
Buy Ligue 1 tickets for the 2025/26 season on 1BoxOffice. French football's top division features 18 clubs playing 306 matches from August 2025 to May 2026, with the title race, European qualification and relegation all running until the final weeks. Compare available listings by seat location, price, delivery type and quantity before you book.
Whether you are looking for Paris Saint-Germain, Marseille, Lyon, Monaco or Lille tickets, 1BoxOffice connects you to verified listings across the full 306-match Ligue 1 schedule.
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Ligue 1 ticket prices on the resale market vary depending on the club, the opponent, the seat location and the level of demand. Matches involving PSG and the major derby fixtures consistently carry higher pricing than standard league games. Compared to the Premier League and La Liga, Ligue 1 tickets are generally more affordable, making it an attractive option for fans looking to experience top-level European football live.
| Fixture Type | Resale Range (GBP) |
| PSG home match (lower-demand opponent) | £50 - £130 |
| PSG home match (high-demand opponent) | £100 - £350+ |
| Le Classique (PSG vs Marseille) | £150 - £500+ |
| Other top-club home match | £30 - £100 |
| Mid-table home match | £20 - £70 |
| Newly promoted club home match | £15 - £50 |
| Hospitality/VIP packages | £300 - £2,000+ |
These are indicative resale ranges, not fixed prices. Live listings on 1BoxOffice may sit above or below these figures depending on supply and demand at any given time.
For a premium matchday experience, hospitality packages are available at select Ligue 1 stadiums, most notably at the Parc des Princes in Paris and the Orange Velodrome in Marseille. These typically include padded or club-level seating, access to a private lounge or restaurant area, pre-match dining and drinks and dedicated entrances.
| Hospitality Tier | Typical Resale Range (GBP) |
| Entry-level hospitality | £120 - £300 |
| Mid-range hospitality | £350 - £700 |
| Premium hospitality (Le Classique/top fixture) | £700 - £1,500 |
| Top-tier VIP / private box | £1,500 - £3,000+ |
Hospitality demand is highest for Le Classique, the Derby du Nord (Lille vs Lens) and end-of-season fixtures where European places or relegation are at stake. Booking through 1BoxOffice lets you compare hospitality options across different clubs and fixtures.
PSG won the 2024/25 Ligue 1, their 13th French championship and fourth consecutive title. Luis Enrique guided the club to the trophy with six matches to spare, clinching it via a 1-0 victory over Angers on 5 April 2025. PSG also won the Champions League for the first time in May 2025, completing a historic treble alongside the Coupe de France. Ousmane Dembele led the league scoring charts with 21 goals.
| Pos | Club | Key Detail |
| 1st | Paris Saint-Germain | 13th title; first-ever Champions League; historic treble |
| 2nd | Marseille | Champions League qualification under Roberto De Zerbi |
| 3rd | Monaco | Champions League qualification |
| Relegated | Montpellier | Relegated after 16 years in the top flight |
| Relegated | Saint-Etienne | Relegated after one year back in Ligue 1 |
| Relegated | Reims | Relegated after seven seasons |
The three promoted clubs for 2025/26 are Lorient, Paris FC and Metz. Both Lorient and Metz returned after single-season absences, while Paris FC's promotion marked a return to the top flight after 46 years, creating a new Parisian derby storyline with PSG. Paris FC's new ownership by the Arnault family and Red Bull has fuelled ambition, with the club relocating to the Stade Jean-Bouin alongside the Parc des Princes.
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The 2025/26 Ligue 1 season runs from 15 August 2025 to 16 May 2026, with each of the 18 clubs playing 34 matches. The season is split into the aller (first 17 matchdays, where each team plays every opponent once) and the retour (the reverse fixtures in the second half). Most fixtures take place on weekends, with occasional midweek rounds scheduled around European commitments.
All major clubs, including PSG, Marseille, Lyon, Monaco and Lille, are competing in another tightly contested campaign with the title, European places and relegation all to be decided.
Yes. Official club sales in France often operate through club membership programmes and priority windows that can be difficult for occasional buyers or international fans to access. A ticket marketplace like 1BoxOffice gives you an alternative route.
You can compare available listings for any Ligue 1 fixture without needing a French club membership, review seating locations and delivery methods, and complete your purchase securely online.
