Vancouver World Cup matchday guide: BC Place transit, Fan Festival, and road closures

Vancouver World Cup matchday guide: BC Place transit, Fan Festival, and road closures

A practical Vancouver guide for the four remaining BC Place World Cup dates, covering the Main Street–Science World stadium route, Hastings Park Fan Festival transit, Granville Street celebrations, and road-closure checks fans should make before leaving.

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Host Cities Guide
2026/6/22 · 22:11
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Quick read: use Main Street–Science World for the stadium, Hastings Park for the party

Vancouver has already run three of its seven BC Place Vancouver match days, which means the remaining fan calendar is compressed: Switzerland vs Canada, New Zealand vs Belgium, one Round of 32 match, and one Round of 16 match still bring stadium crowds into the downtown core. The official host schedule lists the remaining BC Place dates as June 24, June 26, July 2, and July 7; in the channel display time zone, those kickoffs fall on June 24 at 19:00, June 27 at 03:00, July 3 at 03:00, and July 7 at 20:00.1
If you are choosing only one rule to remember: do not aim for Stadium–Chinatown as your primary stadium station on match days. TransLink is directing fans to Main Street–Science World Station, which connects to the Last Mile pedestrian route toward the stadium’s primary entrance at Carrall Street and Pacific Boulevard.2

Remaining Vancouver match days at a glance

Match dayStadium matchBest arrival moveWhy it matters
June 24, 19:00Switzerland vs Canada, Group BUse Main Street–Science World, then the Last Mile route to BC Place Vancouver.3It is a noon Vancouver kickoff, so commuter, lunch, and match traffic overlap.
June 27, 03:00New Zealand vs Belgium, Group GExpect later SkyTrain, SeaBus, and crowd-clearing measures after the late match.2The source schedule lists this as an evening Vancouver kickoff, so post-match trains and rideshares will be under pressure.
July 3, 03:00Round of 32, 1B vs 3EFGIJPlan as a full-day stadium-area closure day; local match days add temporary road restrictions around BC Place and False Creek.4Knockout matches pull in neutral fans, not just supporter groups.
July 7, 20:00Round of 16, W85 vs W87Build extra buffer even if you are walking from downtown; roads around the stadium remain managed through the tournament period.4This is Vancouver’s final host-city match and the last major stadium surge.
The host schedule also shows the three completed Vancouver group matches: Australia beat Türkiye on June 13, Canada beat Qatar on June 18, and Egypt beat New Zealand on June 21.1 That matters for planning because the city and TransLink have already tested the stadium flow under real crowds.
BC Place at sunset from False Creek
TransLink identifies BC Place Vancouver as the match venue and directs match-day riders toward Main Street–Science World Station rather than treating every nearby station as equivalent.3

Stadium transit: the practical routing call

For BC Place, treat Main Street–Science World Station as the default. TransLink says that on match days it connects directly to the Last Mile pedestrian route to the stadium’s primary entrance at Carrall Street and Pacific Boulevard.3 Stadium–Chinatown and Yaletown–Roundhouse remain open, but TransLink warns that access to BC Place from those stations is limited, and the Expo Boulevard lower entrance at Stadium–Chinatown is closed on match days.3
SkyTrain is the backbone. During the tournament, TransLink says it is adding service across buses, SkyTrain, SeaBus, and West Coast Express to handle stadium and festival crowds.2 Before and after BC Place matches, downtown SkyTrain trains are planned to arrive every 2 to 2.5 minutes, with empty trains starting at Main Street–Science World after matches to clear crowds faster.2
For airport arrivals, TransLink says the Canada Line connects YVR to downtown Vancouver in about 25 minutes, while the Vancouver host site says the Canada Line links the airport to downtown in under 30 minutes.25 If you are landing on a match day, buy or tap your fare before entering the busiest downtown stations; TransLink notes contactless debit, credit, mobile wallets, Compass Card, Compass Ticket, and DayPass options.2

