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Europa-Park Stadium Tickets

Europa-Park Stadion is the home of SC Freiburg, a modern 34,700-capacity ground in the sunny south-west corner of Germany that opened in 2021 and set a new standard for the sustainable stadium. Demand for Europa-Park Stadion tickets is driven by a well-run Bundesliga club with a loyal following, the huge standing terrace behind one goal, and the visits of Bayern Munich and the other big German sides, along with the European nights the club has earned in recent seasons. The ground is famous for one of the largest solar roofs in the world and for free matchday travel, in a city that is the green capital of Germany. 1BoxOffice is a verified secondary marketplace established in 2006, with seat-level detail at checkout and a 150% money-back guarantee if a ticket fails to grant entry on matchday.

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This guide is written for the supporter making the trip, not the browser. It covers the tram that runs to the ground and the free travel included with the ticket, how the four stands are arranged around the South Stand terrace, where away fans sit, the bag rules and the entry process, the food and wine of Baden and the Black Forest, and the story of a new ground built for a modern era. By the end you should know how an SC Freiburg matchday runs.

Europa-Park Stadion at a Glance

DetailInformation
Full NameEuropa-Park Stadion
LocationWolfswinkel, Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany
Capacity34,700, including a standing terrace of around 12,400
Opened7 October 2021
ArchitectHPP Architekten
SurfaceNatural grass
Home ClubSC Freiburg
Home EndSouth Stand, an 8,000-capacity single-tier terrace
FeatureOne of the largest solar roofs in the world
Nearest StationA dedicated tram stop at the stadium

How to Get There

Europa-Park Stadion sits in the Wolfswinkel area on the north-western edge of Freiburg, near the small Freiburg airport and the university engineering faculty, a little way out from the historic centre, but it is superbly connected by the city's tram network. The most useful thing to know is that a Bundesliga matchday ticket includes free travel on the regional public transport, so check your ticket before buying a separate fare. Freiburg is also one of the great cycling cities of Germany, and the ground has thousands of bike parking spaces.

By Tram

A dedicated tram stop was built at the stadium as part of the Freiburg Stadtbahn network, so the tram runs right to the ground from the centre and the main railway station, which is by far the easiest way in. The tram is frequent on matchday and covered by the free-travel ticket, so simply ride to the stadium stop and walk the short distance to the turnstiles. It is a model of how to connect a new ground to its city.

By Bike and on Foot

Freiburg is the cycling capital of Germany, and the stadium reflects it, with around 3,700 bicycle parking spaces, so many home supporters ride to the match. For visitors staying nearby the ground is walkable, though it is a fair distance from the historic centre, so the tram is the better bet from the middle of the city. The flat, cycle-friendly layout of Freiburg makes riding to the match a genuine option.

By Train and from the Airports

Freiburg Hauptbahnhof, the main railway station, is well connected to the German rail network and to Basel and beyond, and the tram runs from the station to the ground. The nearest major airport is the EuroAirport at Basel-Mulhouse, around seventy kilometres to the south on the French and Swiss border, with Zurich, Stuttgart and Strasbourg also within reach. From Basel the train up to Freiburg is quick, making this an accessible fixture for overseas visitors.

By Car

By road Freiburg is reached on the A5 motorway that runs down the Rhine valley, and the ground has nine car parks providing around 2,100 paid spaces that can be booked for matchday, along with park-and-ride options nearby. The car parks fill for a sell-out and the roads around the ground get busy, so with the free tram travel included in the ticket, most supporters find the tram far easier than driving and parking. Drivers should book a space in advance and arrive early.

Parking

Parking at Europa-Park Stadion is well organised for a modern ground, with nine car parks offering around 2,100 paid spaces that can be booked in advance for matchday, plus park-and-ride options on the approaches to the city. Even so, the spaces are limited for a sell-out and fill early, and the roads around the ground clear slowly afterwards. With the free regional travel that comes with the ticket and the tram running to the door, the tram is almost always the easier choice, but for those coming from outside the city the bookable car parks are a well-run option if you arrive in good time.

Seating Guide

Europa-Park Stadion is a modern rectangular ground with continuous upper and lower tiers around most of the pitch and a large single-tier terrace behind one goal, built close to the pitch to generate a strong atmosphere. The four stands are named by direction, and the South Stand terrace is the heart of the noise. As a new ground it has excellent sightlines and facilities throughout, with few poor seats, and the standing terrace gives it the feel of a proper German football ground.

