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Champions League

Champions League Tickets

Buy Champions League tickets for the 2025/26 season. The final is set: Arsenal vs Paris Saint-Germain at the Puskás Aréna in Budapest on 30 May 2026, with kick-off at 18:00 CEST. It is Arsenal's first Champions League final in 20 years and PSG's chance to become only the second club in the Champions League era to retain the trophy.

Compare available listings for the final on 1BoxOffice by seat location, price and delivery type before you book. Demand for the Budapest final is high, and inventory tightens quickly in the run-up to kick-off, so booking early gives you the widest choice of sections and the best chance of sitting together.

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Champions League Teams

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Champions League 2025/26 Final

The 2025/26 final pits the team with the best record of the league phase against the defending champions. Arsenal finished the league phase with a perfect 8-0-0 record, eliminated Bayer Leverkusen, Sporting CP and Atlético Madrid on their route to Budapest, and have not lifted the trophy in their history. PSG won the title in 2024/25 with a 5-0 win over Inter Milan and have come through Monaco, Chelsea, Liverpool and Bayern Munich this season.

Final Date Venue Kick-off
Arsenal vs Paris Saint-Germain 30 May 2026 Puskás Aréna, Budapest 18:00 CEST

This is the first Champions League final held in Hungary. The Puskás Aréna has a capacity of 67,215 and previously hosted the 2023 Europa League final. The 18:00 CEST kick-off reflects UEFA's permanent move away from the traditional 21:00 slot.

Champions League 2025/26 Semi-Final Results

The semi-finals delivered one tie of contrasting tension and one of relentless attacking football. Arsenal edged Atlético Madrid 2-1 on aggregate after a first leg ended 1-1 in Madrid and Bukayo Saka tucked home a rebound from a Leandro Trossard shot just before half-time at the Emirates. PSG and Bayern Munich produced a nine-goal first leg in Paris, with PSG winning 5-4, before Bayern's home leg ended 1-1 thanks to a late Harry Kane equaliser. Final aggregate: 6-5 PSG.

Tie First Leg (28/29 April) Second Leg (5/6 May) Aggregate Through
Atlético Madrid vs Arsenal Atlético 1-1 Arsenal Arsenal 1-0 Atlético 2-1 Arsenal
PSG vs Bayern Munich PSG 5-4 Bayern Bayern 1-1 PSG 6-5 Paris Saint-Germain

Both ties were defined by single moments. Saka's poached finish at the Emirates after Jan Oblak parried a Trossard shot was the only goal of an otherwise scrappy 90 minutes. PSG's first leg saw braces from Khvicha Kvaratskhelia and Ousmane Dembélé and a João Neves goal, with Bayern hitting back through a Kane penalty, Dayot Upamecano and Luis Díaz. In the second leg in Munich, Manuel Neuer kept Bayern in the tie with a string of saves before Kane levelled in stoppage time, but the one-goal aggregate deficit proved too much.

Champions League 2025/26 Quarter-Final Results

The quarter-finals produced two comfortable aggregate wins and two that went to the wire. PSG were the most efficient, dispatching Liverpool without conceding over two legs. Arsenal edged through on the narrowest possible margin after a stoppage-time Kai Havertz winner in Lisbon. Bayern Munich eliminated Real Madrid in a 10-goal tie, with Luis Díaz and Michael Olise scoring late at the Allianz Arena to turn a knife-edge aggregate into a dramatic 6-4 win. Atlético Madrid held off a two-goal Barcelona surge at the Metropolitano to complete a 3-2 aggregate win that put them into their first semi-final since 2017.

Tie First Leg Second Leg Aggregate Through
Sporting CP vs Arsenal Sporting 0-1 Arsenal Arsenal 0-0 Sporting 1-0 Arsenal
Real Madrid vs Bayern Munich Real Madrid 1-2 Bayern Bayern 4-3 Real Madrid 6-4 Bayern Munich
Barcelona vs Atlético Madrid Barcelona 0-2 Atlético Atlético 1-2 Barcelona 3-2 Atlético Madrid
Paris Saint-Germain vs Liverpool PSG 2-0 Liverpool Liverpool 0-2 PSG 4-0 Paris Saint-Germain

Champions League 2025/26 Season So Far

This season marked a historic first: six English clubs competed in the same Champions League campaign. Arsenal, Liverpool, Manchester City and Chelsea qualified through the Premier League, Tottenham Hotspur earned their spot by winning the 2024/25 Europa League, and Newcastle United came through via the coefficient performance pathway. Arsenal are the only English club still in the competition.