International supporters make up a significant portion of Ligue 1 matchday attendees, particularly at PSG, Marseille and Monaco home matches. Many use 1BoxOffice because it allows them to compare and buy tickets from anywhere in the world without needing a French address or club membership.
If you are travelling from overseas, pay close attention to the delivery type on each listing (mobile transfer, e-ticket or physical post), any identification requirements at the turnstile and the ease of reaching stadiums outside Paris by TGV or domestic flight. Ligue 1 clubs are spread across France, from Brest on the Atlantic coast to Strasbourg near the German border, so plan your travel if you intend to visit multiple venues.
| Season | Champion | Runner-Up |
| 2024/25 | Paris Saint-Germain | Marseille |
| 2023/24 | Paris Saint-Germain | Monaco |
| 2022/23 | Paris Saint-Germain | Lens |
| 2021/22 | Paris Saint-Germain | Marseille |
| 2020/21 | Lille | Paris Saint-Germain |
| 2019/20 | Paris Saint-Germain | Marseille |
| 2018/19 | Paris Saint-Germain | Lille |
| 2017/18 | Paris Saint-Germain | Monaco |
| 2016/17 | Monaco | Paris Saint-Germain |
| 2015/16 | Paris Saint-Germain | Lyon |
| 2014/15 | Paris Saint-Germain | Lyon |
| 2013/14 | Paris Saint-Germain | Monaco |
| 2012/13 | Paris Saint-Germain | Marseille |
| 2011/12 | Montpellier | Paris Saint-Germain |
| 2010/11 | Lille | Marseille |
| 2009/10 | Marseille | Lyon |
| 2008/09 | Bordeaux | Marseille |
| 2007/08 | Lyon | Bordeaux |
| 2006/07 | Lyon | Marseille |
| 2005/06 | Lyon | Bordeaux |
PSG have won 11 of the last 13 Ligue 1 titles. Only Lille (2020/21) and Monaco (2016/17) have broken their dominance during that period. Before PSG's modern era, Lyon held the record for consecutive titles with seven in a row from 2001/02 to 2007/08, a feat unmatched in French football history.
French professional football began in 1932, two years after the National Council of the French Football Federation voted to adopt professionalism. The first professional season, then called the National, kicked off on 11 September 1932 with 20 teams. Olympique Lillois, a predecessor of modern-day Lille, won the inaugural title. The competition was renamed Division 1 after one season and held that name for nearly 70 years before becoming Ligue 1 in 2002.
Before the professional era, France had an amateur football championship stretching back to 1894. Standard Athletic Club won the first title, and Marseille won the last amateur championship in 1929. The French Football Federation recognises these pre-professional titles as part of the nation's football history, though they sit outside the Ligue 1 record books.
For much of the 20th century, French football was characterised by shifting power bases rather than sustained dynasties. Saint-Etienne dominated the 1960s and 1970s with 10 titles and became the country's most celebrated club, while Marseille rose to prominence in the late 1980s and early 1990s, winning the Champions League in 1993. That title was overshadowed by the subsequent match-fixing scandal involving club president Bernard Tapie, which saw Marseille stripped of their 1992/93 domestic championship.
The first French football championship was a single-day knockout tournament in Paris in 1894. Over the following decades, it expanded into regional leagues and multi-round formats. Twenty-two amateur titles were awarded before the federation voted to adopt professionalism in 1930.
The professional league launched in 1932 with 20 teams under the name National, changing to Division 1 the following year. The competition was suspended during World War II (1939-45). After the war, the league operated with varying numbers of clubs but typically featured 18 to 20 sides. Three points for a win were introduced from the 1994/95 season.
The competition was renamed Ligue 1 from 2002/03. The 2019/20 season was curtailed by the Covid-19 pandemic, with PSG declared champions after 27 matches. This era saw PSG's transformation into a global superclub following the Qatari takeover in 2011, and the league operated with 20 clubs throughout.