South Stand, the Home Terrace

The South Stand behind one goal is a single-tier standing terrace holding around 8,000, the home of SC Freiburg's ultras and the loudest part of the ground. This is where the flags, the banners and the constant singing come from, and it is the section to target for the fullest atmosphere, in the German tradition of the huge standing end. Standing places sell fastest and convert to seats for European fixtures under the competition rules.

Main Stand and Sides

The West stand along one long side is the main stand, holding the premium and hospitality seating, the media positions and the tunnel, so it carries the higher-priced seats and the best facilities, with a strong central view along the length of the pitch. The East stand and the North stand complete the two-tier bowl around the rest of the ground, offering good views in a calmer setting than the South terrace. As a new ground, all the seated areas have clear sightlines.

Away Fans and Accessibility

Away supporters are housed in the corner between the North and East stands, across both tiers, with a mix of safe-standing rails and seating and a spacious modern concourse, with an allocation that varies by fixture. For a big Bundesliga match or a European tie the arrangement can change, so away fans should check the details for the specific game. As a modern ground the stadium has strong accessibility provision, including wheelchair-user positions with companion spaces, though published detail on exact numbers is limited, so supporters with access requirements should contact the club before the match. The table below matches a section to what you want from the day.

PriorityRecommended Sections
AtmosphereSouth Stand, the standing terrace
Tactical overviewWest main stand or the North stand, central rows
Close to pitchFront rows of the lower tier along the sides
Calmer viewEast or North stand seated areas
Budget-friendlyStanding places and upper corners
Away fansCorner between the North and East stands
AccessibilityWheelchair-user bays with companion spaces (request at purchase)

Weather and Roof Coverage

Freiburg is one of the warmest and sunniest cities in Germany, in the Breisgau at the edge of the Black Forest, with pleasant summers and cool winters that can turn cold and occasionally bring snow. The roof, which carries the huge solar array, covers the stands well and keeps most of the crowd dry, a genuine advantage over an open ground, though the standing terrace can catch wind-driven rain at the front. For an autumn or winter fixture a warm layer and a waterproof are sensible, especially on the terrace, while summer and early-season matches are usually comfortable under the covered stands.

Bag Policy

Like other Bundesliga grounds, Europa-Park Stadion runs a firm bag policy with searches on entry, so the sensible approach is to travel light. Large bags and rucksacks are best left at your accommodation, since oversized bags are refused and there is no guarantee of a bag store. Standard prohibited items apply, including bottles, cans, outside alcohol, pyrotechnics and flares, and any object judged dangerous. The concourses take card and contactless payment. Check the club's matchday guidance for the current bag size limit before you travel, and arrive early to clear the search on a busy day.

Food, Drink and Bars

Freiburg is a delightful city in the Baden wine region on the edge of the Black Forest, with a superb food and drink scene, and the ground itself is out towards the airport with the fuller choice in the historic centre. Building the day around the old town, with the free tram out to the ground, is the natural approach.

Baden Food and Wine

The Baden region around Freiburg is one of the great wine areas of Germany, and the city and the Black Forest are known for hearty local food, from the famous Black Forest gateau and smoked ham to Flammkuchen and Baden specialities, along with the crisp local white wines. The old town of Freiburg, around the Münster cathedral and the historic market, is full of restaurants, wine bars and taverns, a fine place to eat and drink before travelling out to the match on the tram.

Bars in the Old Town

The centre of Freiburg, one of the most attractive university cities in Germany with its cobbled streets and the little Bächle water channels, has plenty of bars, beer gardens and cafes that fill with supporters on matchday. Because the ground is out of the centre, gathering in the old town before riding the tram out is the norm, and the free-travel ticket makes it simple. The city's relaxed, sunny atmosphere makes for an enjoyable build-up.

Food Inside the Ground

Inside the arena the concourses are modern and serve German matchday fare of sausages, pretzels, chips and beer, with card and contactless payment throughout. As a new ground the facilities are excellent. For a fuller meal, eat in the old town or the Black Forest villages beforehand, where the choice runs from traditional Baden dishes to international food, then take the tram to the stadium.

Entry Process and Gate Times

SC Freiburg use digital ticketing, so for most fixtures the barcode sits in your phone wallet or the club's app and is scanned at the turnstile. Load the ticket, charge your phone and turn the screen brightness up before you reach the entrance, since a saved screenshot can fail to scan when a barcode refreshes. Gates open ahead of kick-off to let the crowd filter in, and with a bag search and a crowd arriving by tram at once, the entrances get busy in the last half hour. Aim to be at the ground in good time rather than joining the final rush from the tram stop, particularly for a big Bundesliga or European night.

