Arsenal vs Fulham tickets appeal to a very particular kind of buyer. This is a London fixture, but not one that trades on pure hostility. It has familiarity, history and a clean footballing identity that tends to suit supporters who enjoy the shape of a serious Premier League afternoon without needing the volume of a full-scale derby circus. At Emirates Stadium, Arsenal against Fulham often feels like a game for people who care about the match itself as much as the occasion around it, and that gives the market its own character.
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If you are comparing options for this home meeting, start with the broader Arsenal tickets market. That gives you context on how Arsenal home dates are usually priced, how different tiers behave, and where the stronger value often sits at Emirates Stadium. Fulham do not create the same emotional spike as Arsenal against Tottenham or Manchester United, but that does not make this a soft page. For many buyers, it is exactly the sort of fixture they want: a major London ground, a proper top-flight opponent, and a matchday that still feels football-led rather than theatre-led.
There is a strong city texture to the fixture as well. Arsenal and Fulham are not separated by vast geography or by total unfamiliarity. London supporters know the route, know the clubs, and know that these meetings often produce games with a good technical rhythm. Fulham tend to travel with an identifiable support, Arsenal home demand remains high across most league weekends, and the combination creates a market that stays active longer than casual observers sometimes expect.
The 2025/26 home meeting is scheduled for Saturday, 2 May 2026, at 5:30 pm at Emirates Stadium, after the kick-off time was adjusted for live broadcast. That matters because late Saturday slots affect everything around the ticket itself, from hotel planning and rail choices to when buyers decide to commit. This is one of those fixtures where the setting and timing both help sustain demand, even before you get to the football.
Demand for Arsenal against Fulham is built on setting, reliability and the kind of fixture identity that keeps drawing people back. This is a familiar London league meeting between clubs who know each other well. Arsenal brings the scale of Emirates Stadium, a large and persistent home market, and the pull of a club whose home dates are watched closely by local supporters, neutrals and overseas visitors alike. Fulham bring a recognisable travelling support and a style of fixture that often feels more interesting in person than it does in lazy pre-match shorthand.
That away-side draw matters. Buyers who follow the wider Fulham tickets market will know that Arsenal away is one of Fulham's more attractive trips of the season. The transport is straightforward, the ground is major, the match retains London interest, and the fixture has enough history to feel substantial without becoming overheated. That combination makes it appealing to Fulham followers who want the away section, and also to neutral or international buyers who see it as a strong Premier League date inside the capital.
Arsenal home demand does the rest. A large stadium does not mean unlimited access, and Arsenal's usual member-led route means plenty of buyers start looking elsewhere once their preferred path narrows. That is one reason the resale market stays relevant for this match. It is not only about late demand. It is about different kinds of demand arriving at different times: local supporters, visiting supporters, tourists building a London weekend, and buyers who simply prefer to compare live options rather than wait and hope.
The football side helps too. Fulham have been competitive enough in recent seasons to keep the fixture respectable, but Arsenal have also maintained a strong Emirates-era home record against them. That balance is useful in ticket terms. The home side feels likely to provide a proper standard of football, while the away side still carries enough threat to stop the day from feeling routine. Buyers are often looking for that exact mix.
There is another reason the page holds attention. Some fixtures feel oversized in marketing copy and ordinary once you strip that copy away. Arsenal versus Fulham works in the opposite direction. It can look understated from a distance, then feel excellent once you are actually on the ground. Supporters who know that are often the people buying this page early.
Yes, many buyers look for Arsenal vs Fulham tickets without using a membership route. Arsenal home league tickets are generally distributed through member-first processes, which means non-members, international visitors and occasional matchgoers can quickly find themselves outside the most direct channel. That does not remove demand. It simply redirects it.
A verified marketplace matters here because it gives buyers a way to compare real options when the club route is narrow, inconvenient or no longer open to them. For Arsenal against Fulham, that comparison matters. Not every buyer wants the same thing. Some want the cleanest longside view. Some care mainly about sitting together. Some are travelling from abroad and value a clear delivery method above a small price difference. Some need away seating, and that turns the wording of the listing into the most important detail on the page.
This is why membership is not the only useful lens. Access is one thing. Suitability is another. The smarter question is whether the ticket actually fits the day you are trying to build. A listing can be available and still be wrong for your section preference, your supporter identity or your arrival time into London.
