Los Angeles Driving Tips for FIFA World Cup 2026
Millions of visitors are converging on California this summer for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, and for many of them, the biggest obstacle won’t be finding tickets — it will be getting to the stadium on time without spending two hours stuck on a freeway. Whether your match is at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood or Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, both venues sit at the intersection of some of the most congested roads in the country.
Los Angeles is hosting eight matches at SoFi Stadium between June 12 and July 10, including two U.S. Men’s National Team games and a quarterfinal. The Bay Area is hosting six matches at Levi’s Stadium between June 13 and July 1. The venues are roughly 380 miles apart, and while both are well-served by transit options, driving to either one on match day — without a plan — is how fans end up missing kickoff.
SoFi Stadium: There Is No Rail Station at the Venue
The first thing out-of-town visitors need to understand about SoFi Stadium is that no Metro rail line runs directly to it. The stadium sits in Inglewood near the I-405/I-105 interchange — two of the most consistently congested highways in the country — and on match days carrying 70,000-plus fans, the surrounding streets go from slow to gridlocked hours before kickoff.
The official transportation plan for World Cup matches is built around a dedicated shuttle network. LA Metro and more than a dozen regional transit partners are running direct, nonstop bus service from 15 designated pickup locations across the region — spanning downtown Los Angeles (Union Station), the Westside (downtown Santa Monica), the Valley (North Hollywood and Pierce College stations in Woodland Hills), the South Bay (Harbor Gateway Transit Center and El Camino College in Torrance), Long Beach, and as far out as the ARTIC station in Anaheim and Newport Beach. The LAX/Metro Transit Center, accessible via the Metro C and K Lines, is also a designated pickup hub. Direct service from most locations begins three hours and 15 minutes before kickoff, with service for the June 12 USA vs. Paraguay opener starting an hour earlier than usual.
The standard Metro fare of $1.75 each way applies — there is no World Cup surcharge. Fans can pay with a TAP card or by tapping a chip-enabled credit or debit card at the boarding location. Buses from the LAX/Metro Transit Center run on the S11 route and take about 15 minutes to the stadium, dropping off at Lot S near Gate B, a five- to 10-minute walk to the entrance. Buses from Union Station run the R2 route and take about 40 minutes, dropping off at Lot R near Gate E, a 12-minute walk. Reserve parking at SpotHero-listed shuttle locations covers round-trip bus fare for all passengers in the vehicle.
For fans arriving by air the same day, Metro runs a free S11 shuttle directly from Bay 8 at LAX/Metro Transit Center — no K Line transfer required. That route takes roughly 15 minutes from the transit center to the stadium.
The Inglewood Transit Connector — the people mover that will eventually link the K Line to SoFi — is not operational for the 2026 World Cup. It is targeted for completion before the 2028 Olympics.
If you are driving: On-site stadium parking must be pre-purchased through JustPark on the official FIFA parking portal, and only one pass may be purchased per match ticket. Prices range from roughly $80 to $150 for general lots to $250 or more for premium matches, including the USA opener and the quarterfinal. Several lots require a 20-minute walk to the stadium gates. The city-operated Inglewood Park & Go — available through ParkWhiz — offers remote parking with a 15-minute shuttle to the Inglewood Intermodal Transit Facility near the stadium, starting around $59 for early-bird rates.
Do not park on Inglewood residential streets. The city enforces permit zones aggressively during World Cup events, and towing is common. The Clean Zone ordinance enacted by Inglewood prohibits stopping on streets like Prairie Avenue and Century Boulevard for non-official vehicles, and ride-hailing drop-offs are blocked on Pincay Drive between Hardy and 102nd Street.
If you are using a rideshare: Uber and Lyft are available, but surge pricing on match days begins hours before kickoff and intensifies after the final whistle. From downtown LA, allow 60 to 90 minutes of travel time. Designated rideshare pickup zones are available post-match near the stadium, but post-game wait times typically run 15 to 30 minutes or longer.
One practical note: Tailgating is prohibited at SoFi Stadium for all 2026 World Cup matches. FIFA has restricted pre-game gatherings to official fan zones — including one at Exposition Park near the LA Memorial Coliseum — and to restaurants and bars in Inglewood and Hollywood Park. Fans accustomed to NFL-style pregame setups in the parking lots should plan accordingly.
For a free legal consultation, call (877) 735-7035
SoFi World Cup Parking
SoFi Stadium is officially designated “Los Angeles Stadium” for the 2026 FIFA World Cup under FIFA’s policy blocking corporate sponsor names during the tournament. Advance booking is mandatory — no passes are sold at the gate, and attendants will turn away any driver without a prepaid digital pass.
- Hollywood Park Lots 1–3 (closest to gates): $80–$100 per vehicle
- Hollywood Park Lots 4–7 (mid-distance): $50–$70 per vehicle
- Remote lots with shuttle service: $30–$40 per vehicle
- Secondary market resale: averages around $224, with premium locations reaching $342
Fans booking through FIFA’s partner platform JustPark should note a strict email-matching rule: the reservation email must exactly match the email on the FIFA ticketing account, or the reservation is subject to automatic cancellation. Color-zone isolation is also in effect — the campus is divided into color-coded zones, and a pass for one zone will be physically rejected at another gate, so drivers need to confirm their specific entry route before exiting the freeway.
Inglewood operates as a strictly enforced residential permit zone during major events, and any vehicle parked on a neighborhood street without a resident permit will be ticketed and towed. The Metro K Line and C Line both serve the stadium area at a round-trip fare of $1.75. Fans arriving from LAX can take the free LAX-it shuttle to the Aviation/LAX station, board the K Line, and ride to the Westchester/Veterans stop — an 8-minute walk to SoFi’s south gate.
Rideshare drop-offs are located in restricted zones requiring a 20–30 minute walk to the gates, with direct stadium drop-offs prohibited on match days. Post-match surge pricing on rideshare platforms has routinely exceeded $150 for rides that normally cost $25, with wait times at the Kareem Court pickup area stretching past 45 minutes. Drivers who do park on-site should plan to wait 20–25 minutes after the final whistle before attempting to exit, as the 405 heading north sees the worst post-match congestion; routing south toward the 105 or east on Century Blvd typically clears faster.
FIFA World Cup 2026 Advice for Los Angeles
Transportation planners for Los Angeles consistently recommend the same thing: arrive earlier than you think you need to. Shuttle lines and transit platforms fill significantly faster around World Cup matches than during a typical NFL event, and Metro recommends arriving at the stadium 90 minutes before kickoff.
Parking passes must be purchased in advance and are linked to your match ticket — you cannot purchase parking independently. If you wait until match day, on-site parking will almost certainly be unavailable.
At $1.75 each way, the Metro shuttle network is significantly less expensive than on-site parking at any price tier. For fans unfamiliar with LA transit, Metro accepts chip-enabled credit and debit cards at boarding locations, so no pre-loaded transit card is required.
Click to contact our personal injury lawyers today
If You Are in a Crash on the Way to the Game
The volume of unfamiliar drivers, crowded freeways, and compressed road access around SoFi Stadium creates conditions where serious accidents are more likely than on a typical game day. If you are injured in a crash on the way to or from a World Cup match, California law may entitle you to compensation — and the steps you take immediately after a collision affect what options are available to you.
California follows a comparative fault system, meaning injured parties may be entitled to compensation even when there is partial fault involved. At J&Y Law, our attorneys represent injury victims throughout California and can help you understand your options after a crash. If you’ve been hurt, contact J&Y Law for a free consultation.
Call or text (877) 735-7035 or complete a Free Case Evaluation form