Buy Real Madrid vs Girona Tickets on 1BoxOffice and compare Santiago Bernabeu listings by stand, seating tier, delivery method and price before matchday demand tightens. Girona's trips to Madrid changed character after their 2-1 win at the Bernabeu on 17 February 2019, when Stuani, Portu and a Sergio Ramos red card turned the fixture from a routine home date into a more awkward tactical assignment.
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The match at Real Madrid Tickets sits in the mid-tier of the Madrid home calendar. Demand is fed by goal expectation, Girona's recent competitive record and a small but vocal travelling support from Catalonia. The fixture is not a marquee weekend like El Clásico or the Madrid derby, but it is more lively than many meetings with recently promoted sides because Girona have already taken points at this ground.
Real Madrid vs Girona tickets remain in steady resale circulation through matchday week, though the better-positioned longside listings still move first. The pricing spread between upper and lower tiers is wider than for top-four weekends, which gives buyers a longer window to compare sightlines and delivery formats before committing. Girona's 2023/24 Champions League qualification under Míchel also keeps the fixture above a routine mid-table price band, even when the league table softens their immediate demand.
Demand for Girona Tickets at the Bernabeu is driven by three factors: Girona's rise from second-division side to Champions League qualifier inside six seasons, the goal expectation their attacking system produces and the neutral interest that comes with it. Madrid has scored four or more in two of the last four league meetings at home, while Girona's away style often creates a more open tactical contest than buyers expect from a visiting side outside Spain's traditional elite.
Fixture date movement is the main variable. LaLiga confirms broadcast slots roughly two weeks before matchday, so the kick-off window can shift to Friday evening, Saturday afternoon or Sunday night. That flexibility affects both travel cost and pricing curves. Saturday 9 pm kick-offs tend to price slightly higher on hospitality tiers due to dinner-service demand, while Sunday early slots typically attract families and lower-tier longside demand.
A secondary demand driver is Madrid's European calendar. When a Tuesday or Wednesday Champions League tie sits in the same week, hospitality buyers sometimes release weekend Girona seats to prioritise the European trip. That can create short-term movement on premium inventory through the Monday and Tuesday window, which is often when the better-value listings appear for this fixture.
Real Madrid releases the majority of home match tickets through members-only ballots and the club's own site. Madridistas and season-ticket holders get early access, and general sale windows are limited for non-member buyers. Even on a mid-tier fixture like Girona, non-members often find that the better seating areas have cleared before the general window opens.
Verified resale is the practical route for anyone without membership. 1BoxOffice lists seats released by ticket holders at the point they decide not to attend. The range usually covers every tier, and the Girona fixture can offer broader availability across upper-tier, longside standard and premium sections than the derby weekends. Club matchday information changes week to week, so cross-checking the resale market allows buyers to confirm realistic options before committing.
For buyers choosing between regular seating and hospitality, Girona is a useful fixture because the price gap is usually easier to read than it is for derbies. Upper-tier longside listings suit fans who want the full pitch shape, while lower-tier central seats suit visitors who care more about pace, player detail and the bench-side feel of a Madrid home match. Families should check the listing notes for seats together before selecting a block, because late inventory can split groups across adjacent rows.
Five factors shape the resale price for this fixture: seat location within the stadium, overall demand at the point of listing, fixture timing within the broadcast slot, the competition context (whether the match is near a title decision or a Champions League tie) and the hospitality tier chosen. Girona prices sit above routine mid-table fixtures because of the club's recent trajectory, but below derby weekends.
| Ticket Type | Resale Price Range | Best For | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upper tier / less central | £70 – £150 | Budget-conscious buyers and first-time visitors | Widest availability on this fixture |
| Longside standard | £130 – £260 | Balanced sightline and atmosphere | Good value against bigger ties |
| Lower tier / central | £220 – £440+ | Close-range viewing of the action | Less discounted as matchday approaches |
| Premium seating | £420 – £820+ | Comfort, reserved parking access, upgraded service | Includes premium padded seats |
| Hospitality / VIP | £950 – £2,500+ | Corporate or special-occasion buyers | Multiple tiers from sports-bar to fine dining |
Prices reflect typical resale ranges and may change as demand and availability shift closer to the match.
The Bernabeu holds just over 78,000 across three tiers. Choosing a seating area comes down to atmosphere, sightline, cost and hospitality access. The Santiago Bernabeu seating plan shows the four-sided bowl structure and helps buyers compare longside, corner and goal-end views before choosing a block.