That is where a marketplace route becomes practical rather than merely alternative. You can see the stand, the quantity, the approximate location and the delivery terms in one place. For a fixture that is attractive to both planned buyers and late planners, that clarity often matters more than abstract discussion of how club sales work in principle.
Five factors usually shape the resale level for this fixture: seat location, whether the listing is for a single or a pair, how central the seat is, whether premium access is included, and how late in the cycle you are buying. Arsenal home demand tends to reward early comparison, while Fulham's London pull keeps enough interest in the page to stop it drifting into bargain territory simply because the away side is not one of the traditional giant clubs.
It helps to think of Arsenal v Fulham as several smaller markets rather than one flat price. Upper-tier singles can move differently from lower-tier pairs. A premium standard seat can sometimes sit surprisingly close to a top-end general admission seat once the better central blocks start to thin out. Hospitality can even become rational for some groups when you factor in comfort, timing and certainty rather than looking only at the headline number.
| Ticket type | Resale price | Best for | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upper tier, less central | £90 – £160 | Lower-priced entry into the ground | Often a sensible way into Emirates Stadium for buyers who care more about being there than sitting low. |
| Longside standard | £145 – £245 | Balanced view and strong overall experience | Usually the clearest blend of sightline, atmosphere and price for regular matchgoing buyers. |
| Lower tier, central areas | £210 – £395+ | Buyers who want proximity to the pitch | Central lower-tier seats tend to harden in price once inventory gets thinner. |
| Premium seating | £310 – £610+ | Comfort-led buyers | Often includes stronger seat location and upgraded concourse access without going full hospitality. |
| Hospitality / VIP | £525 – £1,300+ | Clients, occasion buyers, premium groups | Lounge access, food and premium seating shape the top of the market. |
Prices reflect typical resale ranges and may change as demand and availability shift closer to the match.
The smarter way to use the table is to match the price band to the kind of day you want. A local supporter going alone may get stronger value from an upper-tier single than from any glamorous-looking seat lower down. A travelling pair may decide that a reliable longside location with clear digital delivery is worth more than saving a modest amount in a less certain section. A group building a London weekend around the match may realise that premium access becomes sensible once comfort and timing are added to the calculation.
If seat choice matters as much as the ticket itself, compare the Emirates Stadium seating plan with the wider Emirates Stadium tickets market before buying. Emirates is a stadium with good general sightlines, but the experience still changes by tier, by angle and by what you want from the day. Some buyers prefer the longside upper-tier view because it lets the match breathe. Others want lower-tier intensity, while premium buyers may care more about entry flow, concourse comfort and indoor time before kick-off.
| Area | What it suits | Pricing | General guidance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Longside lower | Buyers who want closeness to the play and technical areas | High | Strong for intensity and detail, especially if you value a more immediate feel. |
| Longside upper | Supporters who want a tactical view of the whole pitch | Mid-range | Often one of the smartest choices for value and overall perspective. |
| Behind the goal | Atmosphere-led buyers | Low to mid-range | Good for matchday energy, though not the cleanest angle for every phase of the game. |
| Premium seats | Occasion visitors and comfort-first supporters | High | Usually offers upgraded surroundings and a calmer pre-match build-up. |
| Hospitality | Clients, family celebrations and premium groups | Highest | Best for buyers who want lounge access, dining and a more polished day around the match. |
Fulham's presence makes this a fixture where you can choose between atmosphere and clarity without sacrificing the football. The away section usually generates enough audible presence to add edge without overwhelming the rest of the ground. That means longside seats work especially well if you want to appreciate the shape of the contest, while end sections make sense if you prefer the matchday rhythm of reactions, noise and momentum shifts.
For families or mixed groups, quieter longside areas are often the safer bet. For repeat matchgoers who enjoy reading the game, upper longside seats can offer stronger value than lower-tier corners at a similar price. For one-off visitors, premium options can make sense not because the fixture demands extravagance, but because they reduce the chance of paying heavily for a seat that looks good on paper and feels awkward in practice.
Away supporters at Emirates Stadium are usually placed in the lower tier of the south-east corner. Arsenal's own access materials for visiting supporters point to accessible viewing areas in blocks 20, 21 and 22, and the away-side travel guidance places visiting supporters in the green quadrant to the south-east of the stadium. That is the section buyers should look for if they want to sit with Fulham support rather than simply attend the match.
| Supporter type | Best approach |
|---|---|
| Home fans | Buy within the main Arsenal seating bowl and avoid listings described as away allocation or visiting-supporter seating. |
| Away supporters | Look for clearly labelled away-end or visiting-supporter listings in the south-east lower-tier area. |
| Neutral buyers | Choose standard home sections only if you can remain neutral in colours and behaviour throughout the match. |
For Fulham followers, this is the main rule of the page: do not assume a generic Emirates listing puts you with the away support. For Arsenal supporters, the same logic applies in reverse. Even in a fixture without derby-level hostility, supporter separation still matters and should be respected when you buy.
