
A goal at Cal Anderson? No fees or licenses required
With somewhere around 750,000 fans expected in Seattle for its part in the 2026 Men’s World Cup, Capitol Hill bars, cafes, and restaurants may have some Super Bowl-sized hopes of drawing crowds with events and watch parties around the matches.
They should be ready for Super Bowl “big game” sized headaches around FIFA restrictions on viewing parties and events.
To help Seattle’s venues prepare, business chambers have been holding meetings and webinars to help lay out the rules. The GSBA is holding its session for members and anyone else with interest next week:
In this session, we’ll walk through the Community Watch Party Playbook, a guide designed to help organizations understand FIFA’s viewing party rules, licensing requirements, and event-planning best practices. The webinar will simplify the process of securing a FIFA viewing-party license and outline the key steps for hosting a compliant and engaging community event. The session will also include a Q&A with Eric Corning from the Seattle Sports Commission.
You can register here.
The whole thing runs pretty much like the Super Bowl “the big game” where restrictions — and general fear about crossing any legal lines — brings a round of “big game” events and promotions by typical venues who aren’t planning anything near large enough to deal with fees and licensing. Continue reading →