Dallas Stadium will host more World Cup matches than any other US city, including the semifinal on July 14.
Dallas-Fort Worth is about to have the wildest summer of its life. Nine World Cup matches at AT&T Stadium — renamed Dallas Stadium for the tournament — more than any other US host city. A semifinal on July 14. And a 277-acre FIFA Fan Festival at Fair Park running the entire 39-day tournament. If you're in DFW in June or July 2026, the World Cup isn't something you watch. It's something that happens around you.
We've lived here long enough to know where the shortcuts are, which bars will be packed with USMNT fans, and how to survive a 3pm kickoff in Texas heat. Here's everything you need.
Getting Around DFW
The hard truth about Dallas-Fort Worth: this is a driving city. Even locals who swear they'll take the train end up behind the wheel. For World Cup 2026, that means some strategy.
Flying In
DFW International (DFW) is your best bet — it's roughly equidistant from downtown Dallas and AT&T Stadium, and the DART Orange Line connects directly to downtown Dallas in about 50 minutes. Dallas Love Field (DAL) is smaller, closer to downtown, and mostly Southwest Airlines — faster in and out, but fewer international options.
Getting to the Stadium
Here's the thing nobody tells first-time Dallas Stadium visitors: there is no rail service directly to Arlington. None. But the official plan is still rail-based, and it works. Your realistic options on match day:
- Train + free shuttle (the move) — ride the Trinity Railway Express (TRE) to CentrePort Station, board at Victory Station in downtown Dallas (DART Green/Orange) or Fort Worth Central Station, then transfer to a complimentary charter bus (free with a match ticket) that drops you near the gates. TRE tickets are on the GoPass app.
- Rideshare — Uber and Lyft will surge hard, with designated drop-off at the Esports Stadium Arlington lot (~10–15 min walk). Budget $60-100+ each way on match days.
- Drive and park — official lots open hours before kickoff, but parking is steep: roughly $100+ for group-stage matches and up to ~$1,000 for the semifinal. Traffic around I-30 / AT&T Way gets ugly by 2 hours pre-match.
- Stay in Arlington — hotels near the stadium are a premium but eliminate the transit headache entirely.
Getting to Fair Park
Fair Park is the best-connected fan festival site in America. The DART Green Line has its own Fair Park Station that drops you inside the grounds. From downtown Dallas, it's a 15-minute ride. From DFW Airport via Orange Line + Green Line transfer at West End, you're looking at roughly 70 minutes. This is the one World Cup venue in DFW where the train actually works.
Fair Park Fan Festival Guide
Fair Park is going to be the beating heart of the DFW World Cup experience. 277 acres, Art Deco architecture from the 1936 Texas Centennial Exposition, and enough space to host the FIFA Fan Festival for all 39 days of the tournament. It's free, it's walkable, and it's one of the few fan zones in the US where you can actually get there by rail.
What to Expect
- Giant LED screens broadcasting every match — this is how you watch games you don't have tickets for.
- Food vendors from host nations. Expect Mexican, Brazilian, Argentine, and European options alongside Texas staples.
- Live music stages between matches. Local DFW acts plus touring artists.
- Kids' zone, soccer skills challenges, brand activations — the whole circus.
- Beer gardens (yes, it's Texas and yes, they'll be enormous).
Tyler's Tip
Get there 90 minutes before kickoff of the match you want to watch. The good spots near the screens fill fast, especially for USMNT and Mexico matches. Bring a refillable water bottle — Texas June means hydration or consequences. And if it's an afternoon match, scout shaded viewing areas early.
Arlington Game Day Survival
Dallas Stadium hosts nine matches. That's nine opportunities to mess up game day logistics. Here's how to avoid the rookie mistakes.
Arrive Early. Like, Really Early.
Get to Arlington at least 2 hours before kickoff. Security lines at World Cup matches are longer than NFL games. FIFA enforces a strict clear-bag policy. The stadium is cashless-only, so plan payment accordingly (most international cards work, but test yours ahead of time).
Texas Live! Is Your Pre-Match HQ
Right across the street from the stadium, Texas Live! is the indoor/outdoor entertainment complex you'll want to know about. Massive LED walls, live DJs, a proper beer selection, and food from Guy Fieri's joint to local Tex-Mex. When Texas heat makes the outdoor experience miserable, this is your air-conditioned refuge. Expect it to be packed — arriving 3+ hours pre-match makes a seat realistic.
Stadium Essentials
- Clear bags only — max 12" x 6" x 12". Any non-clear bag must be smaller than a hand.
- Cashless — cards, Apple Pay, Google Pay. No cash anywhere.
- No reentry — once you're in, you're in. Factor food and restroom timing accordingly.
- Water bottles — empty ones allowed, fill at stations inside.
- Seat temperature — even with the roof closed, the stadium is huge. Bring a thin long-sleeve for AC surprises.
Best Soccer Bars in DFW
Don't have tickets? DFW has a real soccer-bar scene that will absolutely deliver for matches you're watching on TV. We'll publish a full bar-by-bar breakdown closer to the tournament — here's the current shortlist we're scouting.
- The Londoner (Addison / Uptown) — classic English pub setup, draft selection, opens early for European matches.
- Trinity Hall (Mockingbird Station) — Irish pub with soccer in its DNA. Premier League crowd year-round.
- The Dubliner (Greenville Avenue) — neighborhood spot with proper World Cup energy.
- Katy Trail Ice House — outdoor beer garden, big screens. Good if weather cooperates.
- Deep Ellum Brewing Company — expect watch-party events for marquee matches.
