Liverpool vs Crystal Palace tickets are the kind of late-season search that usually comes from buyers who do not want guesswork. They want a real view of what is available at Anfield, what different areas of the ground feel like, how pricing shifts, and which listing suits the way they want to watch the match. That is the point of this page. It is built to help you compare live options and move closer to a smart purchase, not just skim generic match chatter.
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A game like this still matters even if it does not carry the profile of Liverpool against one of the traditional top-six names. At Anfield, demand rarely drops into the background, and the combination of Liverpool's home pull, the late-April timing and Palace's ability to make this fixture awkward keeps buyers engaged. If you are targeting the home side's market, Liverpool tickets remain one of the strongest transactional clusters on the site for a reason.
There is also a practical marketplace angle. Club sales channels can be restrictive, phased or tied to member access, while the live resale market lets buyers compare section, row, quantity and delivery method before committing. For people who care about where they sit as much as getting through the turnstiles, that difference matters.
This fixture sits in an interesting part of the market. Liverpool at Anfield is already one of the strongest home-ticket propositions in English football, and Palace bring a travelling support and a recent record in this matchup that stops the fixture from feeling routine. Even when the headline attention goes elsewhere, the live market tends to hold because buyers know Anfield demand does not switch off. .
There is another factor too. The Palace is no longer treated as a side that simply fills out the schedule. They have become a more awkward opponent, with a sharper identity and enough recent results in this fixture to keep both sets of supporters interested, which is why Crystal Palace tickets still add to demand for fixtures like this. Add hospitality demand, seat-location preferences and the usual late-season urgency, and the resale market stays active longer than many buyers expect.
Yes, that is one of the main reasons buyers use a resale marketplace for this game. Liverpool home sales can involve member sales, priority structures or limited-release windows, and that can leave plenty of buyers locked out before they even get a clean shot at the fixture. A marketplace gives you another route when club sales channels do not line up with your access level or timing.
The key is to treat the purchase properly. Check whether the listing is for a home area or an away-suitable area, confirm whether seats are together, review the delivery method and read the seller's notes before you pay. That gives you a clearer picture of the day you are buying, not just the ticket itself.
Liverpool vs Crystal Palace ticket prices move for the same five reasons that shape most strong Premier League home markets: seat location, match demand, timing in the season, fixture context and hospitality level. The live 1BoxOffice Anfield page is already showing Liverpool home inventory for this match from just above the two-hundred-pound mark, while wider resale listings on other marketplaces also point to an active market rather than a low-pressure one. Better locations, grouped seats and premium access usually pull the top end higher.
| Ticket Type | Resale Price Range | Best For | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upper tier / less central | £180 – £260 | Buyers focused on better value | Usually the clearest entry point if you want Anfield without paying longside-central pricing |
| Longside standard | £240 – £380 | Fans wanting a balanced view | Strong overall sightlines and a good fit for first-time buyers |
| Lower tier / central | £320 – £520+ | Buyers prioritising seat quality | Closer proximity and stronger status usually keep these listings firm |
| Premium seating | £420 – £750+ | Special occasions and added comfort | Often tied to upgraded concourse access or more desirable seat bands |
| Hospitality / VIP | £550 – £1,400+ | Corporate buyers and premium guests | Can include lounges, dining, complimentary drinks or executive seating depending on package |
Prices reflect typical resale ranges and may change as demand and availability shift closer to the match.
At Anfield, where you sit changes the day. Some buyers want the emotional pull of a more atmospheric end, while others would rather pay for a cleaner football view or a more comfortable route in and out. The best starting point is to compare the ground layout through the Anfield seating plan before you narrow your shortlist.
Once you know which side of the ground fits your matchday preference, check live stock on the main Anfield tickets page and then work back to the fixture listings with a clearer idea of value, view and section context.
| Area | What It Suits | Pricing Bracket | General Guidance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Main Stand lower | Buyers wanting proximity and a strong straight-on feel | Higher | Usually a premium standard-seat choice, especially in better-aligned blocks |
| Main Stand upper | Supporters who prefer a broader tactical view | Medium to high | Good for people who want a fuller picture of shape and movement across the pitch |
| Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand | First-time buyers and groups seeking balance | Medium | Often a sensible middle ground between sightline, atmosphere and price |
| Anfield Road | Buyers comparing home and away-adjacent context carefully | Medium | Important section to read closely because the away allocation is based here |
| Hospitality | Guests wanting a fuller premium day | Highest | Best for buyers who want lounge access, food service or executive seating rather than basic entry |
Palace supporters should not assume any standard home listing will suit them. Liverpool's 2025/26 visiting supporters guide states that visiting fans enter via entrances Q and R, approaching Anfield Road from the direction of 97 Avenue, which places the away allocation in the Anfield Road end rather than scattered around the ground. That is the section context you should keep in mind when reading listings.
| Supporter Type | Best Approach |
|---|---|
| Home fans | Choose clear home-designated sections and avoid the away allocation end if you want the most straightforward entry experience |
| Away supporters | Look for away-suitable inventory tied to the Anfield Road visitor section and check section notes carefully before purchase |
| Neutral buyers | Prioritise sightline and listing clarity first, while still respecting segregation and the supporter mix in each area |
The same visiting supporters guide also notes turnstiles opening two hours before kick-off and confirms that the visitors' section includes licensed safe standing rows. That matters because some buyers prefer a calmer seated environment, while others are comfortable with a more active away-end feel.
