RAVE 52 free play, while live match viewings on The Barge are ticketed. 7
Victory Hall at The BoxyardFans who want to stay close to the stadium districtSeattle Matchday Live at Victory Hall is hosted by the Seattle Mariners, runs daily through the tournament, and combines free fan celebration programming with a separate ticketed 21+ concert series. 7
If you are staying outside Seattle proper, ORCA's World Cup visitor guide also lists official regional fan-zone options in Bremerton, Everett, and the Puyallup Tribe/Tacoma area, with transit notes for ferries, Sounder, Everett Transit, Pierce Transit, and Tacoma connections. 6 Those are not substitutes for a stadium ticket, but they are useful if your group has mixed plans or you want a lower-pressure viewing day between Seattle matches.

Your matchday operating plan

Treat Seattle like a transit-first World Cup city. SeattleFWC26 has already warned fans that there is no publicly available parking at Seattle Stadium on matchdays, and the stadium-area pedestrian zone changes vehicle access around Pioneer Square. 7 Sound Transit also warns that station parking will be very limited on matchdays and that gates open three hours before kickoff. 8
A workable plan for the remaining Seattle dates looks like this:
  1. Set your arrival station by direction, not by which dot looks closest on the map: Pioneer Square from the north, Stadium from the south, International District/Chinatown from the east, and King Street for Sounder. 3
  2. Buy or set up payment before you leave your hotel. A contactless card works for many services, but an ORCA card is still useful if you want day passes, multi-day passes, or broader regional transfers. 6
  3. Use the Match Day Shuttle for planned city hops. It is built to connect the stadium, Seattle Center, and downtown stops on matchdays; do not wait until you are already late to learn the route. 4
  4. Check bag and water rules before the walk. SeattleFWC26 says Seattle Stadium follows a clear bag policy and allows factory-sealed water bottles up to 20 ounces. 7
  5. Keep the FIFA guide/app as your final pre-entry check. FIFA's Seattle Stadium Know Before You Go page directs fans to the official app for stadium, host-city, and matchday information. 9
For the June 24 midday match, aim to be downtown before the lunch peak, especially if you still need to buy an ORCA card or meet a group at Pacific Place or Seattle Center. For the June 26 evening match, decide your return station before kickoff; post-match crowds will be easier if everyone in your group already knows whether they are walking to Stadium, Pioneer Square, International District/Chinatown, King Street, or the shuttle loop.
The simplest Seattle rule is also the most reliable one: do not bring a car to the stadium district. Build the day around Link, Metro, Sounder, ferries, and the official shuttles, then choose the fan celebration that fits your group's energy level.

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