How to Get to the Great American State Fair DC Without a Car (2026)

The Great American State Fair runs June 25 through July 10 on the National Mall — 16 days, 56 states and territories, a 110-foot Ferris wheel, and almost no parking within a reasonable distance. The National Mall has minimal on-site parking under normal circumstances. Add America’s 250th birthday celebration and July 4th weekend to the mix and driving becomes the wrong choice for almost everyone. The good news: DC’s transit network was built for exactly this — getting large numbers of people to and from the National Mall without a car. Here’s every option, ranked by how well it actually works.

The short version: Take Metro to Smithsonian station. That’s it. Smithsonian station (Blue/Orange/Silver Lines) drops you directly on the Mall at the heart of the fair. Everything else on this list is for people who can’t use that option or want alternatives.

Metro — The Best Option By Far

The DC Metro is how the National Mall was designed to be accessed and it’s the right choice for the vast majority of State Fair visitors. Two stations put you directly at the fair:

Smithsonian Station (Blue/Orange/Silver Lines) — exits directly onto the National Mall between the Smithsonian Castle and the Washington Monument. This is the closest station to the center of the fair footprint (4th–14th Street NW) and the first choice for most visitors. The Mall exit puts you at the Smithsonian Castle — walk east toward the Capitol for the eastern pavilions, west toward the Monument for the western end.

L’Enfant Plaza Station (Blue/Orange/Silver/Yellow/Green Lines) — use the 7th Street & Maryland Avenue SW exit. Walk one block north on 7th Street to reach Independence Avenue and the southern edge of the Mall. L’Enfant Plaza connects five Metro lines, making it the most accessible station from the widest range of starting points in the DC metro area.

Federal Triangle Station (Blue/Orange/Silver Lines) — exits onto Constitution Avenue NW at the northern edge of the Mall. Good entry point for the western section of the fair near the Washington Monument end.

Capitol South Station (Blue/Orange/Silver Lines) — about a 10-minute walk to the eastern end of the fair near 4th Street. Good option if the Smithsonian and L’Enfant exits are heavily congested.

Metro timing for the fair: Trains run every 6–8 minutes on the Blue/Orange/Silver Lines during peak hours. On July 4th expect platform crowding at Smithsonian and L’Enfant Plaza — arrive at least 30 minutes earlier than you think you need to. SmarTrip card required — load yours before you go at wmata.com or any Metro station. Children under 4 ride free.

Park and Ride — For Visitors Driving From Outside DC

If you’re driving from Northern Virginia, Maryland, or further out — park at a suburban Metro station and ride in. This eliminates DC traffic and parking entirely while still letting you drive part of the way.

Best park and ride stations for the State Fair:

  • Vienna/Fairfax-GMU (Orange Line, Virginia) — large free parking garage, direct Orange Line to Smithsonian. Best option from Northern Virginia and I-66 corridor
  • Franconia-Springfield (Blue Line, Virginia) — free parking, direct Blue Line to Smithsonian. Best from I-95 South and Springfield area
  • Greenbelt (Green Line, Maryland) — free parking, direct Green Line to L’Enfant Plaza. Best from I-95 North and Baltimore direction
  • Shady Grove (Red Line, Maryland) — free parking, transfer at Metro Center to Blue/Orange/Silver for Smithsonian. Best from I-270 corridor and Montgomery County
  • Huntington (Yellow Line, Virginia) — free parking, direct Yellow Line to L’Enfant Plaza. Best from I-95 South via Alexandria

Weekend Metro parking is free at all Metro-owned garages and surface lots. Arrive by 9am on weekends — lots at popular park and ride stations fill by mid-morning during major events.

DC Circulator — The $1 Option

The DC Circulator’s National Mall route runs along the Mall between Union Station and the Lincoln Memorial, stopping at major museum and monument entrances throughout the fair footprint. Flat $1 fare, SmarTrip accepted, buses every 10 minutes during peak hours.

The Circulator is most useful for:

  • Visitors already in the Capitol Hill or Union Station area who want to reach the Mall without walking
  • Fair-goers who want to move between the eastern end (Capitol side) and western end (Monument side) without walking the full mile
  • Families with young children who need a break from walking mid-visit
  • Visitors arriving from East Potomac Park who used the free parking there

Download the DC Circulator app or check dcirculator.com for real-time bus arrivals at each stop.

Biking — For DC Residents and Trail Users

The National Mall is accessible by bike from most DC neighborhoods and the surrounding trail network. Capital Bikeshare has docking stations near all major Mall entrances — you can ride in and lock up without worrying about bike security during your visit.

Best bike routes to the fair:

From Northwest DC: Rock Creek Park trail south to the Mall. Car-free, scenic, connects to 15th Street NW protected lane which runs directly to the Mall.

From Capitol Hill and Eastern DC: Pennsylvania Avenue SE bike lane west to the Mall. Direct, flat, and one of DC’s better protected lane routes.