Getting Away After the Match

Leaving a modern ground on the edge of the city means relying mainly on the tram, which is quick and included in the ticket.

By Tram

The tram from the stadium stop runs back towards the centre and the main railway station after the match, and the free travel included with the ticket covers the return. The platforms are busy immediately after a sell-out, so either move quickly with the first wave or wait a few minutes for the initial crush to clear before heading back into the city. The frequent service means you are never held up for long.

By Bike and Car

Cyclists collect their bikes from the thousands of spaces at the ground and ride back on Freiburg's excellent cycle network. Drivers should expect the car parks and the surrounding roads to clear slowly when a full house leaves at once, so following the signed routes back to the A5 is the quickest way out, but the tram avoids the congestion entirely.

Rounding Off the Evening

The natural way to end a matchday is to ride the tram back into the old town and settle into a wine bar or a beer garden in one of the most pleasant city centres in Germany. The simplest way to beat any post-match crowd is to let the first wave clear before heading back, and with the free travel and the frequent trams there is no rush. Freiburg's relaxed evening scene makes for an easy end to the day.

Stadium History

Europa-Park Stadion opened on 7 October 2021 as the new home of SC Freiburg, replacing the old Dreisamstadion, a small and much-loved ground that had served the club since the 1950s but had become too cramped and outdated for the modern Bundesliga, with a sloping pitch and a limited capacity. The new stadium was built in the Wolfswinkel area towards the airport to a design by HPP Architekten, giving the club a modern 34,700-capacity ground with a huge standing terrace and excellent facilities, and it took its name from the Europa-Park theme park, the largest in Germany, in nearby Rust.

The ground quickly became known for more than football. Its roof carries one of the largest solar arrays of any stadium in the world, a system of around 2.4 megawatts that reflects Freiburg's status as the green capital of Germany, a city long associated with solar energy and sustainability. Combined with the free matchday public transport, the thousands of bicycle parking spaces and the modern, efficient design, the stadium has become a model of the sustainable arena, admired well beyond the game.

SC Freiburg themselves are one of the most respected clubs in Germany, run with a stability and a long-term vision that have kept a modestly resourced club competitive in the Bundesliga and taken them into European competition in recent seasons, with the European nights at the new ground among its early highlights. The move from the intimate Dreisamstadion to the Europa-Park Stadion marked a new era, and the club has carried the character of its old home into a modern setting, with the South Stand terrace at the heart of it.

Memorable Matches

As a new ground opened in 2021, the Europa-Park Stadion has a short but growing history, verified by contemporary records. Its early highlights have been SC Freiburg's European nights, when the club qualified for the Europa League and brought continental football to the new stadium for the first time, with the South Stand terrace in full voice against visitors from across the continent. The visits of Bayern Munich and the other leading Bundesliga clubs have produced the biggest league occasions, and the ground has also hosted the Germany national team, adding international football to its record in its first seasons.

Stadium Future

Europa-Park Stadion is a new, modern and highly sustainable ground, so there is no question of a rebuild, and its future lies in establishing itself as one of the best mid-sized stadiums in Germany. The design and the solar roof have already made it a landmark of the sustainable arena, and any future work is likely to be a matter of refining the facilities rather than structural change. The ground gives SC Freiburg a stable, modern home for the long term, and for now it remains the settled base of the club, admired as much for its environmental credentials as for its football.

Accessibility

As a stadium opened in 2021, Europa-Park Stadion has strong accessibility provision designed into a modern ground, including wheelchair-user positions with companion spaces, accessible facilities and step-free access, helped by the level approach from the tram stop. The exact number and location of accessible spaces are not widely published, so supporters with access requirements should contact the club well before the match to confirm the available seating, arrange any companion ticket and check the route into the ground. The dedicated tram stop and the free matchday travel make reaching the ground more manageable than at many older stadiums, and the club can advise on the most suitable arrangement for a given fixture.

High-Demand Fixtures and Pricing

The fixtures that move Europa-Park Stadion tickets fastest are the visits of the biggest Bundesliga clubs and SC Freiburg's European nights. The match against Bayern Munich is the standout league draw, and you can follow it on the Freiburg vs Bayern Munich tickets page, with the visitors' own listings on the Bayern Munich tickets page, along with other home games such as the Freiburg vs Werder Bremen tickets fixture. The full home programme sits on the SC Freiburg tickets and Bundesliga tickets listings. The club's continental campaigns bring the knockout and group nights of the Europa League tickets calendar to the ground, where the terrace is at its loudest. Early-season fixtures against mid-table sides are the most accessible and sometimes available closer to kick-off. Secondary-market prices move with demand, so treat any figure as indicative rather than fixed and buy early for the marquee matches.