The Santiago Bernabeu tickets page groups wider venue listings by area, which is useful when comparing this fixture with other Real Madrid home dates. For Girona, longside upper usually gives the cleanest balance of tactical view and price, while lower longside seats suit buyers who want the speed of Madrid's attack close up.
| Area | What It Suits | Pricing Bracket | General Guidance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Longside lower | Close viewing, strong atmosphere | Mid | Fills up fastest for this fixture |
| Longside upper | Better tactical view | Lower-mid | Good availability late week |
| Behind the goal | Passionate home-support areas | Lower-mid | Limited elevation on front rows |
| Premium seats | Padded seats, lounge access | Upper-mid to high | Includes food and drink options |
| Hospitality | Corporate and special occasions | High | Full matchday package |
| Supporter Type | Suggested Approach |
|---|---|
| Home fans | Any section outside the away allocation; longside upper for a strong budget-to-view balance |
| Away supporters | Designated visiting-fan allocation in the 3rd and 4th stands of the north end, with access through Tower D |
| Neutral buyers | Longside upper or central lower; avoid immediate edge of the away allocation |
Away-fan entry at the Bernabeu is routed through Tower D at the north end of the stadium. Visiting supporters are normally placed in the 3rd and 4th stands of the north end, with a separate allocation, dedicated facilities and security checks before entry.
Neutral buyers who prefer a louder home atmosphere should sit towards the halfway line in the lower or middle tiers rather than along the goal lines. Girona supporters should use the travelling-fan route issued by their club and should avoid buying home-area listings if they plan to wear away colours.
Supporters arriving from Catalonia should leave extra time around Tower D because visiting-fan ticket checks can begin before the main stadium flow is fully open. Buyers holding home-area tickets should not assume they can move between sectors once inside, because the Bernabeu uses controlled circulation on matchdays. Neutral visitors who want to avoid the travelling allocation should choose longside areas or the opposite end rather than corner blocks close to the north-end separation line.
| Hospitality Option | Typical Buyer | Main Appeal |
|---|---|---|
| Sports-bar lounge | Casual corporate groups | Relaxed food, drink and screen coverage before and after the game |
| Premium padded seats | Couples and mid-tier corporate | Upgraded seating with private access routes |
| Fine-dining hospitality | Client entertaining and special occasions | Table-service dinner with wine list and a served seat in premium blocks |
| Tunnel Club-style | High-tier corporate and luxury buyers | Access closer to pitch-level walkways and premium catering |
Hospitality descriptions mirror the club's hospitality pages. Mid-tier LaLiga fixtures typically retain hospitality availability closer to matchday than the derby weekends, which is useful for last-minute corporate bookings without the derby premium attached.
| Delivery Type | What to Check |
|---|---|
| Mobile ticket | Confirm the listing supports mobile delivery for your device and check transfer timing |
| E-ticket / PDF | Verify print quality and entry scanning notes before leaving the hotel |
| Courier / hotel collection | Allow a 24 to 48 hour window and confirm the collection address during booking |
| Paper ticket | Check the delivery window is compatible with your arrival date |
Always read listing notes carefully before purchase, bring a valid photo ID and charge the phone for mobile entry. Screens fade on cold nights, so keep a battery pack on hand for evening kick-offs.
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1BoxOffice is a verified secondary ticket marketplace established in 2006 with a 150% money-back guarantee covering every purchase. Listings are checked for validity before the order ships, and buyer support runs across the matchday window to resolve any delivery or entry issues that come up late in the week.
International buyers get the same delivery options as Spanish residents. Mobile entry covers most stands, and paper tickets or courier collection at the hotel are available when the listing supports it. Delivery windows tighten within 72 hours of kick-off, so overseas buyers booking late should favour mobile or e-ticket listings to avoid shipping risk. Digital delivery clears customs or postal risk entirely, which is why most international buyers default to mobile and email options in the final week.
Seats-together requests are fulfilled when supported by the original listing. Groups of three or more should confirm seat continuity before purchase rather than rely on the default quantity filter. Fixture dates can shift by 24 to 48 hours because LaLiga confirms broadcast slots roughly two weeks before matchday, so international travellers should hold flexible flights and refundable accommodation until the final kick-off time is confirmed.
Madrid Barajas airport sits roughly 30 minutes from the stadium by taxi or via Metro Line 8 with a change at Nuevos Ministerios. Hotel districts around Paseo de la Castellana, Plaza de Castilla and Nuevos Ministerios keep travellers within walking distance or a single Metro stop from the ground. Matchday transport holds up well at the Bernabeu because Line 10 stops directly under the stadium, and returning fans typically clear the area inside 40 to 60 minutes after the final whistle.
