The World Cup in Seattle will bring six games, tens of thousands of fans, and the world’s cameras to the Pacific Northwest, all centered on Lumen Field. Seattle is one of 16 host cities across Canada, Mexico, and the United States, and its downtown stadium will host four group-stage fixtures and two knockout matches in June and early July 2026.

The official schedule confirms that Seattle’s slate includes the United States vs. Australia in Group D, along with matches involving Belgium, Egypt, Qatar, and a European playoff winner. Beyond the stadium, the city has designated Seattle Center as the main fan celebration site, creating Washington’s largest non-stadium viewing and events zone for the tournament.

The city’s tourism board, Visit Seattle, has already folded FIFA World Cup ’26 into its broader visitor messaging, positioning the city’s neighborhoods, food scene, and waterfront as part of the match-day experience. This guide focuses on concrete things to do, where to stay, and how to navigate Seattle during World Cup 2026 with clear options for first-time visitors, families, and diaspora fans.

Things To Do In Seattle During World Cup 2026

An aerial view of Seattle Center with the Space Needle rising above surrounding buildings and Elliott Bay visible in the background.
Steph Chambers / Getty Image

Seattle Center will sit at the heart of the World Cup 2026 in Seattle. The complex will host the official World Cup Fan Celebration, with large-screen viewing, interactive activities, and cultural programming — all a short monorail ride from downtown. On the same campus, you can take the elevator up the Space Needle for 360-degree views of the city, the bay, and the surrounding mountains, then walk a few steps to the Museum of Pop Culture (MoPOP) for exhibitions on music, film, gaming, and science fiction.

The wider Seattle Center area also links easily to the Pacific Science Center, which continues to operate as a science education hub with IMAX screens and hands-on exhibits, even as its campus evolves. On the waterfront, a visit to Pike Place Market connects World Cup fans with one of the country’s oldest continuously operating farmers’ markets, now drawing around 10 million visitors a year. Construction and new traffic rules continue to push the area toward a more pedestrian-focused experience, so expect busy but walkable streets during match weeks.

From the market, new infrastructure such as the Overlook Walk and a rebuilt Pier 58 park make it easier to reach the waterfront promenade. Here, public spaces now include a marine-themed playground and expanded viewpoints over Elliott Bay. Fans who want a neighborhood break between fixtures can head to the Chinatown–International District for East and Southeast Asian food, or to hubs like Capitol Hill, Ballard, and South Lake Union for restaurants, bars, and coffee culture.

Where To Stay In Seattle For World Cup Matches

The Hyatt Regency Seattle tower at night, with guest room lights illuminated in the shape of BLM (Black Lives Matter) against the downtown skyline.
David Ryder / Getty Images

For fans who want to stay close to the match action, hotels around Lumen Field and Pioneer Square offer the shortest walks to World Cup fixtures in Seattle. Silver Cloud Hotel – Seattle Stadium is directly across from T-Mobile Park and adjacent to Lumen Field and its event center, making it a practical base for early kickoffs and late finishes. In nearby Pioneer Square, citizenM Seattle Pioneer Square sits within walking distance of Lumen Field, the Seattle waterfront, and the historic brick-and-stone blocks that host a growing mix of sports bars, cafés, and galleries.

Both areas connect to the stadium and airport via the Link light rail at nearby stations, reducing reliance on match-day car traffic. Travelers who prefer a slightly calmer base while staying central can consider downtown and South Lake Union. Hyatt Regency Seattle sits in the downtown core near the Seattle Convention Center, within walking distance of the Westlake light rail station and a short rail ride from the stadiums. It positions itself as a LEED Gold–certified tower hotel with easy access to Pike Place Market and South Lake Union.

Around the lakefront, chain hotels such as Courtyard Seattle Downtown / Lake Union and Residence Inn Seattle Downtown / Lake Union cluster near restaurants, bars, and waterfront walking paths. This mix lets visitors choose between a stadium-side base and a more residential-feeling area that remains within a short transit or rideshare ride of World Cup venues and fan zones.

Best Neighborhoods For Visiting Fans

Most visiting supporters for the World Cup in Seattle will gravitate toward a handful of central neighborhoods that combine transit access, bars, and walkability. Downtown and Pioneer Square lie closest to Lumen Field. Pioneer Square, in particular, is a historic core with art galleries, brick-fronted blocks, and direct routes to both stadiums and the waterfront. The SoDo district around the stadium complex feels more industrial, but gives very short walks to matches and pre-game events.

For many fans, these areas will serve as match-day hubs, while the official fan celebration at Seattle Center anchors viewing parties to the north. Beyond the immediate stadium blocks, Capitol Hill, east of downtown, is widely described as a dense arts and nightlife district and as the center of LGBTQ+ culture in Seattle. This area has live music venues, bars, and late-opening restaurants. South Lake Union is a newer mixed-use area where restaurants, lakefront paths, and tech offices share the same streets, which appeals to fans who want a modern city feel and quick transit to downtown.

Ballard, named by several travel guides as one of the city’s best neighborhoods to visit, combines a strong restaurant and bar scene with a more local residential feel, though it sits a rideshare or bus ride away from the stadium. Together, these areas give visiting fans a range of environments, from dense nightlife corridors to quieter waterfront enclaves.

Free Things To Do In Seattle Between Matches

Fans looking to manage costs during the World Cup in Seattle will find several key attractions that are free to enter. The Olympic Sculpture Park, operated by the Seattle Art Museum, is a waterfront park featuring large-scale outdoor artworks and is free and open 365 days a year, from 30 minutes before sunrise to 30 minutes after sunset.

It sits next to Myrtle Edwards Park and within walking distance of the downtown core, so visitors can combine a stroll through the park with views of ferries and cargo ships moving across Elliott Bay. Nearby, the city’s long-running waterfront upgrade has added wide promenades, bike lanes, and public viewpoints from Pioneer Square up to the Seattle Aquarium.

Pike Place Market also serves as a free sightseeing stop for visitors who simply want to walk its corridors and watch produce and fish vendors at work. At Seattle Center, the Artists at Play playground between MoPOP and the Armory offers another free space for visitors to spend time before or after fan-zone events.

Bringing The Kids? How To Make It Family-Friendly

Families traveling to Seattle for the World Cup can plan their days around clusters of child-friendly attractions. At Seattle Center, the Pacific Science Center has interactive science exhibits and IMAX theaters, while the Artists at Play playground provides children with an outdoor space to climb and explore within sight of the Space Needle.

The Seattle Center Monorail links this campus directly to downtown’s Westlake station, enabling families to move between hotels, fan celebrations, and attractions without needing a car. Older children and teens can visit MoPOP, which features rotating exhibitions on music, film, games, and science fiction in a Gehry-designed building steps from the main fan zone.

On the waterfront, the Seattle Aquarium serves as the region’s main marine-life education center, with exhibits on Puget Sound species, otters, seals, and an expanded ocean pavilion next to the rebuilt park at Pier 58. Families seeking more green space can head north to Woodland Park Zoo, an award-winning 92-acre zoo in the Phinney Ridge area that cares for hundreds of species and attracts more than a million visitors annually.