19 Jun
Fri
•12:00
Lumen Field • Seattle
12 Jun
Fri
•18:00
SoFi Stadium • Los Angeles
19 Jun
Fri
•12:00
Lumen Field • Seattle
25 Jun
Thu
•19:00
SoFi Stadium • Los Angeles
13 Jun
Sat
•21:00
BC Place Stadium • Vancouver
19 Jun
Fri
•12:00
Lumen Field • Seattle
25 Jun
Thu
•19:00
Levi's Stadium • San Francisco
The U.S. arrives at Seattle’s Lumen Field as the home side, riding the momentum of Qatar 2022, where they went through the group stage unbeaten and reached the round of 16 going toe to toe with top European teams. Australia comes in with a very similar profile: in 2022 they also made the last 16 after beating Tunisia and Denmark and pushing eventual champions Argentina to the limit.
On the pitch, you’ll see two very physical football philosophies with their own twists: the U.S. team thrives on high pressing, pace out wide and relentless intensity when they lose the ball; the Socceroos lean on a compact, hard‑working unit, strong in the air and dangerous every time they flood the box.
In a World Cup group stage, every point reshapes the bracket: a mistake playing out from the back, a loose ball or a poorly defended corner can define the entire tournament. Watching this showdown live, with Lumen Field packed, the steep stands towering over the pitch and the noise echoing under the roof, is football turned up to full volume.
The U.S. national team has become a regular at World Cups and in Qatar 2022 returned to the round of 16 with a young generation already shining in Europe’s top leagues. Christian Pulisic leads the attack, backed by the all‑action game of Weston McKennie, the balance of Tyler Adams and a group that runs, presses and never switches off.
Australia has been building World Cup experience since 2006 and reached the round of 16 again in 2022, confirming their competitive rise. Mathew Leckie, Harry Souttar and Jackson Irvine bring leadership, height and personality when it matters most.
USA vs. Australia in Seattle is a straight duel between two teams that have already proved they can handle World Cup pressure: secure your ticket and experience it live.
Lumen Field offers around 68,000 seats for soccer, with steep stands, no running track and a famously loud atmosphere, on par with many of Europe’s top stadiums. The lower sidelines are the equivalent of a prime central tribune in London or Dortmund; the ends are home to the noisiest fans, and the upper tiers give you a perfect vantage point to follow every tactical move.
Using recent World Cup group‑stage price ranges as a guide, you can roughly expect around €60–90 in the highest sections (category 4), €120–200 behind the goals and in the corners (category 3), €200–300 along the middle sidelines (category 2) and €300–380 for central midfield seats (category 1). These figures can vary depending on demand, the opponent or when you buy, but they give you the ballpark you need to make sure you don’t miss this USA–Australia showdown in Seattle.