Girona are a recent addition to top-flight Spanish football compared with most of Madrid's league rivals. The Catalan club earned their first LaLiga promotion in 2017 under Pablo Machin and produced an immediate impact, finishing 10th in 2017/18.
The ownership link with City Football Group, established in 2017, accelerated the club's infrastructure investment and scouting network. Míchel Sánchez then rebuilt the side after a Segunda spell, leading Girona to third place in 2023/24 and a first Champions League qualification. That rise is the main reason this fixture now carries more market weight than a normal mid-table visit.
The Bernabeu rivalry in LaLiga began on 18 March 2018 when Madrid won 6-3 in one of the highest-scoring home league games of that era. Cristiano Ronaldo scored four times, Lucas Vazquez and Gareth Bale added the other two and Stuani, Portu, and Juanpe replied for Girona.
Ronaldo's four-goal haul came during the run-in to his final Bernabeu season before his move to Juventus. It remains the individual highlight of any Madrid-Girona league meeting at this ground and showed from the start that Girona were not going to defend passively.
The most notable Bernabeu result for Girona came on 17 February 2019. Cristhian Stuani converted from the penalty spot, Sergio Ramos was sent off for a second yellow card, and Portu added the decisive goal after the break.
Casemiro pulled one back, but Madrid could not find an equaliser and the match ended 1-2. It was Girona's first LaLiga win at the Bernabeu, it came during Santiago Solari's spell after Julen Lopetegui's dismissal, and it remains the reference point for buyers who want a fixture with more tension than the table sometimes suggests.
Girona were relegated in 2018/19 and spent three seasons in Segunda before returning in 2022/23. The Bernabeu meeting on 30 October 2022 ended 1-1, giving Girona another result that strengthened the fixture's awkward profile for Madrid.
Madrid then won 4-0 on 10 February 2024 during Girona's historic Champions League-qualifying season. Jude Bellingham scored a first-half brace, Vinicius Junior and Rodrygo added the third and fourth,th and the result showed the gap that can still open when Madrid controls the first hour.
The February 2025 return was a 2-0 Madrid win through Luka Modric and Vinicius. The 10 April 2026 meeting ended 1-1, with Federico Valverde scoring for Madrid and Thomas Lemar equalising for Girona in a match that dented Madrid's title chase.
The historical pattern produces a clear buyer profile. Girona's league position moves the pricing curve more than it does for most Bernabeu visitors, because their demand changes sharply when they enter the match in European contention.
When Girona arrive near the top half, lower-tier central seats and premium longside blocks usually move earlier in the listing cycle. When they arrive closer to the bottom half, upper-tier value windows can stay open further into matchday week.
What distinguishes this fixture from Madrid's other mid-table LaLiga ties is the combination of attacking intent from both sides and the rare but present threat of a Girona upset. The Bernabeu crowd responds to this pattern, and buyers can expect an engaged stadium even when the scoreline tilts heavily in Madrid's favour.
The fixture, therefore, sits as a moderately high-goal, largely home-dominated tie with a single-result outlier that keeps the commercial profile higher than a straight form comparison would suggest. It is especially attractive for travellers who want the Bernabeu experience without paying derby prices.
Sources checked: Real Madrid match reports, ESPN match reports, Sports Mole head-to-head records and LaLiga fixture history.
| Metric | Total |
|---|---|
| Matches played | 6 |
| Home wins | 3 |
| Away wins | 1 |
| Draws | 2 |
| Home goals | 15 |
| Away goals | 7 |
| Biggest home win | 4-0 |
| Biggest away win | 1-2 |
| First La Liga meeting at current stadium | 18 Mar 2018 |
| Most recently played home La Liga meeting | 10 Apr 2026 |
Figures are calculated from the match-by-match data below. The dataset is naturally short because Girona first reached LaLiga in 2017 and had a later spell back in Segunda, so there are no Bernabeu league meetings before 2018.
| Date | Fixture | Result |
|---|---|---|
| 10 Apr 2026 | Real Madrid vs Girona | 1-1 |
| 23 Feb 2025 | Real Madrid vs Girona | 2-0 |
| 10 Feb 2024 | Real Madrid vs Girona | 4-0 |
| 30 Oct 2022 | Real Madrid vs Girona | 1-1 |
| 17 Feb 2019 | Real Madrid vs Girona | 1-2 |
| 18 Mar 2018 | Real Madrid vs Girona | 6-3 |
The table uses Bernabeu league meetings only, which is why the sample begins in 2018 rather than 2006. Girona were not a LaLiga club before their 2017 promotion, and later Segunda seasons also reduced the available fixture set.
