Miami World Cup guide for June 24 onward: shuttles, Bayfront Fan Festival, and bronze-final planning
June 24, 2026 · 2:14 AM

Miami World Cup guide for June 24 onward: shuttles, Bayfront Fan Festival, and bronze-final planning

A practical Miami plan for the remaining World Cup dates, covering Game Day Express shuttle hubs, Bayfront Park Fan Festival access, Metromover and Metrorail choices, stadium bag rules, and how to plan for the Round of 32, quarterfinal, and bronze final.

Miami's World Cup plan is now less about getting to South Florida and more about avoiding the wrong last-mile choice. From 24 June onward, Miami Stadium still has five tournament dates: Scotland vs Brazil on 24 June, Colombia vs Portugal on 27 June, a Round of 32 match on 3 July, a quarterfinal on 11 July, and the bronze final on 18 July.1 Hard Rock Stadium's event page lists the remaining Miami kickoffs as 22:00 UTC on 24 June, 23:30 UTC on 27 June, 22:00 UTC on 3 July, and 21:00 UTC for both 11 July and 18 July.2

The fast decision: pick your hub before matchday

For stadium ticket holders, the cleanest plan is the Miami Game Day Express. The host committee describes it as the official free round-trip shuttle between four transit hubs and Miami Stadium, with a valid match ticket required to board.3 Do not treat a train ticket as enough; Brightline, Tri-Rail, Metrorail, or Metrobus gets you to a hub, while the match ticket gets you onto the stadium shuttle.3
Map showing Miami Stadium shuttle hubs
The visitor bureau map shows the stadium shuttle-hub pattern fans should choose before leaving their hotel.4
If you are starting from...Use this hub firstWhy it fitsWatch-out
Downtown Miami, Brickell, MIA, or a Metrorail-connected hotelDr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Plaza Metrorail StationGreen Line access plus Metrobus 27/27A and 62No onsite parking at the hub.3
Broward, Palm Beach, or a Tri-Rail approachGolden Glades Multimodal Transit StationTri-Rail and multiple Metrobus routes connect thereParking is paid; confirm event pricing and availability before you travel.3
A Brightline trip from Orlando, West Palm Beach, Boca Raton, Fort Lauderdale, or AventuraAventura Brightline StationThe Aventura station is an official Game Day Express hubPaid station parking is separate from the free shuttle.3
Hollywood, Fort Lauderdale hotels, or casino-area parkingSeminole Hard Rock Hotel & CasinoIt is one of the four official shuttle hubsLot 70 parking is paid; arrive with a confirmed plan.3
Timing is the part to be strict about. Fans may start lining up no earlier than five hours before kickoff, ticket scanning and boarding begin four hours before kickoff, and the first loaded shuttle leaves 3.5 hours before kickoff.3 Shuttles run as they fill, not on a fixed timetable, so a 21:00 UTC kickoff is not a reason to leave your hotel at 19:30 UTC.

If you are staying downtown, split the day in two

Use Bayfront Park as the pre-match or non-ticket base, then move to your stadium hub separately. The official Miami Fan Festival is at Bayfront Park from 13 June through 5 July, with live match broadcasts, entertainment stages, cultural performances, food and drink areas, and interactive fan activities.5 The festival page says gates generally open about 60 minutes before the first match kickoff, last entry is about 30 minutes after the final match kickoff, and operations conclude about 90 minutes after the final broadcasted match.5
Bayfront Park Fan Festival location graphic
The official Fan Festival page places the public watch site at Bayfront Park in downtown Miami.5
Miami Metromover near downtown
The free Metromover is the simplest downtown connector for Bayfront Park during Fan Festival days.4
The practical downtown route is simple: use the free Metromover for Bayfront Park, or take Metrorail to Government Center and transfer to Metromover. Miami's visitor bureau lists Bayfront Park, First Street, College/Bayside, and College North as the closest Metromover stations; it also lists Government Center and Historic Overtown as the closest Metrorail stations for a walk-in approach.4 For fans landing at MIA, the host committee recommends Metrorail Orange Line to Government Center, then the Metromover Inner Loop or a 15-20 minute walk toward Biscayne Boulevard.3
Service hours matter after late matches. Miami's visitor bureau says Metromover and Metrorail run until midnight during Fan Festival, with service extended to 05:00 UTC the next day, or 1:00 a.m. in Miami, on 25 June, 27 June, and 4 July among the remaining dates.4 If your hotel is outside downtown, check the last rail or Brightline connection before you commit to the final broadcast at Bayfront.

Stadium entry: pack for the shuttle, not your hotel room

FIFA's Miami Stadium A-Z guide says stadium gates open three hours before kickoff, and general and hospitality parking open one hour before gates.6 The same guide lists Miami Stadium as a cashless venue and gives the stadium address as 347 Don Shula Drive, Miami Gardens.6
The bag rule is the easiest way to lose time. FIFA says approved bags must be clear plastic, vinyl, or PVC and no larger than 12 inches by 6 inches by 12 inches; small clutch purses or wallets are allowed only if no larger than 4.5 inches by 6.5 inches.6 The host committee's shuttle FAQ applies the stadium bag policy to shuttle boarding because ticket validation happens before the ride.3
A good matchday pack is boring: phone with mobile ticket loaded, passport or ID if you need it, contactless card, small sunscreen, one factory-sealed soft plastic water bottle of 20 ounces or less, and a clear bag that fits the rule. FIFA's A-Z guide says one soft, factory-sealed disposable water bottle of up to 20 ounces is permitted at matches in the USA and Canada.6

Best plans for the remaining Miami dates

24 June, Scotland vs Brazil: use the shuttle hub closest to where you will end the night, not necessarily where you started the day. The 22:00 UTC kickoff means a hot late-afternoon queue in Miami, and Bayfront's Fan Festival is open the same day.5
27 June, Colombia vs Portugal: this is the trickiest downtown-to-stadium day because Fan Festival transit is extended later and the stadium match starts at 23:30 UTC.2 If you want Bayfront first, leave enough time to reach your chosen shuttle hub before boarding queues thicken.
3 July, Round of 32: treat it as a full knockout matchday even though Fan Festival is still running. FIFA lists Match 86, Argentina vs the Group H runner-up, at Miami Stadium on 3 July.1
11 July and 18 July: these are the high-stakes Miami dates. FIFA assigns a quarterfinal to Miami Stadium on 11 July and the bronze final to Miami Stadium on 18 July.1 By then, Fan Festival at Bayfront Park has ended, so your main decision becomes hotel base plus shuttle hub, not festival plus stadium.

Bottom line

For Miami, the winning move is to separate the city day from the stadium transfer. Use Bayfront Park and Metromover for the fan-festival portion, then switch to the official Game Day Express hub that best matches your hotel, rail connection, or post-match exit. If you have a ticket, pack to the stadium rules before you leave your room; if you do not, Bayfront Park remains the main official public watch plan through 5 July.

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