The league phase ran from September 2025 to January 2026 under the format introduced in the previous season: 36 teams each played eight matches (four home, four away) against different opponents, with all clubs ranked in a single table. The top eight qualified directly for the round of 16, while teams finishing 9th to 24th entered a knockout playoff round. Teams placed 25th to 36th were eliminated from European competition entirely.

League Phase Top Eight

Position Club Notes
1stArsenalThe only team with a perfect record in the league phase
2ndBayern MunichStrong form throughout, including a 4-0 win over Club Brugge
3rdLiverpoolTopped their group of opponents despite a 1-4 home loss to PSV
4thTottenham HotspurEuropa League holders reached the last 16 before falling to Atlético Madrid
5thBarcelonaHansi Flick's side through to the quarter-finals after eliminating Newcastle
6thChelseaEliminated by PSG in the round of 16
7thSporting CPThrough to the quarter-finals after seeing off Bodø/Glimt
8thManchester CityEliminated by Real Madrid in the round of 16 (1-5 on aggregate)

Round of 16 Results

Tie Aggregate Score Result
PSG vs ChelseaPSG 8-2 ChelseaPSG advanced to the quarter-finals
Galatasaray vs LiverpoolGalatasaray 1-4 LiverpoolLiverpool advanced to the quarter-finals
Real Madrid vs Man CityReal Madrid 5-1 Man CityReal Madrid advanced to the quarter-finals
Atalanta vs Bayern MunichAtalanta 2-10 Bayern MunichBayern Munich advanced to the quarter-finals
Newcastle vs BarcelonaNewcastle 3-8 BarcelonaBarcelona advanced to the quarter-finals
Atlético Madrid vs TottenhamAtlético Madrid 7-5 TottenhamAtlético Madrid advanced to the quarter-finals
Bodø/Glimt vs Sporting CPBodø/Glimt 3-5 Sporting CPSporting CP advanced to the quarter-finals
Bayer Leverkusen vs ArsenalLeverkusen 1-3 ArsenalArsenal advanced to the quarter-finals

The biggest shock of the knockout phase came in the playoff round, when Norwegian side Bodø/Glimt stunned Inter Milan 5-2 on aggregate. Newcastle also delivered a statement with a 9-3 aggregate demolition of Qarabağ, while Galatasaray knocked out Juventus 7-5 on aggregate after extra time in a dramatic second leg in Turin.

Meet the Finalists

Arsenal

Arsenal were the standout team of the league phase, finishing first with a perfect record. They beat Bayer Leverkusen 3-1 on aggregate in the round of 16, edged Sporting CP 1-0 in a quarter-final that was the joint lowest-scoring in Champions League history and saw off Atlético Madrid 2-1 in the semi-final thanks to Bukayo Saka's strike at the Emirates.

The Budapest final is Arsenal's first Champions League final since 2006, when they lost 2-1 to Barcelona in Paris. They have never lifted the trophy. Mikel Arteta's side currently sit top of the Premier League and are chasing a first league title since 2003/04, alongside a first European Cup. The semi-final win came after a frustrating Premier League defeat to Manchester City on 19 April, after which Declan Rice's public challenge to the squad was credited as a turning point.

Paris Saint-Germain

The defending champions. PSG won their first Champions League title in May 2025, beating Inter Milan 5-0 in Munich, the largest margin of victory in a modern European final. Luis Enrique's side completed a continental treble that season and has now reached six semi-finals in seven years.

Their 2025/26 knockout run reads: AS Monaco 5-4 (playoff), Chelsea 8-2 (round of 16), Liverpool 4-0 (quarter-final), Bayern Munich 6-5 (semi-final). Ousmane Dembélé, the current Ballon d'Or holder, scored twice at Anfield in the quarter-final and added another brace in the semi-final first leg. Khvicha Kvaratskhelia also bagged a brace against Bayern. PSG now bids to become only the second club in the Champions League era to retain the trophy, after Real Madrid's three-in-a-row between 2015/16 and 2017/18.

Buy seats for the final now on the dedicated Arsenal vs PSG fixture page.