Buying Europa-Park Stadion Tickets on 1BoxOffice

1BoxOffice is a verified secondary marketplace that has operated since 2006, showing seat-level detail before you pay and backing every order with a 150% money-back guarantee if a ticket fails to grant entry on matchday. The eight steps below cover the process from finding a fixture to tracking your order.

Step1

Find the fixture
Go to the Europa-Park Stadion listing on 1BoxOffice and select the match you want. Each fixture shows the available stands, rows and current pricing before you commit to a seat.

Step2

Check the seat detail
Use the stand and price filters to compare sections. Seat location and row are shown against the venue layout, so you can weigh the South Stand terrace against a calmer main-stand seat before deciding.

Step3

Confirm the supporter section
Make sure the block matches who you are travelling with. Home and visiting-supporter areas are listed separately, and away fans are routed to the corner between the North and East stands.

Step4

Review before checkout
Check the delivery method and the kick-off time against your travel plans, and note that your ticket includes free regional transport. Bundesliga and European kick-off times can shift with broadcast scheduling, so verify the date and time before you book travel or a hotel.

Step5

Create your account
First-time buyers should create an account to complete checkout and receive the ticket. Returning customers simply log in. An account keeps your order and delivery details in one place.

Step6

Complete payment
All major credit and debit cards are accepted. The 150% money-back guarantee applies automatically to every order if the ticket fails to grant entry on matchday.

Step7

Receive your ticket
Tickets for SC Freiburg fixtures are typically issued digitally. Keep the live ticket in your wallet or the club's app ready to scan, and avoid relying on a saved screenshot that may fail at the turnstile.

Step8

Track your order
Follow delivery status and manage your booking through track order. Digital tickets arrive ahead of the match so you can travel with everything ready.

Tips for International Visitors

Freiburg makes a rewarding football trip, one of the most attractive and sunniest cities in Germany, on the edge of the Black Forest and close to France and Switzerland. Fly into the EuroAirport at Basel, around seventy kilometres south, and take the train up to Freiburg, or use Zurich, Stuttgart or Strasbourg. Base yourself in or near the old town, with the free tram out to the ground on matchday. Remember that a Bundesliga ticket includes free regional public transport, that the concourses are cashless so a contactless card is essential, and that the ground is out towards the airport rather than in the centre. Pack a warm layer for an autumn or winter fixture, especially on the terrace, and set aside time for the Black Forest and the wines of Baden.

With the region rich in things to see, many supporters build a longer trip around the match. If you are lining up other fixtures, the football tickets hub, the wider football tournaments calendar and the venues tickets directory show what else is on, while tournament travellers follow the World Cup tickets hub. In and around Freiburg, the Münster cathedral and the old town with its Bächle water channels, the heights of the Schlossberg, the Europa-Park theme park in nearby Rust and the villages and trails of the Black Forest all reward a matchday trip to the region.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Europa-Park Stadion holds 34,700, including a large standing terrace of around 12,400 in the South Stand for Bundesliga matches, which converts to seats for European fixtures. Opened in 2021, it is a modern ground with excellent sightlines and one of the largest solar roofs of any stadium in the world.

  • Take the tram to the dedicated stadium stop, built on the Freiburg Stadtbahn network, which runs from the centre and the main railway station right to the ground. The tram is frequent and covered by the free-travel ticket. Freiburg is also a great cycling city, and the ground has around 3,700 bicycle parking spaces.

  • Yes. A Bundesliga matchday ticket includes free travel on the regional public transport network, which covers the tram to and from the ground. Check your ticket for the details, and note that the scheme may not apply to some cup or friendly fixtures. It is a long-standing feature of German football and makes reaching the ground simple.

  • Yes, there are nine car parks with around 2,100 paid spaces that can be booked in advance for matchday, plus park-and-ride options nearby. They fill for a sell-out and the roads clear slowly afterwards. With free tram travel included in the ticket, the tram is usually the easier choice, but the bookable car parks are well organised for those who drive.

  • Yes, though members and season-ticket holders get first access and the biggest fixtures sell out fast at a ground with a loyal following. Public sales for remaining tickets are limited, which is why a verified secondary marketplace is often the realistic route for visitors, with seat detail shown before you pay.

