Navigate city services, beat the traffic, catch world-class events, and make the most of an extraordinary summer — whether you're a Seattleite bracing for the surge or a visitor heading to the World Cup or Alaska.
June 15, 2026 · 12:00 PM PDT · Lumen Field, SODO · Group Stage
Official schedule confirmed by FIFA. All 6 Seattle matches at Lumen Field — see full schedule ↓
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For the first time in history, Seattle will simultaneously host a FIFA World Cup and operate at full Alaska cruise capacity — alongside Seafair, Pride, and its regular summer festival calendar. Locals should plan around the surge; visitors should plan way ahead. This is going to be extraordinary.
Seattle's light rail, bus network, ferry system, and bike share all come together to make car-free travel surprisingly easy — especially important when roads are choked with match-day crowds.
Lumen Field, both cruise terminals, all Link Light Rail stations, the ferry dock, and parking lots near every venue — click any marker for details, rates, and walk times.
Live weather for Seattle updated every hour. Useful for match-day planning, cruise departure days, and deciding whether to pack an umbrella.
Quick access to the services Seattleites use most — from paying utilities to reporting a pothole, getting a permit, or finding your nearest library.
Every major event this summer — FIFA matches, festivals, holidays, and cruise season — in one place. Past events grey out automatically.
Curated Seattle businesses near Lumen Field, the cruise terminals, and downtown — handpicked for FIFA fans and Alaska cruise passengers.
Get listed and reach FIFA World Cup fans & Alaska cruise passengers planning their visit. Featured placements available.
Every neighborhood has a different character and different travel times to Lumen Field, the cruise terminals, and Sea-Tac. Pick your situation to see which areas suit you best.
Have a free day between matches or before your cruise? Seattle is surrounded by stunning escapes — many reachable by ferry with no car needed.
A 35-minute ferry ride from downtown Seattle drops you into one of the most charming small towns in the Pacific Northwest. No car needed — foot passengers hop on at Colman Dock (Pier 52), just steps from the waterfront. The ferry ride itself is half the experience, with sweeping views of the Seattle skyline and Olympic Mountains.
A 150-acre woodland sanctuary of extraordinary beauty — Japanese garden, reflection pool, moss garden, bird sanctuary, and forest trails. One of the finest designed landscapes in the Pacific Northwest. Allow 2–3 hours. Closed Mondays.
🎟️ Book tickets → bloedelreserve.orgReal-fruit New Zealand–style ice cream — a Pacific Northwest rarity. Fruit is blended fresh into the ice cream right in front of you. Flavors rotate seasonally with local berries and fruit. A must-stop after the ferry or on your way back.
📸 @icecreamsocial2024Winslow Way is Bainbridge's charming main street — independent bookshops, art galleries, wine bars, and local restaurants, all within easy walking distance of the ferry terminal. Start here, grab coffee, and plan your day.
🗺️ Visit Bainbridge IslandA gentle, flat trail along Eagle Harbor with views of sailboats, herons, and the Seattle skyline across the water. Connects naturally to Winslow shops. Perfect for an easy morning walk before heading to Bloedel Reserve or lunch.
🌿 Bainbridge Island GuideFree contemporary art museum right at the ferry terminal showcasing Pacific Northwest artists. Rotating exhibitions. A great rainy-day stop — and on Bainbridge, that's never a bad contingency plan.
🖼️ biartmuseum.orgBainbridge is a fantastic cycling island. Bike Barn Rentals near the terminal offers e-bikes, hybrid, and road bikes. Ride to Bloedel Reserve (4 miles), Fort Ward State Park, or along scenic Pleasant Beach Drive with Puget Sound views.
🚲 Bike Barn Rentals270-foot waterfall in the Cascade foothills — one of Washington's most visited natural landmarks. Tap for guide.
14,411-ft active volcano — wildflower meadows, glacier views, and trails at 5,400 ft. One of the most spectacular day trips in the US. Tap for guide.
Quieter and more rural than Bainbridge. Artisan studios, farm stands, and a slow pace. No tourist chains — that's the point. Tap for guide.
Temperate rainforest, rugged Pacific coastline, and glacier-capped peaks — one of the most diverse national parks in the US. Tap for guide.
Skip the guidebook version. These are the things locals would tell you over a beer — the shortcuts, the honest takes, and the spots worth your time.
Seattle's homegrown fast food chain since 1954. No app, no delivery, no modifications — just a window, cash, and the best Deluxe burger and hand-dipped shake in the city. The Wallingford location at 2 AM after the bars is a Seattle rite of passage.
A Caribbean sandwich shop with a cult following. The Caribbean Roast — slow-braised pork on a torpedo roll with pickled jalapeños and aioli — is one of the city's great sandwiches. Two locations (Fremont, South Lake Union). Line moves fast.
That flaky Russian pastry cart at Pike Place is genuinely good — smoky salmon, apple cinnamon, and the mushroom cheese are the picks. The tourist photo spot is the first stall; locals use the real menu at the actual window. Walk past the flower stalls.