Road to Budapest: The Eliminated Semi-Finalists

Atlético Madrid came through the knockout playoffs after finishing outside the top eight, eliminated Tottenham 7-5 on aggregate and shocked Barcelona 3-2 in the quarter-final after a 2-0 win at Camp Nou. Their semi-final exit at the Emirates was their fourth final-or-semi-final defeat under Diego Simeone since 2014.

Bayern Munich finished second in the league phase, beat Atalanta 10-2 in the round of 16 and eliminated Real Madrid 6-4 in a 10-goal tie. Harry Kane's late equaliser in the second leg of the semi against PSG was not enough to overturn the first-leg deficit. Their pursuit of a seventh European Cup, and a first since 2019/20, ends here.

Champions League 2025/26 Key Dates

Stage Date
Final Saturday 30 May 2026, 18:00 CEST, Puskás Aréna, Budapest

The 2025/26 final will be the first Champions League final held in Hungary. The Puskás Aréna has a capacity of 67,215 and previously hosted the 2023 Europa League final. UEFA's 18:00 CEST kick-off is now permanent, having moved from the traditional 21:00 slot last season.

Champions League Ticket Prices (2025/26)

Champions League ticket prices on the resale market are shaped by the stage of the competition, the teams involved, the stadium and how close you are to the pitch. Here are typical price ranges based on current and recent listings:

Stage Standard Seats Premium/Central Hospitality
League phase£50-£130£130-£260£430-£1,300
Round of 16£100-£260£215-£430£700-£2,150
Quarter-finals£175-£350£300-£520£850-£2,600
Semi-finals£215-£520£430-£780£1,300-£3,500
Final (Budapest)£520-£1,300£1,050-£2,150£2,600-£8,500+

These are indicative resale ranges, not fixed prices. Live listings on 1BoxOffice may be above or below these figures depending on supply and demand at any given time. The Arsenal vs PSG final pairing combines two of Europe's largest travelling fanbases with a defending-champion narrative and Arsenal's first final in 20 years, which typically pushes resale demand toward the upper end of the historical range.

Champions League Hospitality Packages

For buyers looking for more than a standard matchday, hospitality packages are available for many Champions League fixtures. The exact offer depends on the stadium and the host club, but packages typically include premium seating in the best stadium locations, access to private lounges with food and drink, dedicated entrances to avoid queues and, at some venues, concierge services. These packages suit corporate groups, special occasions and fans who want an elevated matchday experience.

Hospitality demand is at its peak for the Budapest final, with packages selling quickly as kick-off approaches. Booking early through 1BoxOffice is the best way to compare hospitality options and secure your preferred package.

UCL Hospitality Tickets and Resale Price Ranges

Common hospitality types across the UEFA Champions League include:

Package Features
Lounge hospitalityPremium padded seating with access to a shared hospitality lounge, usually with pre-match food and selected drinks
Club-level or premium seat packagesBetter central seating with upgraded concourse or club access, often lighter than full corporate hospitality but above standard admission
Restaurant hospitalityPremium seating combined with a hosted dining experience before the match, sometimes with a more formal food service
Private boxes/executive suitesEnclosed or semi-private suites designed for groups, often including premium catering, drinks and dedicated service
VIP hospitality packagesHigh-end premium access that may include the best seating areas, top-tier dining, exclusive lounges and enhanced guest services
Final-specific hospitalityUEFA Champions League Final hospitality usually sits in its own price category because of global demand, event prestige and limited supply

Resale Price Ranges for UCL Hospitality

Hospitality type Typical resale price range (GBP)
Club-level/premium seating£180-£450+
Lounge hospitality£250-£700+
Restaurant hospitality£350-£900+
Executive boxes/private suites£500-£1,500+
VIP/top-tier premium hospitality£900-£3,000+
UEFA Champions League Final hospitality£2,000-£8,000+

UCL Hospitality Tickets: Resale Market Prices by Round

Round Hospitality type Resale price
League PhaseShared lounge/premium hospitality£350-£900
Knockout Play-off/Round of 16Shared lounge/premium club level£500-£1,400
Quarter-finalPremium lounge/restaurant hospitality£800-£2,200
Semi-finalPremium lounge/private hospitality£1,200-£3,500
FinalOfficial-style premium hospitality/luxury packages£4,000-£12,000+

How the Champions League Format Works (2025/26)

The Champions League switched to a new format starting from the 2024/25 season, replacing the old group stage with a single league phase.