For neutral buyers, the practical question is simple. Are you attending as a quiet observer, or do you actually want to react like a fan of one side? If it is the latter, buy accordingly. If it is the former, a standard home section is usually fine so long as you behave with the same restraint your seat choice implies.
Arsenal's premium offering suits this fixture particularly well because Arsenal against Fulham often attracts buyers who want a polished London football day rather than a noisy badge-chasing exercise. Some want Club Level comfort and a better pre-match setting. Some want a fine-dining package and a proper afternoon around the match. Some simply want the certainty that comes with premium access when general admission choices have become too narrow or too awkward.
| Hospitality option | Typical buyer | Main appeal |
|---|---|---|
| Club Level social spaces | Pairs and small groups | Relaxed sports-bar style atmosphere with premium seating and smoother access. |
| Club 1886 | Comfort-led buyers | Exclusive Club Level dining feel with a calmer matchday setting. |
| Woolwich restaurant packages | Clients and special-occasion visitors | Fine dining, lounge time and premium Club Level seating. |
| The Avenell and Box Level experiences | Premium event buyers | Luxury surroundings, strong views and a more complete occasion around the football. |
Hospitality is not only for buyers chasing status. On a fixture like this, it can be the most practical route if you are entertaining guests, marking an occasion or travelling into London for one specific match and want the day to run smoothly. Arsenal's premium products are varied enough that the sensible move is to compare the actual inclusions instead of treating all premium access as one flat category.
That matters because not every buyer wants the same atmosphere. Some prefer the hum of Club Level social spaces. Others want the quieter shape of a dining-led package. Arsenal versus Fulham can suit both because the fixture itself has enough substance to reward attention, even if the tone of your day is calmer than it would be for a harder-edged rivalry match.
Delivery details can shape the whole experience of this fixture. Arsenal's stadium guidance stresses digital readiness, bag checks and arriving early enough to avoid queues, so buyers should understand their delivery method before they pay rather than after they have already planned the trip.
| Delivery type | What to check |
|---|---|
| Mobile transfer | Confirm when the ticket will arrive, whether it needs a wallet or app, and keep your phone fully charged. |
| PDF e-ticket | Check whether scanning from your device is fine or whether a printed copy is recommended. |
| Local collection | Read handover instructions carefully and allow extra time before heading towards the stadium. |
| Hospitality confirmation | Review lounge entry instructions, named guest details and any dress guidance included with the package. |
Always read the listing notes, carry ID and make sure your phone has a battery before you travel. Arsenal's current stadium guidance says only bags smaller than A4 are permitted, and all bags are subject to search, so travelling light is usually the fastest route through the entry process.
It is also worth treating entry as part of the purchase rather than a separate chore. A well-located seat with a vague release method can feel like poor value once matchday stress is added. A slightly more expensive listing with a clearer path into the ground can be the better decision, especially for visitors coming from outside London or trying to coordinate multiple people.
Step1
Open the match page
Open the Arsenal vs Fulham match page and review the current listings by stand, row, quantity and delivery type.
Step2
Create or access your buyer account
Create or access your buyer account through 1BoxOffice registration so your order and delivery details are connected to the right profile.
Step3
Use the filters carefully
Use the filters carefully if you need pairs together, longside seating, a lower-tier view or premium access.
Step4
Read the seller notes in full
Read the seller notes in full and confirm whether the listing is home seating, away seating or hospitality.
Step5
Compare sections before paying
Compare more than one section before paying, because the strongest value often depends on block and tier rather than the broad stand name alone.
Step6
Complete checkout
Complete checkout using the payment method that suits you and keep your order confirmation easy to access.
Step7
Monitor delivery updates
Monitor your email and account area for delivery updates, especially if the ticket is due closer to the match.
Step8
Track your order on matchday
On the day, use Track Order if you need to confirm status, then arrive early enough for searches and turnstile checks.