Ballard has more breweries per block than almost anywhere in the US. Reuben's Brews, Peddler Brewing (bike-themed, outdoor), and Lucky Envelope are the standouts. Saturday afternoons are a local tradition — tap room + beer garden, no reservations needed.
Yes, Starbucks is from Seattle. No, Seattle coffee culture doesn't revolve around it. Try Victrola (Capitol Hill) for pour-over seriousness, Lighthouse Coffee for the neighborhood vibe, or Broadcast Coffee on Beacon Hill — small, excellent, always a line of regulars.
The original Starbucks at 1912 Pike Place is worth visiting exactly once — for the photo, not the coffee. Typical wait: 20–35 minutes. The drinks are identical to any other Starbucks location. See it, appreciate the history, then walk 100 feet and get something better.
ORCA is Seattle's tap-in-tap-out transit card (like Oyster in London, Clipper in SF). Works on Link Light Rail, all Metro buses, ferries, and the streetcar. Get one at the Link station in Sea-Tac baggage claim, load $20, and never think about cash fares again.
Sea-Tac → downtown (38 min, $3.50). Capitol Hill (10 min from downtown). University of Washington (14 min). SODO for Lumen Field (2 min from downtown). Northgate. The line is fast, frequent, and doesn't care about traffic. You rarely need a car within the city.
King County Metro buses and the South Lake Union Streetcar are free in the downtown core. If you're hopping between Pike Place, Pioneer Square, the waterfront, and Amazon, you can ride free all afternoon. Routes 3, 4, and 36 are the workhorses locals rely on.
Kerry Park in Queen Anne is Seattle's greatest viewpoint — skyline, Space Needle, Elliott Bay, and on clear days, Mt. Rainier in the background. Every serious Seattle photo is taken here. Sunset (6–8 PM in summer) is a tourist scrum. Dusk (after 8:30 PM) is quiet and better lit.
SAM's outdoor sculpture park at the north end of the waterfront. Free 24/7. Alexander Calder's Eagle is photogenic at golden hour. Walk through, watch the ferry traffic, and avoid the $30 aquarium next door — the park is frankly better. Connects directly to the waterfront path.
The ground floor is crowded; the real market is downstairs. The lower levels have aged cheese shops, imported spice vendors, a used bookshop, a record store, and actually good lunch spots — all without the tourist flow. The gum wall is in Post Alley, right off the market.
A 300-acre peninsula in Lake Washington with a 2.4-mile loop trail through old-growth forest. Swimming beaches, kayak rentals, bald eagles overhead. Far from downtown so few tourists make it. Take the 50 bus from downtown — 25 minutes, drops you at the park entrance.
When a Seattleite says "the mountain is out," they mean Mt. Rainier is visible — which only happens on clear days, and after Seattle's famously overcast spells, it feels like a genuine gift. If a local points toward the south and looks excited, look south. It's worth it.
Seattle's reputation for rain is about volume (grey, overcast, persistent drizzle) not intensity. Summer is actually very dry — July and August average under an inch of rain total. If you visit then, you might not see rain at all. Locals don't own umbrellas; they own good rain layers.
Rainier cherries (yellow-red, sweeter than any cherry you've eaten) come from the Yakima Valley and peak late June through July. Every farmers market in the city has them. The Capitol Hill Broadway Farmers Market (Sundays) and the Fremont Sunday Market are the best bets.
Seattleites are polite, helpful, and notoriously slow to open up with strangers. You won't get cold-shouldered — you'll get pleasant but measured interactions. Don't read quiet on the bus or in line as rudeness. Start a conversation about the ferry, the mountains, or the Mariners and it usually warms up fast.
The Space Needle is iconic and worth seeing — but the observation deck costs $40+ and doesn't include the Needle itself in the view. The Columbia Center Sky View Observatory (73rd floor) costs less, is the tallest public observation point in the PNW, and has the Space Needle in the foreground.
Rideshare from Sea-Tac to downtown: $45–65, and 45–75 minutes in airport traffic. Link Light Rail: $3.50, 38 minutes, runs directly from the terminal. Even at 11 PM, the train is faster and cheaper. The only reason to take a car is if you have an unusual amount of luggage or are going somewhere the rail doesn't reach.
Pike Place Fish Market does throw fish — but it's a scripted tourist attraction at this point. The real Pike Place magic is in the lower market: aged cheese at Beecher's, flowers from the farm stalls, fresh Dungeness crab by weight, and the genuine chaos of 4 AM delivery day. Rachel the bronze pig is the real mascot.
On FIFA match days, parking within a mile of Lumen Field is restricted or at capacity from noon onward. Event parking lots are priced at $50–80. Rideshare surge hits $40–80 for downtown pickups post-match. Link Light Rail to SODO Station is a 2-minute walk to the gate — and it's $3.50.