In the league phase, 36 teams are drawn into a single table. Each team plays eight matches (four home, four away) against eight different opponents, with matchups determined by a seeded draw. The top eight teams at the end of the league phase qualify automatically for the round of 16. Teams finishing 9th to 24th enter a two-legged knockout playoff round, with the eight winners joining the top eight in the last 16. Teams finishing 25th to 36th are eliminated from European competition entirely and do not drop into the Europa League.

From the round of 16 onwards, the competition follows a traditional knockout format: two-legged ties through the quarter-finals and semi-finals, with the final played as a single match at a neutral venue. The bracket is partly pre-determined based on league phase finishing positions, meaning the top two seeds cannot meet before the final.

UEFA Champions League Format Explained

Stage Who's Involved Match Format How Teams Advance
Qualifying roundsClubs entering from the July-August qualifiersTwo-legged tiesWinners secure remaining places in the league phase
League phase36 clubs8 matches per club (4 home, 4 away) vs 8 different opponents; one single league tableTop 8 qualify directly to the Round of 16; 9-24 go to the play-offs; 25-36 are eliminated
Knockout phase play-offsTeams ranked 9th-24th in the league phaseTwo-legged tiesWinners progress to the Round of 16 (teams ranked 9-16 are seeded vs 17-24)
Round of 1616 clubs (Top 8 + 8 play-off winners)Two-legged tiesAggregate winner advances
Quarter-finals8 clubsTwo-legged tiesAggregate winner advances
Semi-finals4 clubsTwo-legged tiesAggregate winner advances
Final2 clubsSingle match at a neutral venueWinner lifts the trophy (extra time + pens if needed)

How English Teams Qualify for the Champions League

England can send up to six clubs to the Champions League in a single season. The standard allocation gives the top four Premier League finishers a place in the league phase. Additional spots can be earned if an English club wins the Champions League or Europa League without finishing in the top four domestically, or through UEFA's coefficient-based performance pathway.

In the 2025/26 season, England had six representatives for the first time in Champions League history: Arsenal, Liverpool, Manchester City and Chelsea qualified through the Premier League, Tottenham Hotspur qualified as Europa League winners, and Newcastle United earned a spot via the coefficient performance pathway. Arsenal are the last English club standing and will represent the country in the Budapest final.

UEFA Champions League Participant Leagues

League Country Number of Teams
Premier LeagueEngland6
La LigaSpain5
BundesligaGermany4
Serie AItaly4
Ligue 1France3
Primeira LigaPortugal2
Belgian Pro LeagueBelgium2
EredivisieNetherlands2
EliteserienNorway1
Süper LigTürkiye1
Super League GreeceGreece1
Azerbaijan Premier LeagueAzerbaijan1
Danish SuperligaDenmark1
Kazakhstan Premier LeagueKazakhstan1
Cypriot First DivisionCyprus1
Czech First LeagueCzechia1

The general criteria for UCL spots for league work are based on each association's five-season coefficient. The coefficient is calculated from the results of that country's clubs in the Champions League, Europa League and Conference League.

The Premier League had six Champions League spots in 2025/26 because England got its usual four automatic places for a top-four-ranked association. It then earned an extra European Performance Spot after English clubs finished in the top two of UEFA's 2024/25 association coefficient table, making it five teams along with La Liga.

Can You Buy Champions League Tickets Without a Membership?

Yes. Official club sales often require membership, involve priority windows or run through ballot systems that can be difficult for occasional buyers to access. A ticket marketplace like 1BoxOffice gives you an alternative route. You can compare available listings for any Champions League fixture without needing a club membership, review seating locations and delivery methods and complete your purchase securely online.

Champions League Winners (2005-2025)

Season Winner Score Runner-Up Venue
2024/25Paris Saint-Germain5-0Inter MilanMunich
2023/24Real Madrid2-0Borussia DortmundLondon
2022/23Manchester City1-0Inter MilanIstanbul
2021/22Real Madrid1-0LiverpoolParis
2020/21Chelsea1-0Manchester CityPorto
2019/20Bayern Munich1-0Paris Saint-GermainLisbon
2018/19Liverpool2-0Tottenham HotspurMadrid
2017/18Real Madrid3-1LiverpoolKyiv
2016/17Real Madrid4-1JuventusCardiff
2015/16Real Madrid1-1 (pens)Atlético MadridMilan
2014/15Barcelona3-1JuventusBerlin
2013/14Real Madrid4-1Atlético MadridLisbon
2012/13Bayern Munich2-1Borussia DortmundLondon
2011/12Chelsea1-1 (pens)Bayern MunichMunich
2010/11Barcelona3-1Manchester UnitedLondon
2009/10Inter Milan2-0Bayern MunichMadrid
2008/09Barcelona2-0Manchester UnitedRome
2007/08Manchester United1-1 (pens)ChelseaMoscow
2006/07AC Milan2-1LiverpoolAthens
2005/06Barcelona2-1ArsenalParis
2004/05Liverpool3-3 (pens)AC MilanIstanbul