- Fort Worth Stockyards Station — several bars will do watch events with a very Texas twist.
All six are confirmed open and operating as of May 2026 — we'll lock down exact match-day hours and any minimums as the tournament nears.
Neighborhood Guide
DFW is a patchwork of neighborhoods with completely different personalities. Here's where to spend your off-match time.
Deep Ellum
Dallas's oldest entertainment district and still the best one. Live music every night, street art murals everywhere, and a food scene that runs from world-class barbecue at Pecan Lodge to the cocktail bars along Main and Elm. Walkable once you're there. Rideshare in — parking is a nightmare. If you want nightlife after a match, this is the neighborhood.
Bishop Arts District
North Oak Cliff, across the Trinity from downtown. Walkable, tree-lined, packed with independent restaurants, coffee shops, and boutiques. Think Brooklyn-meets-Texas. Emporium Pies is a must. Hattie's for Southern. Great for a slower afternoon when you don't want the crowds of Deep Ellum.
Fort Worth Stockyards
Worth the 40-minute drive west. This is the capital-W Western experience — twice-daily cattle drives down Exchange Avenue, Billy Bob's Texas (the world's largest honky-tonk), Cowtown Coliseum rodeos, and more boot shops per square foot than should be legal. If international visitors want the Texas stereotype delivered authentically, this is it.
Downtown Dallas & AT&T Discovery District
Downtown Dallas has been quietly leveling up. The AT&T Discovery District features a massive outdoor media wall — expect FIFA activations and viewing parties here throughout the tournament. Klyde Warren Park hosts food trucks and events. The Dallas Museum of Art and the Perot Museum are a few blocks apart. Walk it or DART Green Line it.
Beat the Heat Tips
Real talk: Texas in June and July is brutal. Afternoon highs of 100°F are routine. 95°F with 60% humidity will hit harder than you expect. If you're coming from Europe or a cooler climate, this is not a drill.
- Hydrate the day before. Not just match day. Start 24 hours out.
- Electrolytes matter. LMNT, Liquid IV, Pedialyte — grab a stash.
- Lightweight, light-colored clothing. Linen, moisture-wicking athletic gear. No dark jerseys for afternoon matches unless you love suffering.
- Hat and sunglasses, always. The Texas sun doesn't negotiate.
- Sunscreen reapplied every 2 hours — you'll be outside at Fair Park longer than you think.
- Know your AC escapes. Malls, museums, Texas Live!, the stadium concourse. Plan cooling breaks into your day.
- Watch for afternoon thunderstorms. Texas summer storms blow in fast and hard. Check radar before heading out.
Family Activities
Traveling with kids? DFW actually has great family options between matches.
- Six Flags Over Texas (Arlington) — right next to the stadium. Combine stadium day with theme park day if the kids can handle it.
- Dallas Zoo — 106 acres, strong big-cat and elephant exhibits, DART Red Line access.
- Perot Museum of Nature and Science (Dallas) — iconic glass cube downtown, incredible hands-on exhibits.
- Dallas World Aquarium (Dallas) — downtown indoor aquarium + rainforest walk with sloths, toucans, and manatees. Small, dense, and blissfully air-conditioned on a 100° match day.
- Fort Worth Zoo — consistently ranked among America's best zoos.
- Klyde Warren Park (Dallas) — food trucks, free programming, downtown green space built over a freeway.
- Legoland Discovery Center (Grapevine) — indoor, AC, rainy-day bulletproof.
- Great Wolf Lodge (Grapevine) — indoor waterpark hotel. Not cheap, but a lifesaver in 100° heat.
One Last Thing
Dallas-Fort Worth hasn't hosted a World Cup match since 1994. We've been waiting 32 years. Come tournament time, the vibe is going to be unreal — and if you've never seen this city throw a party, you're in for a surprise. Nine matches. A semifinal. An entire summer of the world showing up in our backyard.
We're planning to be everywhere — Fair Park, Texas Live!, every soccer bar worth its salt. Follow along as we cover it all. And if you see us out there, come say hi.
Getting to the Games
AT&T Stadium isn't on rail. Plan ahead — drive, rideshare, or combine transit with a FIFA shuttle. Crowds during the tournament will be unprecedented.
Full transportation guide →Fan Zone
FIFA Fan Festival at Fair Park
The official FIFA Fan Festival is free to attend, runs throughout the tournament, and broadcasts every match on giant LED screens. Expect food vendors, live music, family activities, and plenty of atmosphere.
Open in Maps →Where to Watch Without Tickets
Soccer bars, pubs with proper Premier League energy, neighborhood spots, and outdoor watch parties. No ticket? No problem — the city experience is half the tournament.
See watch parties →Eat & Drink
Local specialties, the must-try restaurants, and where to grab a proper pre-match meal. We'll highlight cuisines from visiting nations as the tournament approaches.
Browse World Cup eats →Things to Do
Between matches, on off days, and for traveling companions who aren't here for the soccer. The neighborhoods, attractions, and local experiences worth your time.
Explore the experience →The Host's Perspective
I've lived in DFW long enough to know this: we've been starved for a World Cup, and this summer is going to be unreal. Nine matches. A semifinal. An entire city that treats soccer as an afterthought about to have its mind blown. If you're coming here as a visitor, my advice is simple — get out of your hotel, spend a night in Deep Ellum, eat at Pecan Lodge, and go to Fair Park even on days when your team isn't playing.
The best part of hosting isn't the matches. It's watching your city show up.
Matches at Dallas Stadium (AT&T Stadium)
Match schedule will populate once the draw is complete and FIFA confirms venue assignments. Check back as we get closer to the tournament.