Scores are cross-checked against ESPN, Real Madrid match reports and Sports Mole head-to-head records. Cup fixtures and pandemic-era matches away from the Bernabeu are excluded, so the table reflects the actual venue experience buyers are evaluating.
Because the fixture history is short, the match-by-match table is more useful as a buyer signal than as a deep rivalry record. Two draws and one Girona win across six Bernabeu league meetings explain why the page should not be treated like a routine home-bank fixture, while Madrid's three wins show why pricing still sits well below the derby tier. The result spread also helps buyers decide whether to pay more for a lower-tier atmosphere or stay higher for a broader view of Girona's passing structure.
Yes. Resale inventory on verified marketplaces lists tickets released by members and season-ticket holders who cannot attend. The Girona fixture typically retains non-member availability closer to matchday than the derby weekends.
International buyers can purchase in any currency supported at checkout. Delivery favours mobile or e-ticket listings close to matchday, while courier collection works well for buyers arriving several days in advance.
Seat location, fixture timing, overall demand at listing, hospitality tier and proximity to a Champions League tie are the five main factors. Girona's league position also moves the curve because demand rises sharply when the Catalan side is in European contention.
Upper-tier longside and upper-tier corner seats consistently offer one of the better-value routes. Buying in even-numbered groups also tends to reduce the per-ticket price against single or odd-numbered listings.
Yes. Hospitality packages run from sports-bar lounges through premium padded seats to fine-dining experiences and pitch-level tunnel access. Availability usually holds closer to matchday for fixtures outside the derby weekends.
Typical inclusions are a reserved seat, pre-match and half-time food and drink service, access to a private lounge and event staff support throughout the matchday window. Higher tiers include full dinner service and wine.
VIP options include premium seat locations, private-entry routes, upgraded food and drink, parking access at some tiers and a dedicated service team. Specifics vary by listing, so read the package notes before purchase.
Yes. Resale inventory typically covers every seating tier for this fixture, from upper-tier longside through to hospitality. Listings refresh most heavily in the week before matchday.
The North Stand, East Stand and West Stand are the main home areas. The South Stand contains the away allocation on matchday, with the rest of that stand populated by home supporters outside the allocation footprint.
Away supporters are normally placed in the 3rd and 4th stands of the north end, with access through Tower D. The visiting allocation is separated from home areas by stadium staff, security barriers and police controls.
Wearing any colours is permitted in most home sections, though visible away colours directly alongside home-only blocks are better left covered until entry to the away allocation. Stadium stewards can also advise on the day.
No. Away-allocation seats are for travelling supporters only. The ticketing system enforces the split, and stewards may refuse entry to buyers visibly supporting the home side in the away block.
Girona receive a travelling-fan allocation through their own ticketing channels. Most of those seats are issued to registered Girona supporters, with limited release to neutral sellers on the resale market.
Yes, when the listing supports the requested quantity. Buyers looking for groups of three or more should confirm seat continuity with the listing notes or use the contiguous-seat filter when available.
Mobile, e-ticket, courier collection and paper delivery are the main formats. Digital delivery dominates in the final week before matchday, while courier collection works for buyers in Madrid from several days out.
Some listings support instant delivery. Look for the label on the listing before purchase and confirm compatibility with your device for mobile entry.
Two to three weeks before kick-off typically offers a better balance of selection and price. Waiting until the final 48 hours can produce lower prices, but a reduced choice of seat blocks.
Small bags are permitted through stadium security, and larger bags may be restricted or subject to search. Plan for tighter checks on evening kick-offs and keep valuables on your person where possible.
Yes. Children are permitted, and family-friendly seating areas are available in most stands. Buyers should confirm age-based pricing rules on the listing before purchase.
Metro Line 10 stops at Santiago Bernabeu station directly under the stadium. Several Madrid bus routes serve the area, and taxi pick-up zones operate north of the ground. From Barajas airport, Metro Line 8 connects via Nuevos Ministerios with a single change.
Data sourced from LaLiga fixture records, ESPN match reports and Sports Mole head-to-head statistics.
Compare Real Madrid vs Girona tickets on 1BoxOffice before the better-positioned Bernabeu listings thin out. 1BoxOffice is a verified marketplace established in 2006, with secure checkout and 150% money-back guarantee on qualifying orders.