From Georgetown and the C&O Canal: The C&O Canal towpath east to Georgetown waterfront, then the Rock Creek trail south to the Mall. Scenic approach from the west.

From Virginia (Arlington): Key Bridge to Georgetown, then south to the Mall. Or the 14th Street Bridge bike lane from Crystal City directly to the Mall’s south end.

From Navy Yard and the Anacostia Riverwalk: The Riverwalk Trail north to the Mall’s eastern end. Flat, paved, and connects directly to the Capitol end of the fair.

Capital Bikeshare at the fair: Stations near the Mall will be heavily used during the fair — check the Lyft app (which runs Bikeshare) for availability before you ride. E-bikes are available at select stations for an additional per-minute fee. Helmets required for riders under 16 — bring your own or rent at several locations near the Mall. Read our biking in DC guide for the full trail network breakdown.

Rideshare — Uber and Lyft Drop Zones

Rideshare works well for the State Fair with one important caveat: pickup after the event — especially on July 4th — will involve significant surge pricing and wait times as hundreds of thousands of people request rides simultaneously.

Best rideshare drop zones for the fair:

  • Constitution Avenue NW — northern edge of the Mall, multiple drop points along the fair’s length
  • Independence Avenue SW — southern edge of the Mall, accessible from multiple directions
  • 7th Street NW — central access point between the two main halves of the fair

Rideshare pickup after July 4th fireworks: Do not plan to Uber or Lyft home immediately after the fireworks. Surge pricing will be extreme and wait times will be 30–60+ minutes. Walk to a Metro station, ride to a less congested area, then request a ride from there. Or walk further from the Mall before requesting — prices drop significantly two or three blocks away from the main pedestrian flow.

Water Taxi — From The Wharf and National Harbor

City Cruises and Potomac Riverboat Company operate water taxi service connecting The Wharf, Georgetown waterfront, Old Town Alexandria, and National Harbor. While water taxis don’t dock directly at the Mall, they connect to the Wharf — a 10-minute Circulator ride from the Mall’s southern entrance.

For visitors staying in Alexandria, National Harbor, or The Wharf area, the water taxi plus Circulator combination is a genuinely pleasant and uncrowded way to reach the fair — particularly on weekdays.

Getting There From Reagan National Airport (DCA)

Reagan National is the most convenient airport for State Fair visitors — Blue and Yellow Line Metro service connects directly to Smithsonian station in about 20 minutes with no transfers. Walk out of the terminal, take the airport Metro, and you’re at the fair entrance. Read our Reagan National guide for the full airport picture.

What to Do With Your Car If You Must Drive

If you’re driving and can’t use the park and ride options, East Potomac Park on the peninsula south of the Jefferson Memorial has hundreds of free parking spaces — arrive by 2–3pm on weekdays, earlier on weekends. The trade-off is a 15–20 minute walk to the fair entrance. The DC Circulator connects from this area if the walk is too far.

Pre-book a garage via SpotHero — L’Enfant Plaza garage and several garages in the Southwest corridor are the closest paid options to the fair footprint.

🅿️ Pre-Book Parking Near the State Fair

Available parking near the Mall during the fair sells out fast — especially July 4th weekend. Pre-booking locks in your spot and your rate before you leave home.

→ Search SpotHero for State Fair Parking

Quick Reference: Getting to the State Fair Without a Car

  • Best Metro station: Smithsonian (Blue/Orange/Silver) — exits directly onto the Mall
  • Second best Metro: L’Enfant Plaza (5 lines) — 7th & Maryland Ave exit, 1 block to Mall
  • Best from Northern Virginia: Vienna park and ride → Orange Line to Smithsonian
  • Best from Maryland: Greenbelt park and ride → Green Line to L’Enfant Plaza
  • Best $1 option: DC Circulator National Mall route — runs along full fair length
  • Best bike route: Rock Creek Park trail or 15th Street NW protected lane
  • Rideshare drop: Constitution Ave NW or Independence Ave SW
  • Rideshare pickup after fireworks: Walk 2–3 blocks first, then request
  • From DCA airport: Blue/Yellow Line direct to Smithsonian — 20 minutes
  • Free parking if driving: East Potomac Park — arrive by 2pm weekdays
  • SmarTrip card: Load before you go at wmata.com or any Metro station

🏨 Staying in DC for the Fair?

Hotels near the Mall and Metro stations book fast for the fair — especially July 4th weekend. America 250th is drawing historic crowds to DC this summer.

→ Find DC Hotels Near the Mall on Hotels.com

→ Compare DC Summer 2026 Hotel Rates on Expedia

Also on UnscriptedDC: Read our Great American State Fair complete guide for everything about the event itself. Our DC fireworks 2026 guide covers the best July 4th viewing spots. And our DC Metro guide covers fares, lines, and everything locals know about riding the system.

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