Road closures: assume driving is the backup plan, not Plan A

Around BC Place Vancouver and False Creek, the host committee says temporary road closures and local-traffic-only restrictions are in place to support the event footprint and emergency access.4 Pacific Boulevard is closed between the Cambie Street Bridge off-ramp and Carrall Street from May 23 through the end of July to expand the stadium footprint and support public safety.4 On each of Vancouver’s seven match days, additional stadium-area road closures and restrictions apply, and the host committee tells businesses and residents to plan for a full day of restrictions.4
Vancouver stadium-area match day closure map
The Vancouver Host Committee publishes separate tournament-period and match-day road-closure maps for the BC Place and False Creek area.4
That does not mean downtown is closed. It means your route needs to be mode-first: SkyTrain or walking for stadium access, bike or e-scooter for shorter trips where permitted, and rideshare only after checking the open-street pattern. The host committee says walking and wheeling access will generally be maintained, the seawall remains open, and signed detours will be provided where needed.4

Fan Festival: Hastings Park is the official hub

FIFA Fan Festival™ Vancouver runs from June 11 to July 19 at the PNE Grounds in Hastings Park.6 The host site describes it as free and accessible, with World Cup match broadcasts on screens across the site, live music, food and beverage vendors, interactive experiences, and premium options that guarantee Amphitheatre access.6
For transit, do not route it like a stadium trip. TransLink’s Hastings Park page points fans to bus and SkyTrain connections serving the PNE grounds, including R5 Hastings plus routes 28, 130, and 222.7 TransLink also says it is adding a dedicated shuttle connecting the festival grounds to both the Expo and Millennium lines, with extra service on R5, 14, 28, 130, and 222.2
FIFA Fan Festival Vancouver stage at Hastings Park
The official Fan Festival page places Vancouver’s public watch hub at the PNE Grounds in Hastings Park, with live match broadcasts, music, food, and interactive experiences across the site.6
The host committee has framed the festival as the largest public watch-party hub in Vancouver, with up to 25,000 visitors at any given time over 28 days of programming.8 That makes it a strong choice if you do not have a BC Place ticket, but it also means you should check the festival schedule, arrive early for popular broadcasts, and avoid assuming re-entry will be instant if the site reaches capacity.

Granville Street: the downtown celebration strip

Granville Street is the second piece of the fan map. The City of Vancouver has turned the five-block stretch from Georgia Street to Davie Street into a car-free pedestrian zone through July 19, with themed blocks, public seating, activations, market vendors, patios, and live entertainment from Thursday to Sunday except on Vancouver match days.9
For fans, that makes Granville useful before or after a match, but not as a substitute for the stadium route. City guidance says buses that normally operate on Granville are rerouted to Seymour and Howe streets during the pedestrian zone, with new bus lanes supporting the change.9 If your hotel is near Granville, check TransLink alerts before assuming your usual bus stop is still active.9

A simple match-day plan

  1. Before leaving: check the official match or festival page, then check TransLink alerts. TransLink’s customer information team is extending service hours at least two hours past match end times during the tournament.2
  2. If going to BC Place: go to Main Street–Science World and follow the Last Mile route. Do not depend on the lower Expo Boulevard entrance at Stadium–Chinatown on match days.3
  3. If going to the Fan Festival: route to Hastings Park/PNE, not BC Place. Use the TransLink Hastings Park page for the current bus links and alerts.7
  4. If meeting friends downtown: make Granville Street your flexible meetup area, then move together by transit or on foot. The pedestrian zone is built for celebration, food, and public seating, but buses are rerouted off Granville.9
  5. If you must drive: treat road-closure maps as required reading, not fine print. Pacific Boulevard and match-day local-traffic controls change the obvious stadium approaches.4
The upshot: Vancouver is one of the easiest 2026 host cities to do car-light, but only if you pick the right node. For the stadium, start at Main Street–Science World. For the official public celebration, aim for Hastings Park. For downtown atmosphere, use Granville Street, then keep moving with TransLink instead of trying to outguess the closures.

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