Real Madrid leads the all-time winners list with 15 titles, followed by AC Milan with seven, Bayern Munich and Liverpool with six each and Barcelona with five. Paris Saint-Germain became the 23rd different club to win the competition when they lifted the trophy in Munich in May 2025. A win in Budapest would make Arsenal the 24th.

Teams with Most UCL Titles

Club UCL Titles
Real Madrid15
AC Milan7
Liverpool6
Bayern München6
FC Barcelona5
Ajax4
Manchester United3
Inter Milan3
Benfica2
Chelsea2
Juventus2
Nottingham Forest2
FC Porto2
Aston Villa1
Borussia Dortmund1
Celtic1
Crvena Zvezda1
Feyenoord1
Hamburg1
Manchester City1
Marseille1
Paris Saint-Germain1
PSV Eindhoven1
Steaua București1

The History of the UEFA Champions League

What fans now know as the UEFA Champions League began in 1955 as the European Champion Clubs' Cup (European Cup), a straight, high-stakes competition built around national champions battling through knockouts.

UEFA introduced a group stage in 1991/92, then launched the modern identity in 1992/93, with the 'Champions League' name, anthem and the iconic starball branding.

Previous UCL Formats (How the Competition Used to Work)

European Cup era: Pure knockout (1955-1991)

Mostly league champions only, with two-legged ties and no league/group phase. Every round felt like a final because there was little margin for error.

Transitional change: The first group stage (1991/92)

UEFA approved a new structure and used the 1991/92 season as a transitional phase, introducing a group stage.

Early Champions League: Group stage + knockout evolution (1992/93 to mid-90s)

1992/93 brought the Champions League identity and the group-stage spotlight. In 1994/95, a 16-team group stage was introduced, with the top teams advancing into two-legged knockout rounds.

Expansion era: More big-league entries (late 90s)

In 1997/98, runners-up from the top domestic leagues were allowed to enter, widening the elite field.

The 'two group stages' era (1999/2000 to 2002/03)

The tournament expanded to two group stages: an initial group phase followed by a second group stage before reaching the quarter-finals.

Modern classic format: One group stage + round of 16 (2003/04 to 2023/24)

In 2003/04, the format reverted to a single group stage, with a Round of 16 replacing the second group phase. In 2009/10, separate qualifying paths for champions versus non-champions were introduced, along with a playoff round in qualifying.

New era: The 'league phase' format (2024/25-present)

This format replaces groups with a 36-team league phase. Each team plays 8 matches against 8 different opponents (4 home, 4 away). The top 8 teams go straight to the Round of 16; teams ranked 9th to 24th enter a two-legged playoff for the remaining spots, while teams ranked 25th and below are eliminated (not dropping to the Europa League).

How to Buy Champions League Tickets on 1BoxOffice

Step1

Search for the Champions League fixture.
Search for the Champions League fixture you want to attend and select it from the listings.

Step2

Sign in or create your account.
Enter your details to sign in or create your 1BoxOffice account before checkout.

Step3

Compare available listings.
Compare available listings by stand, section, ticket quantity and price.

Step4

Review seats and delivery notes.
Check whether the seats are together and review the delivery method and any seller notes.

Step5

Complete secure checkout.
Pay through secure checkout once you are happy with the listing, quantity and delivery details.

Step6

Follow delivery and entry instructions.
Follow the delivery and entry instructions attached to your order. You can track your order using your order ID, surname and email.

Champions League Ticket Release Dates

UEFA typically announces ticket phases over the summer before each season. League phase tickets become available after the draw in late August, while knockout round tickets are released as matchups are confirmed.