That process suits buyers who want control rather than guesswork. 1BoxOffice has been operating since 2006, and for a fixture like Arsenal against Fulham, the real advantage is the ability to compare live options in a market where direct club access does not always match the buyer's circumstances.
Better value on this fixture is usually about making the seat fit the plan. A well-placed longside seat with a clear release method can be a much stronger value than a lower headline price attached to uncertainty. That is especially true for international buyers or anyone building the trip around this one game.
International buyers are often well suited to this fixture because it combines a major London club, a top stadium and a familiar opponent without always reaching the most extreme demand levels of Arsenal's fiercest home dates. That can make it an appealing entry point into a Premier League weekend, especially for visitors who want a high-quality atmosphere and a recognisable fixture but also want a realistic spread of seating options.
The practical checks remain important. Confirm whether the seats are together, whether the ticket may be transferred close to the match, and whether your travel plans can cope with fixture-time adjustments. This 2025/26 meeting is set for a late Saturday kick-off, which can affect return travel, hotel timing and the way you pace the rest of your weekend in London.
Supporters coming from abroad should also think ahead about transport. Arsenal station on the Piccadilly line is the nearest Tube stop at around a three-minute walk from the ground, while Finsbury Park and Highbury & Islington are both around a 10-minute walk and can be useful alternatives depending on your route. Buyers who plan that side early usually enjoy the day more than those who focus only on the ticket and improvise everything else.
Arsenal against Fulham is one of those London fixtures that develops its own weight through repetition. It has never needed loud rivalry branding to matter. These are clubs with distinct identities, distinct neighbourhood pull and a long familiarity with each other in the top flight. The result is a fixture that can feel both calm and substantial at the same time. It lacks the raw edge of Arsenal's fiercest local rivalries, but it rarely lacks footballing interest.
At Emirates Stadium, the balance has strongly favoured Arsenal. Fulham have not won a Premier League away game there, and Arsenal have produced a run of home results ranging from controlled 2-1 victories to more expansive afternoons such as 4-0 in 2010 and 4-1 in 2019. Yet the series also contains enough draws to prevent complacency. Fulham have held Arsenal at Emirates on several occasions and have shown they can make the game untidy, especially when the home side expects rhythm and control.
That pattern helps explain the page's tone. This is not a fixture driven by hostility. It is driven by city familiarity and by a consistent contrast in style. Arsenal usually try to impose structure and tempo. Fulham often arrive with the confidence to disrupt that structure and turn the contest into something more patient, more physical or more awkward than a home crowd expected. Supporters who know the series understand that and often buy accordingly.
What makes the fixture distinctive is its mix of familiarity and uncertainty. Arsenal have owned much of the home record, yet Fulham have created enough difficult afternoons to stop the fixture from becoming decorative. For a buyer, that matters. This is not just a London league game you attend because it is available. It is one you attend because it tends to produce a proper footballing contest in a high-quality setting.
Data compiled from 11v11 match records, Premier League fixture pages, Arsenal fixture and ticket pages, Arsenal stadium guidance, transport information and hospitality materials.
| Metric | Total |
|---|---|
| Matches played | 13 |
| Home wins | 8 |
| Away wins | 0 |
| Draws | 5 |
| Home goals | 28 |
| Away goals | 13 |
| Biggest home win | Arsenal 4–0 Fulham, 9 May 2010 |
| Biggest away win | None in Premier League at Emirates Stadium |
| First EPL meeting at current stadium | Arsenal 3–1 Fulham, 29 Apr 2007 |
| Most recently played home EPL meeting | Arsenal 2–1 Fulham, 1 Apr 2025 |
Source note: figures calculated from verified Emirates Stadium Premier League results cross-checked against 11v11 match records and Arsenal fixture pages.
The numbers tell an interesting story. Arsenal have avoided a home league defeat to Fulham at Emirates Stadium, but the draw count is high enough to show that the fixture has not simply been a procession. Fulham have often made the game more resistant than the broader home record suggests, and that tension is part of the page's enduring value.
| Date | Score |
|---|---|
| 1 Apr 2025 | Arsenal 2–1 Fulham |
| 26 Aug 2023 | Arsenal 2–2 Fulham |
| 27 Aug 2022 | Arsenal 2–1 Fulham |
| 18 Apr 2021 | Arsenal 1–1 Fulham |
| 1 Jan 2019 | Arsenal 4–1 Fulham |
| 18 Jan 2014 | Arsenal 2–0 Fulham |
| 10 Nov 2012 | Arsenal 3–3 Fulham |
| 26 Nov 2011 | Arsenal 1–1 Fulham |
| 4 Dec 2010 | Arsenal 2–1 Fulham |
| 9 May 2010 | Arsenal 4–0 Fulham |
| 28 Feb 2009 | Arsenal 0–0 Fulham |
| 12 Aug 2007 | Arsenal 2–1 Fulham |
| 29 Apr 2007 | Arsenal 3–1 Fulham |
Source note: Emirates Stadium Premier League home meetings listed newest first, verified from 11v11 and cross-checked against Arsenal fixture pages where available.
