Toronto World Cup matchday guide: streetcars, Fleet Hub, Fan Festival, and final group dates

Toronto World Cup matchday guide: streetcars, Fleet Hub, Fan Festival, and final group dates

A practical Toronto World Cup guide for the remaining stadium dates, covering the June 23 and June 26 group matches, the July 2 Round of 32 match, TTC and GO routes, Fan Festival tickets, Nathan Phillips Square broadcasts, rideshare zones, and match-day road closures.

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June 21, 2026 · 10:11 AM
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Toronto is now past its first three stadium dates. If you are planning the next wave, treat the western waterfront as a pedestrian-and-transit district first: the official city guidance says vehicle traffic around Fort York, Liberty Village, Exhibition Place, and the Fan Festival area is being limited, especially on match days. 1
The short version: use GO Transit to Exhibition, use TTC streetcars and match-day buses to the Fleet Street hub, and do not assume rideshare can pick you up at the stadium curb. FIFA lists GO's Lakeshore East and West trains as direct service to Exhibition Station, and the TTC's official match-day guidance points fans toward the 509 Harbourfront, 511 Bathurst, 29/929 Dufferin, and 829 Dufferin Gate Express options. 2 3

The remaining Toronto Stadium dates

DateStadium matchWhy it matters for fans
Tuesday, June 23, 7 p.m.Panama vs Croatia, Group L. 4The City lists June 23 as a Toronto match day, with Fan Festival hours from 11:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. 1
Friday, June 26, 3 p.m.Senegal vs Iraq, Group I. 4The earlier kickoff compresses lunch-hour arrivals, stadium gates, road controls, and Blue Jays-area traffic into the afternoon. The City lists Fan Festival hours from 1:30 to 10:30 p.m. that day. 1
Thursday, July 2, 7 p.m.Match 83, Round of 32: Group K runners-up vs Group L runners-up. 4This is Toronto's knockout match. The City lists July 2 as a match day and Fan Festival date, with hours from 1:30 to 10:30 p.m. 1

Get to the stadium: the no-car route

Toronto Stadium sits beside Exhibition Place, Fort York, The Bentway, and Liberty Village. That is good news if you arrive by rail or streetcar; it is rough news if you try to thread a private car into the area late.
Start with GO if you are coming from outside downtown. FIFA's stadium transport page names GO Transit Lakeshore West and Lakeshore East trains as direct service to Exhibition Station, close to Toronto Stadium. 2 The City says GO service is increasing for the tournament, with Lakeshore West and East trains running every 15 minutes most of the day from June 10 and up to six trains per hour during peak Toronto match times. 1
Use the TTC if you are already in the city. The temporary Fleet Street Transit Hub, between Fort York Boulevard and Strachan Avenue, is the match-day streetcar pick-up and drop-off point because Exhibition Loop and road access to Exhibition Place are closed on match days. 3 The City says the 509 Harbourfront and 511 Bathurst streetcars run every five minutes from June 7 to July 24, while the 829 Dufferin gives direct shuttle service between Dufferin Station and Dufferin Gates on Toronto match days. 1
Recommended walking and cycling routes to Toronto Stadium and the FIFA Fan Festival
The City map shows the preferred walking and cycling corridors into Toronto Stadium and the FIFA Fan Festival area. 1
A practical route choice:
  1. From Union Station: take the 509 Harbourfront streetcar toward the Fleet Street hub, then follow event wayfinding.
  2. From Bathurst Station: take the 511 Bathurst streetcar south to the Fleet Street hub.
  3. From Dufferin Station: use the 29/929 Dufferin to Dufferin Gate, or the 829 Dufferin Gate Express on match days.
  4. From the suburbs or another city: use GO to Exhibition, then walk with the stadium crowd.
Build in extra time after the final whistle. The City says Exhibition GO Station is open only to GO customers on Toronto match days, with no pass-through access inside the station. 1 That is a crowd-control detail, but it affects anyone who usually cuts through the station area on foot.