Ahead of the 2023/24 season, Ligue 1 was reduced from 20 clubs to 18. Four clubs were relegated from the 2022/23 season, with only two promoted, creating the current 18-team, 34-match format. This change reduced the number of fixtures per club, increased recovery time between matches and was designed to strengthen the quality of the league overall. The bottom two clubs are directly relegated, while the 16th-placed club enters a relegation play-off against a Ligue 2 side.
| Stage | Who | Format | Outcome |
| League season | 18 clubs | 34 matches each (home and away) | Table ranked by points: 3 for a win, 1 for a draw, 0 for a loss. |
| Champions | 1st place | Final table | 1st are Ligue 1 champions; receive the Hexagoal trophy. |
| Relegation | Bottom 3 | Final table + play-off | The 17th and 18th were relegated directly. 16th enters play-off vs Ligue 2 side. |
| Promotion | Ligue 2 clubs | Season + play-offs | Top 2 promoted directly; 3rd-6th enter play-offs for one further spot. |
| Competition | Usual Route | Qualification Detail |
| Champions League | League position | 1st-3rd qualify for the league phase. 4th enters the third qualifying round. |
| Europa League | League position/cup | 5th qualifies for the league phase. Coupe de France winners also qualify. If the cup winners finish in the top five, the place passes to 6th. |
| Conference League | League position | 6th enters Conference League qualifying. If the Coupe de France winners finish in the top six, the place passes to the next-highest club. |
| Club | Stadium | City | Capacity |
| AJ Auxerre | Stade de l'Abbe-Deschamps | Auxerre | 21,477 |
| Angers SCO | Stade Raymond Kopa | Angers | 18,752 |
| Brest | Stade Francis Le Ble | Brest | 15,220 |
| Le Havre | Stade Oceane | Le Havre | 25,178 |
| Lens | Stade Bollaert-Delelis | Lens | 38,223 |
| Lille | Stade Pierre-Mauroy | Lille | 50,186 |
| Lorient | Stade du Moustoir | Lorient | 18,110 |
| Lyon | Groupama Stadium | Lyon | 59,186 |
| Marseille | Orange Velodrome | Marseille | 67,394 |
| Metz | Stade Saint-Symphorien | Metz | 30,000 |
| Monaco | Stade Louis II | Monaco | 18,523 |
| Nantes | Stade de la Beaujoire | Nantes | 37,473 |
| Nice | Allianz Riviera | Nice | 36,178 |
| Paris FC | Stade Jean-Bouin | Paris | 20,000 |
| PSG | Parc des Princes | Paris | 47,929 |
| Rennes | Roazhon Park | Rennes | 29,778 |
| Strasbourg | Stade de la Meinau | Strasbourg | 26,109 |
| Toulouse | Stadium de Toulouse | Toulouse | 33,150 |
Marseille's Orange Velodrome is the largest club stadium in Ligue 1 with a capacity of 67,394. Lyon's Groupama Stadium (59,186) and Lille's Stade Pierre-Mauroy (50,186) are the next two largest. Paris FC and PSG are now city neighbours, with the Stade Jean-Bouin sitting directly beside the Parc des Princes in the 16th arrondissement.
French football's most high-profile rivalry is Le Classique between PSG and Marseille, a fixture that has defined Ligue 1 for decades and consistently generates the highest demand for tickets in the league. Other notable fixtures and their significance are as follows.
| Fixture | Clubs | Significance |
| Le Classique | PSG vs Marseille | France's defining football rivalry regularly draws peak TV audiences and resale demand. |
| Derby du Nord | Lille vs Lens | A fierce regional rivalry between two northern clubs separated by just 35km. |
| Olympico | Lyon vs Marseille | A rivalry rooted in the 2000s, when both clubs were competing at the top of the table. |
| Parisian derby | PSG vs Paris FC | A new rivalry created by Paris FC's 2025/26 promotion; the two clubs split in 1972. |
| Derby de la Côte d'Azur | Nice vs Monaco | A Riviera rivalry between two clubs on the Mediterranean coast. |
| Club | Titles | Most Recent |
| Paris Saint-Germain | 13 | 2024/25 |
| Saint-Etienne | 10 | 1980/81 |
| Marseille | 10 | 2009/10 |
| Monaco | 8 | 2016/17 |
| Nantes | 8 | 2000/01 |
| Lyon | 7 | 2007/08 |
| Bordeaux | 6 | 2008/09 |
| Lille | 4 | 2020/21 |
| Reims | 6 | 1961/62 |
| Nice | 4 | 1958/59 |
PSG hold the record for the most Ligue 1 titles with 13, including 11 of the last 13 seasons. Marseille's total of 10 includes one amateur title (1929) but excludes the stripped 1992/93 championship. Lyon's seven consecutive titles from 2001/02 to 2007/08 remain a record for sustained dominance by any French club in a single run. Only two French clubs have won the Champions League: Marseille (1993) and PSG (2025).