The Budapest final has its own dedicated release phase. UEFA's general fan ballot for the 2026 final closed earlier this year, with allocations split between the two finalist clubs (Arsenal and PSG), the host association, sponsors and the public ballot. Demand for Champions League finals consistently exceeds supply by a multiple of around 30 to 1, which is why resale platforms like 1BoxOffice often become the primary route for fans who miss the official ballot or sit outside club priority windows.

Why UCL Tickets Stay in Demand

Champions League tickets remain in strong demand throughout the season because this is the competition where Europe's biggest clubs, biggest players and biggest nights all meet.

That demand is not limited to the final. It runs from the league phase through to the knockout rounds, with supporters targeting major fixtures, iconic stadiums and high-stakes European nights.

Knockout ties, semi-finals, and the final naturally sit at the top of the market. However, many earlier Champions League matches also attract strong interest because of the level of the competition, the international appeal of the clubs involved and the atmosphere that comes with a major European fixture.

Here are some interesting facts about the demand for UEFA Champions League tickets:

  • According to UEFA's own ticketing process, demand far outweighs supply for the Champions League Final, making it fiercely competitive.
  • UEFA handles sales directly through a ballot system, meaning even applying does not guarantee a ticket.
  • As per official ticket pricing data, Category 1 tickets typically exceed £510 to £595, while even the most affordable Category 4 seats are priced between £60 and £85, reflecting just how premium the experience is considered to be.
  • According to global viewership figures, the 2023/24 Champions League Final, where Real Madrid defeated Borussia Dortmund, reached an estimated global viewership of 145 million people.
  • As reported by sports analysts in 2025, the 2025 Champions League Final between PSG and Inter Milan drew an estimated 430 million viewers worldwide, comfortably surpassing Super Bowl 59, which attracted 252 million.
  • According to broadcast data, the Champions League Final is broadcast across more than 200 territories worldwide, reaching audiences on every continent through a vast network of national and international partners.
  • As per UEFA club competition crowd figures, men's UEFA club competition crowds reached 17 million, up 9.9% year on year, as part of what UEFA described as unprecedented attendance levels across European football.
  • According to streaming records, the 2024 Champions League Final became the most-streamed soccer match of all time on Paramount+, with the platform also recording its most-streamed full season of the Champions League in 2023/24.

Champions League Tickets for Non-Members

Many supporters use 1BoxOffice because not every buyer has access to official club memberships, ballots or restricted ticket windows. UEFA Champions League tickets for non-members are in strong demand, especially for knockout ties and high-profile European nights where official access can be limited.

Non-member buyers are often highly motivated fans. They may be international travellers, families or supporters targeting one specific match who want a clear, reliable way to buy Champions League tickets without depending on club-only sales channels.

That is where a marketplace becomes useful. 1BoxOffice helps fans compare UEFA Champions League tickets, review seat options and choose the listing that works best for their budget, travel plans and matchday goals.

Season Tickets and UCL

UEFA Champions League tickets are usually bought match by match rather than through a traditional season-ticket model. Unlike club football, where supporters may hold the same seat across a full domestic campaign, Champions League access is shaped by the fixture, the stage of the competition and the club involved.

For buyers, that means the smartest approach is often to focus on the matches you most want to attend rather than expecting one ticket product to cover the full tournament. Some supporters target a specific knockout tie, some want a major league-phase night, and others are looking ahead to premium fixtures later in the competition if their team progresses.

If you are planning multiple Champions League games, flexibility helps. Prices and availability can change significantly depending on the opponent, the venue and how close the match is to kick-off. Watching the market closely and acting when the right listing appears can be the best way to secure seats for the fixtures that matter most to you.

Club rules vary by team, round and season. We can't verify every club's current live policy, so this is best used as a general UCL club criteria table, not as a claim that every club applies every rule in the same way.