Seen in sequence, the series is more varied than people often remember. Arsenal have controlled the results column, but Fulham have repeatedly pulled the match into draws and late tension. That is exactly why the fixture is a better live experience than a casual glance at the home record might suggest.
Yes. Many buyers use a marketplace because Arsenal home league seats are generally distributed through member-first access. That makes secondary supply relevant for non-members who still want a seat at Emirates Stadium.
Yes, international buyers can purchase from abroad, but they should pay close attention to delivery timing and fixture scheduling. A late Saturday kick-off can affect travel plans, so it helps to keep the wider weekend flexible until your arrangements are settled.
Prices usually move according to seat location, whether seats are together, how close the match is and whether premium access is included. Upper-tier entries tend to sit at the lower end, while central lower-tier and hospitality seats usually carry the highest numbers.
Your first look should usually be upper-tier or less central longside sections. Single seats can also present better value than pairs, especially once the more desirable paired listings start to thin out.
Often, yes, depending on what sellers list for the fixture. Hospitality can work especially well for occasion buyers, visitors building a London weekend or anyone who wants a calmer matchday around the football.
That depends on the package, but common inclusions are premium seating, lounge access, food and drinks, and a more controlled entry process. The key is comparing the actual inclusions rather than assuming every premium ticket offers the same day.
VIP usually refers to the top end of the premium market, where buyers are paying for a fuller experience rather than only a seat. Lounge access, service, comfort and indoor time are often central to the package.
Yes. For Arsenal's home edition of the fixture, the venue is Emirates Stadium. What changes across listings are the section, access type and any premium element attached to the seat.
Most of the bowl is home seating, with the away allocation set aside separately in the south-east corner of the lower tier. Arsenal supporters should stay within clearly identified home sections to avoid any issues with supporter separation.
Visiting supporters are usually placed in the lower tier of the south-east corner. Arsenal's access materials also identify accessible away areas in blocks 20, 21 and 22.
It is not advisable. Visible away colours in home areas can lead to entry problems or steward attention, even in a fixture that lacks derby-level hostility. If you are supporting Fulham, it is better to buy in the correct section.
No sensible buyer should plan for that. Away sections are intended for visiting supporters, and a home fan in the wrong area can create unnecessary tension for themselves and others nearby.
Club-distributed away tickets are limited and usually released through Fulham's own priority process. If you are not using that route, the key is finding a resale listing that clearly states it is within the visiting-supporter area.
Pairs are usually easier than larger groups, but availability depends on when you buy and which parts of the ground are still active in the market. If sitting together matters, look early rather than relying on the late cycle.
Delivery can vary by listing, with mobile transfer, digital release, local collection and premium confirmation all possible. The important thing is to read the seller's notes fully before paying.
Sometimes, but not always. Some tickets are released well before the match, while others arrive closer to kick-off, so buyers should not assume every order completes instantly after payment.
Earlier buying usually gives you a wider choice of sections and better odds of finding seats together. Waiting can still work, but later buying often means more price movement and less control over the exact location.
Arsenal's current stadium guidance says only bags smaller than A4 are permitted, and all bags are subject to search. Travelling light is usually the easiest way to speed up entry.
Yes, children can attend, and Arsenal's seating guidance identifies family-friendly areas within the ground. The useful step is choosing the right section for the group rather than simply the lowest price available.
Public transport is usually the simplest route. Arsenal station on the Piccadilly line is around a three-minute walk from the ground, while Finsbury Park and Highbury & Islington are both around a 10-minute walk and can be useful alternatives depending on your route into North London.
Sources used for this page: Premier League fixture and ticket information pages, Arsenal fixture pages and ticket pages, Arsenal transport and matchday guidance, Arsenal access materials for visiting supporters, Arsenal hospitality package descriptions, and 11v11 head-to-head and match records.