The Ligue 1 champions receive the Hexagoal trophy, designed by Argentine-French sculptor Pablo Reinoso and awarded since the end of the 2006/07 season. It replaced the previous trophy, designed by Andree Putman, which had been in use for only five years. The Hexagoal takes its name from France's hexagonal shape. PSG hold the record for the most points accumulated in a single Ligue 1 season, collecting 96 in 2015/16.
In July 2025, the Ligue de Football Professionnel launched Ligue 1+, an in-house direct-to-consumer streaming service, in time for the opening weekend of the 2025/26 season. Of the nine weekly Ligue 1 matches, Ligue 1+ exclusively broadcasts eight, with beIN Sports retaining its allocation of one Saturday fixture. UK-based fans currently have no domestic television deal for Ligue 1, making attending matches in person or using international streaming services the primary viewing options.
Search for your chosen fixture on 1BoxOffice, compare listings by seat, price and delivery method, and complete your booking online. You do not need a French club membership.
Prices vary by club, opponent and seating category. Standard tickets typically start from around £20 for lower-demand fixtures and can reach £350 or more for Le Classique and other high-profile matches.
Yes. International fans can buy from anywhere using secure payment options. Check the delivery type on each listing before buying.
The 2025/26 season runs from 15 August 2025 to 16 May 2026.
Eighteen teams compete in Ligue 1, playing 34 matches each across a home-and-away round-robin format. The league was reduced from 20 clubs ahead of the 2023/24 season.
PSG are the defending champions, having won a record 13th title in the 2024/25 season under Luis Enrique. PSG also won the Champions League that season, completing a historic treble.
Le Classique is the fixture between Paris Saint-Germain and Olympique de Marseille. It is the most high-profile match in French football and consistently generates the highest demand for Ligue 1 tickets on the resale market.
The Hexagonal is the trophy awarded to the Ligue 1 champions. Designed by Pablo Reinoso, it has been in use since the 2006/07 season. The name refers to France's hexagonal shape.
Lorient, Paris FC and Metz were promoted from Ligue 2, replacing Montpellier, Saint-Etienne and Reims. Paris FC returned to the top flight after a 46-year absence.
Hospitality tickets are premium packages that may include lounge access, food and drink, upgraded seating and dedicated entrances. Availability depends on the club and fixture.
Delivery depends on the ticket type. Many tickets are mobile transfers or e-tickets. Always check the delivery details on the listing.
The bottom two clubs are directly relegated to Ligue 2. The 16th-placed club enters a relegation play-off against a Ligue 2 side for the right to stay in the top flight.
The top three qualify for the Champions League (with 4th entering qualifying), 5th qualifies for the Europa League and 6th for the Conference League. The Coupe de France winners also receive a Europa League place.
AS Monaco is based in the sovereign city-state of Monaco on the French Riviera. Despite not being a French club, they have competed in the French league system since 1953 and have won eight Ligue 1 titles. Their home ground is the Stade Louis II.
The Parc des Princes is PSG's home stadium, located in the 16th arrondissement of Paris. It is accessible by Metro lines 9 and 10 and has a capacity of approximately 47,929.
Broadcast arrangements vary by country. In the United States, Ligue 1 is available on beIN Sports and Fubo. UK viewers currently have no domestic broadcast deal for Ligue 1. The league launched its own streaming service, Ligue 1+, for domestic French viewers in August 2025.
Children can attend, but specific policies on age restrictions and accompanied entry vary by stadium. Check the listing details and the stadium's entry rules before booking.
Bag policies vary by stadium. As a general rule, bring a small bag and be prepared for security screening at all venues.
PSG hold the record with 13 Ligue 1 titles. Saint-Etienne and Marseille are joint second with 10 each. Lyon holds the record for the most consecutive titles with seven in a row (2001/02 to 2007/08).
Yes. Every order placed through 1BoxOffice is covered by a 150% money-back guarantee. If your tickets are not delivered as promised, you receive a full refund plus 50% as credit towards a future booking. For order support, email help@1boxoffice.com or visit the FAQ page.
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