Criteria How UCL clubs usually apply it to season pass holders
Season ticket/season pass statusPriority is usually given to current season ticket or season pass holders before the general sale opens
European package opt-inSome clubs require holders to opt into a full European package, covering all home UCL matches
Seat reservation windowSeason pass holders may get first refusal on their usual seat for a limited time before it is released
Attendance historyClubs may prioritise holders with stronger attendance records from league, cup or previous European matches
Loyalty points/membership pointsMany clubs rank season pass holders by loyalty points earned from past home and away attendance
Previous European purchase historyFans who bought Champions League or other European tickets in prior seasons may receive added priority
Ballot eligibilityIf demand exceeds supply, season pass holders may enter a ballot rather than receive guaranteed access
Cup scheme/auto-cup enrollmentSome clubs give priority to supporters already enrolled in domestic cup or European auto-purchase schemes
Payment deadline complianceHolders must usually complete payment within a short sales window or lose priority access
Account standingThe ticketing account must normally be active, valid and free from prior misuse or sanctions
Name matching/ID checksClubs may require the supporter's name to match account details, especially for high-security UCL ties
Ticket limit per accountSeason pass holders are often limited to one ticket per eligible account, especially in high-demand matches
Transfer/forwarding restrictionsSome clubs limit ticket forwarding, resale or transfer for European matches more than for league games
Opponent risk categoryHigh-risk fixtures may have tighter controls, stricter distribution and reduced transfer options
Stage of competitionLeague phase, knockout rounds, semi-finals and finals may all have different priority rules and sales methods
Away-match qualificationFor away UCL tickets, clubs often require season pass status plus a high loyalty-point total
Domestic vs European seat rightsA domestic season pass does not always guarantee the same seat or automatic access for UCL matches
Hospitality exclusion or separationPremium and hospitality inventory may be sold through different channels and not included in season pass priority
Usage requirementsSome clubs require minimum usage of the season pass across the season to retain future priority rights
Non-use penaltiesRepeated failure to use or manage allocated tickets can sometimes reduce future priority or renewal strength

Your Trusted Source for Champions League Tickets

1BoxOffice has been helping fans access live event tickets since 2006. Every Champions League ticket purchased through our platform is covered by a 150% money-back guarantee. Our secure checkout uses SSL encryption, we offer multicurrency support for international buyers, and our customer service team is available to help with any questions about your order.

FAQs About UEFA Champions League Tickets

  • Yes. You can buy UEFA Champions League tickets for non-members on 1BoxOffice. This is useful if you don't have access to club member-only sales, ballots or limited ticket windows.

  • Search your fixture, choose your seats and check out online. No club membership number is required, and a ticket guarantee backs your purchase.

  • Yes. International fans can buy from anywhere using secure payment options, with delivery based on the ticket type listed.

  • Prices vary by club, stadium, seat location and the stage of the competition. League-phase matches can be lower than late knockouts, while quarter-finals, semi-finals and finals typically price higher due to demand.

  • Open the Arsenal vs PSG final listing on 1BoxOffice, compare available seats by stand, section and price and complete checkout. Final tickets often use mobile delivery and strict transfer rules, so always check the listing notes before booking.

  • The Puskás Aréna in Budapest, Hungary, on 30 May 2026, with kick-off at 18:00 CEST. It is the first Champions League final ever held in Hungary.

  • Cheaper options are usually upper-tier seats, less high-profile fixtures and some league-phase games. Prices can also change near kick-off if more inventory becomes available. Keep checking listings and filters.

  • Hospitality tickets are premium packages that may include lounge access, food and drink options and upgraded seating, ideal for corporate guests or special occasions.

  • VIP tickets typically refer to top-tier premium seating, private suites or club-style experiences. Availability depends on the match, venue and the listings on the marketplace.

  • Open the match page for your fixture, then filter listings by stand/section, seat type, quantity, and delivery method. The venue and city are shown on the listing/match page so you can align with travel plans.

  • Away allocations are limited, and rules can be strict. If you're travelling, make sure you buy the correct end. Buying in the home sections can lead to refused entry.

  • Away fans sit in a designated away section set by the home club and stadium operations. Exact blocks vary by venue and match, so always check the listing details and stadium map guidance.

  • Delivery timing depends on the listing type. Many are digital, including e-ticket or mobile transfer options, but some are released closer to matchday. Always read the listing notes before checkout.

  • Bag rules vary by stadium and local security guidance. It's best to bring only a small bag and expect checks. Large backpacks or suitcases may be refused entry.

  • Often yes, but rules vary by stadium, seating area and ticket category. Check the listing details and venue guidance before buying, especially for age categories and entry requirements.

  • It depends on the host city and stadium. Use the match page to confirm the venue, then plan via public transport where possible and arrive early for security checks, especially for knockout matches and high-demand fixtures.

UCL Stadium Seating Maps

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Champions League Teams

Team TicketsHome Ground / StadiumCitySeating Plan
Ajax Tickets---
Arsenal TicketsEmirates Stadium TicketsLondon Events TicketsEmirates Stadium Seating plan
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