Fan Festival: Fort York and The Bentway are the default gathering point

Toronto's official Fan Festival is at Fort York National Historic Site and The Bentway. The City says it includes live entertainment, match broadcasts, interactive experiences, and more than 30 food vendors, with all ages welcome. 5
For June 23, the festival schedule lists an 11:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. match-day window, all-zone broadcasts of Portugal vs Uzbekistan at 1 p.m., England vs Ghana at 4 p.m., and Panama vs Croatia at 7 p.m., plus main-stage programming including Shawn Desman, Jully Black, The Tenors, and Kardinal Offishall's Soundclash Society. 6
Admission is not walk-up. Toronto FWC26 says general admission is free but must be obtained online before lining up; it also says general admission tickets have all been claimed, with same-day tickets possible only if capacity permits and premium tickets available for guaranteed access. 7 If you are planning a full day around the festival, check ticket status before you get on the train.

If you do not have a stadium or Fan Festival ticket

Nathan Phillips Square is the simplest backup gathering point downtown. The City says it is showing select live World Cup broadcasts during the tournament, with Visa mini-pitches and some activity days in the square. 8
Fans watch a soccer broadcast at Nathan Phillips Square
The City identifies Nathan Phillips Square as a public viewing site for select World Cup broadcasts. 8
The June 23 Nathan Phillips Square schedule includes Portugal vs Uzbekistan at 1 p.m., England vs Ghana at 4 p.m., Panama vs Croatia at 7 p.m., and Colombia vs Congo DR at 10 p.m.; the City marks Panama vs Croatia as the match hosted at Toronto Stadium. 8 For knockout planning, the same City page lists Round of 32 broadcasts on June 29, June 30, July 1, and July 2, then later Round of 16, semifinal, bronze final, and championship final broadcasts. 8
This creates a clean two-stop plan for visitors staying downtown: use Nathan Phillips Square for non-ticketed broadcasts, then only go west toward Fort York and Exhibition Place when you already have a Fan Festival ticket or stadium ticket.

Rideshare, taxis, and parking: know the edge of the zone

On Toronto match days, road closures in the Liberty Village and Fort York area start five hours before kickoff and end three hours after the match, or sooner if the City and Toronto Police Service change the plan. 1 That means a 7 p.m. kickoff can affect the neighbourhood from mid-afternoon until late evening.
Match-day road closures and local-traffic restrictions around Toronto Stadium and the Fan Festival
The City road map marks the match-day closure and local-access area around Toronto Stadium, Fort York, and Liberty Village. 1
The City lists four taxi and rideshare zones near the stadium and Fan Festival: Lamport Stadium on Toronto match days, Douro Street on all match and Fan Festival days, Front Street West and Bathurst Street on all match and Fan Festival days, and Stadium Road on Fan Festival days except Toronto match days. 1 Pick-up, unless for accessibility purposes, must happen at designated zones only during the listed restriction periods, and rideshare apps will direct users there through geofencing. 1
Parking is the weak option. The City says there is no on-street paid parking temporarily from June 10 to July 19 on several corridors, including King Street West from Jameson Avenue to Bathurst Street and east Liberty Village streets such as East Liberty Street, Lynn Williams Street, Pirandello Street, and Western Battery Road. 1 If you must drive from outside Toronto, park well outside the closure area and finish by rail, streetcar, bike, or foot.

Match-day playbook

If you have a stadium ticket: arrive by GO to Exhibition or by TTC to Fleet Street. Save the rideshare app for after you have walked out of the restricted area, unless you need an accessibility pick-up.
If you have only a Fan Festival ticket: check the festival schedule and ticket status first, then use the same transit plan as stadium fans. Fort York and The Bentway are close enough to the stadium that you should expect the same crowd-management rules.
If you are watching without a ticket: Nathan Phillips Square is easier than testing the Fan Festival gate. It is central, connected to the subway network, and the City has a published broadcast schedule.
If you are staying in Liberty Village or Fort York: watch the resident page before every event day. Local access passes, rideshare geofencing, parking restrictions, garbage collection changes, and match-day closure windows all live there, and the City has been updating it during tournament week. 1
Toronto's best World Cup day is car-light: one reliable arrival route, one confirmed ticket or viewing location, and a clear plan for the first 20 minutes after the final whistle.

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