Jalisco authorities have announced a monthlong traffic plan around Estadio Guadalajara ahead of the 2026 World Cup: Circuito JVC will be closed for all of June and temporary match‑day restrictions will apply on June 11, 18, 23 and 26.
The mobility operation, formally named “Última Milla,” locks down the stadium’s immediate perimeter and the feeder corridors that serve the west Zapopan neighborhood. Circuito JVC will remain closed throughout June between the camino a las Villas Panamericanas and the intersection with avenida del Bosque, while the main exclusion perimeter includes the side roads of the Anillo Periférico Poniente and the side lanes of avenida Vallarta. Authorities also list planned cuts on avenida del Bajío, avenida del Bosque and avenida Las Torres.
Temporary closures are tied to four fixtures scheduled in the Guadalajara area: South Korea vs. Czech Republic on June 11 at 20:00, Mexico vs. South Korea on June 18 at 19:00, Colombia vs. DR Congo on June 23 at 20:00, and Uruguay vs. Spain on June 26 at 18:00. On each match day vehicle circulation limits will begin seven hours before kickoff and remain in force until seven hours after the final whistle.
The initial phase of streetwork and preparation began in late May and runs through June 10, putting the permanent Circuito JVC closure into effect before the first match. Officials describe the window around every game as a 14‑hour operational block aimed at clearing routes for fans, deliveries and emergency services while the events take place.
To centralize maps and logistical data, the Instituto de Información Estadística y Geográfica de Jalisco added six MapaLab sections for the tournament: Estadio Guadalajara, FIFA Fan Festival, Transporte público, Partidos, Conciertos and Sitios turísticos. The MapaLab World Cup portal is live at /mapalab/mapa and pulls operational inputs from the Dirección de Movilidad y Transporte del Gobierno de Zapopan.
Abigail Rizo said the MapaLab tool was designed to give citizens a single, accessible place to consult the work of state and municipal agencies and to find what could affect daily routines. The platform also lets users explore statistical and geographic data across Jalisco’s 125 municipalities.
Jorge Arizpe clarified that the Última Milla measures cover the stadium’s perimeter and the secondary corridors that connect to that sector of Zapopan, framing where traffic will be restricted and where access points will be controlled when the operation is active.
Despite the mapped sections and the listed street closures, officials acknowledge a practical limit: the MapaLab dataset will evolve as authorities adjust operational decisions during the competition, so the details posted now can change. Crucially, the public notice does not specify which exact public‑transport routes or particular access points will be altered for each of the four matches — a detail commuters, workers and service providers will need before the tournament begins.
Residents, employers and delivery services should plan around two overlapping timelines: the permanent closure of Circuito JVC for June and the match‑day windows that extend seven hours before and after each kickoff on June 11, 18, 23 and 26. For a mapped summary of the announced limits around the stadium, FilmoGaz has a guide at and the most actionable source for last‑minute changes is the MapaLab site maintained by the state.
What comes next is precise operational detail. Authorities say they will continue feeding MapaLab with updates, but they have not yet published service‑level changes for specific bus lines or exact alternative access routes. The single unresolved question that residents need answered before the first match is which public‑transport trajectories and stadium access points will be rerouted — and those answers must appear on MapaLab or from municipal mobility authorities in the days before June 11.