  • Travel light, as large bags and rucksacks are refused and there is no guarantee of a bag store. Expect a search at the entrance. Bottles, cans, outside alcohol, pyrotechnics and flares are prohibited. The concourses are cashless, so bring a contactless card. Check the club's matchday guidance for the current bag size limit before you travel.

  • The South Stand, a single-tier standing terrace holding around 8,000, is the home of SC Freiburg's ultras and the loudest part of the ground, with flags, banners and constant singing. Target it for the fullest atmosphere. The seated stands are calmer and better suited to a clear tactical view of the game.

  • Visiting supporters are housed in the corner between the North and East stands, across both tiers, with a mix of safe-standing rails and seating and a spacious modern concourse. The allocation varies by fixture, and can change for a big Bundesliga match or a European tie, so away fans should check the details for the specific game.

  • Yes. As a ground opened in 2021 it has strong accessibility provision designed in, including wheelchair-user positions with companion spaces and step-free access helped by the level approach from the tram stop. The exact number of spaces is not widely published, so contact the club before the match to confirm the seating and arrange it in advance.

  • Gates open ahead of kick-off to let the crowd in, typically around an hour and a half before a Bundesliga match. With a bag search and a crowd arriving by tram at once, the entrances get busy in the last half hour, so aim to arrive in good time. The precise opening time is confirmed with your ticket.

  • The concourses are cashless and serve German matchday fare of sausages, pretzels, chips and beer. The real draw is the old town of Freiburg, in the Baden wine region on the edge of the Black Forest, with its restaurants, wine bars and taverns serving local specialities. Eat and drink in the centre before riding the tram out to the ground.

  • The roof of Europa-Park Stadion carries one of the largest solar arrays of any stadium in the world, a system of around 2.4 megawatts, reflecting Freiburg's status as the green capital of Germany and a leader in solar energy. Combined with free matchday travel and thousands of bike spaces, it makes the ground a model of the sustainable stadium.

  • SC Freiburg moved to the Europa-Park Stadion in October 2021, from the old Dreisamstadion, a small and much-loved ground that had become too cramped and outdated for the modern Bundesliga, with a sloping pitch. The new stadium gave the club a modern home with a large standing terrace while keeping the character of the old ground.

  • Face-value Bundesliga prices at Freiburg are reasonable by European standards, with the standing places among the cheapest tickets in top-flight football. Resale prices depend heavily on the opponent, with Bayern Munich, the big clubs and European nights the most expensive. Secondary-market prices move with demand, so treat any figure as indicative rather than a promise.

  • The old town around the Münster cathedral is the best base, with plenty of hotels and easy tram links out to the ground and the free travel included in the ticket. Staying central puts you among the wine bars, restaurants and sights of one of the most attractive cities in Germany, and the tram makes the trip to the stadium simple.

  • SC Freiburg issue tickets digitally, so the barcode sits in your phone wallet or the club's app and is scanned at the turnstile. Charge your phone, turn up the screen brightness and load the ticket before you arrive. A saved screenshot can fail to scan when a barcode refreshes, so rely on the live ticket.

  • It is known as one of the most sustainable stadiums in the world, with one of the largest solar roofs of any ground, free matchday travel and thousands of bike spaces, in the green city of Freiburg. It is also known for the large South Stand terrace, the home of SC Freiburg, and for opening in 2021 as a modern replacement for the old Dreisamstadion.

  • The ground is out towards the airport, so the attractions are in the city and the region. The Münster cathedral and the old town of Freiburg with its Bächle water channels, the Schlossberg heights, the Europa-Park theme park in nearby Rust and the villages and trails of the Black Forest all reward a matchday trip to the Breisgau.

  • Europa-Park Stadion opened on 7 October 2021 as the home of SC Freiburg, replacing the old Dreisamstadion. It is the home of SC Freiburg in the Bundesliga, a modern 34,700-capacity ground designed by HPP Architekten, and it also hosts the Germany national team on occasion.

  • They are as safe as the marketplace you use. A verified marketplace shows seat details before checkout, confirms sellers and offers a money-back policy if the ticket fails to admit you. 1BoxOffice has operated since 2006 and applies a 150% money-back guarantee. Avoid anonymous sellers who will not show seat details before payment.

Sources: SC Freiburg (scfreiburg.com), club matchday guidance, RVF and Freiburg Stadtbahn transport, Bundesliga and stadium reference records. Information was gathered in July 2026 and may change; check sources for the latest details. 1BoxOffice is not affiliated with SC Freiburg or Europa-Park Stadion. All trademarks belong to their respective owners.

Europa-Park Stadion Tickets | SC Freiburg