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🚗🚆 How to Get Around Dallas During the World Cup (Without Losing Your Sanity)

A practical guide to getting around Dallas-Fort Worth during the 2026 World Cup, including rideshares, trains, parking tips, and matchday travel advice.

🚗🚆 How to Get Around Dallas During the World Cup (Without Losing Your Sanity)
Photo by Perry Merrity II / Unsplash

Let’s get one thing out of the way early: Dallas-Fort Worth is not a walkable city, and it is definitely not a transit-first city. If you arrive expecting European-style trains whisking you from neighborhood to stadium with ease, you’re going to have a bad time. The good news? If you understand how DFW actually works, getting around during the World Cup is totally manageable.

This guide breaks down your real options, which include rideshare, trains, rental cars, and walking (yes, really), and tells you exactly when each one makes sense. No sugarcoating. No fantasy maps. Just the truth.


🚕 Rideshare (Uber & Lyft): The Default Choice

For most World Cup visitors, Uber and Lyft will be your primary mode of transportation. They’re everywhere, they’re easy, and they’re usually faster than trying to decode local transit maps after a few beers at Peticolas.

Pros

Cons

Pro Tip:
After matches at AT&T Stadium, walk 10–15 minutes away from the stadium before requesting a ride. Prices should drop fast, and drivers are far more willing to pick you up once you’re outside the immediate stadium zone.

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🚆 TRE Commuter Rail: The Hidden MVP

If you’re staying in Downtown Dallas, Victory Park, or Downtown Fort Worth, the TRE (Trinity Railway Express) is your best-kept secret, though you'll still need to keep the first option in mind when taking this rail.

The TRE connects Dallas and Fort Worth and stops at CentrePort/DFW Airport Station, which is the closest rail stop to AT&T Stadium.

How it works

Pros

Cons

Reality Check:
This is not a “walk off the train into the stadium” situation. But it will save you time and money on match days if planned correctly.


🚗 Rental Cars: Useful, but Not Always Necessary

If you’re staying outside the core areas—or planning to explore Fort Worth, breweries, or suburbs—a rental car can be worth it. Dallas driving isn’t hard (especially in the suburbs, which are is to hesitation.

Pros

Cons

Parking Reality

Best Use Case:
Rental cars make sense for daytime exploring and non-match days, not necessarily for matchday itself.

DFW Neighborhood Guide for World Cup 2026 Visitors: Where to Stay, Eat & Drink
Explore the best Dallas-Fort Worth neighborhoods for World Cup visitors, with where to stay, eat, drink, and get to matches in 2026.

🚶 Walking: Only in Very Specific Places

Let’s be clear: Dallas is not walkable overall. But certain neighborhoods are.

You can comfortably walk around:

You cannot walk between neighborhoods. Do not attempt this. This is not a “quick stroll.” This is a sunburn and regret situation.

Rule of Thumb:
Walk within neighborhoods. Ride between them.

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🚇 DART Light Rail & Buses: Limited, But Useful

Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) exists and can help in very specific scenarios—mainly Downtown, Uptown-adjacent stops, and airport connections.

Pros

Cons

Verdict:
Use DART if it aligns perfectly with your hotel location. Otherwise, rideshare wins.


🏟️ Getting to AT&T Stadium on Matchday

Here’s the honest ranking of matchday transportation options:

  1. Rideshare + short walk (most visitors)
  2. TRE + rideshare combo (Downtown/Fort Worth stays)
  3. Hotel shuttles (if offered—rare but clutch)
  4. Driving yourself (only if you enjoy traffic puzzles)

What Not to Do

Leave early. Always earlier than you think.


Timing Tips That Will Save Your Trip


🧠 Final Sanity-Saving Advice

Dallas rewards people who plan just a little bit ahead. If you accept that this is a car-first city and use rideshares strategically, you’ll be fine. Fight it, and you’ll spend your World Cup staring at brake lights, wondering where it all went wrong.

You came for soccer. Let’s not let traffic ruin it.

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