Hospitality can make more sense for this fixture than some buyers first assume. Liverpool's hospitality pages show a broad range at Anfield, from sports-bar style entry in the Anfield Road Stand to more formal dining and higher-end Main Stand lounges. That gives buyers a real spread of premium options rather than one flat VIP category.
| Hospitality Option | Typical Buyer | Main Appeal |
|---|---|---|
| Brodies Sports Bar | Fans wanting a lively premium route | Upper-tier Anfield Road seating, street food and a more casual hospitality feel |
| Premier Club | Guests and small client groups | Executive seating in the Upper Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand with buffet service before the game |
| The Chemistry Lounge | Occasion buyers seeking a polished day | Main Stand views, walk-through seat access and a three-course matchday menu |
| Premium Lounge | High-end buyers and corporate hosts | Elevated Main Stand seating, a four-course menu and complimentary drinks around the matchday schedule |
One detail matters here. Liverpool's hospitality fixtures page marks Liverpool vs Crystal Palace hospitality as Home Supporters Only, so Palace fans should not treat a premium package as a workaround for away placement. It is a premium home-matchday route, not a neutral section.
Delivery method is not a box to skip past. Liverpool's NFC ticket guide and hospitality terms make clear that mobile entry is a major part of the Anfield process, especially for hospitality products, while resale listings can still vary depending on the seller and the release timing. Read the listing closely before checkout so you know whether you are dealing with a digital transfer, an e-ticket or a later release window.
| Delivery Type | What to Check |
|---|---|
| Mobile transfer | Check whether the ticket must be accepted through a mobile wallet or club-compatible digital route |
| E-ticket / NFC pass | Make sure your phone is compatible, charged and ready to display the pass correctly at the turnstile |
| Secure electronic delivery | Review the expected release timing and whether extra forwarding steps are noted by the seller |
| Last-minute release | Confirm whether the ticket may only arrive close to matchday and plan your travel with that timing in mind |
Always read listing notes, bring a valid photo ID and make sure your phone is charged for mobile entry. Liverpool's recent Anfield security notices also stress earlier arrival times because searches and entry checks now take more time than many regular supporters were used to.
1BoxOffice is a verified marketplace established in 2006, and for fixtures like this, the value is simple: you can compare live inventory clearly, buy through a structured checkout and book with a 150% money-back guarantee behind the order.
Step1
Select the fixture and open the live listings page
Select the Liverpool vs Crystal Palace fixture and open the live listings page.
Step2
Create your account through Register
Create your account through the Register page so your booking details, contact information and delivery updates are attached properly.
Step3
Compare listings by more than headline price
Compare available listings by stand, row, section, quantity and price rather than focusing on headline price alone.
Step4
Check whether the seats are together
Check whether the seats are together, especially if you are buying for a pair, family group or small party.
Step5
Review the delivery method and seller notes
Review the delivery method and any seller notes so you know whether the ticket is mobile, electronic or released later.
Step6
Confirm the section suits the team you support
Confirm whether the section fits the team you support, particularly if you are looking at Anfield Road inventory near the away allocation.
Step7
Complete checkout and save your order details
Complete checkout and save the order details you will need for delivery and entry follow-up.
Step8
Track your order after purchase
Use the Track Order page to monitor delivery progress with your order ID, surname and email address.
International buyers often approach this fixture differently from local supporters. They are not just choosing a seat. They are choosing a delivery setup that fits flights, hotel timings and the risk that fixture dates or kick-off times can move for broadcast or competition reasons. Liverpool's own ticket availability and hospitality pages both list this match for Saturday, 25 April 2026 at 3 pm, while also noting that the schedule remains subject to change.
That is why delivery type matters so much. Check whether the listing is digital, whether grouped seats are confirmed and whether the section is suitable for the team you support. If you are travelling to England for the game, the cleaner your ticket information is before booking the rest of the trip, the calmer the whole plan becomes.
Liverpool against Palace at Anfield is not sold on glamour alone. The fixture has its own sharp edge, partly because Palace have been one of the sides willing to make the ground uncomfortable, and partly because Liverpool have also produced some emphatic home results in this series. The modern Premier League history at Anfield is full of swings rather than one-way predictability, which makes the ticket market more alive than many buyers first expect.
The stronger recent pattern is Liverpool's overall control of the matchup, but the details matter. Palace have won several eye-catching league matches at Anfield, including consecutive wins in 2015 and another in 2017, then returned with a 1-0 result in April 2024 that reset the tone again. That gives the fixture more bite than a basic home-favourite label suggests.
What makes the fixture distinctive is that Anfield pressure never fully cancels Palace's threat. Buyers looking at this game are not only paying for Liverpool's home draw. They are paying for a matchup that has produced heavy Liverpool wins, awkward stalemates and properly disruptive away results.
Data sourced from 11v11 match records, Liverpool FC ticket availability pages, Liverpool FC visiting supporters guidance, Liverpool FC stadium access notices, Liverpool FC hospitality package pages, the Premier League fixtures archive and live 1BoxOffice fixture, club and venue pages.
| Metric | Total |
|---|---|
| Matches played | 16 |
| Home wins | 9 |
| Away wins | 4 |
| Draws | 3 |
| Home goals | 32 |
| Away goals | 17 |
| Biggest home win | 5-0 |
| Biggest away win | 1-3 |
| First EPL meeting at current stadium | 28 Nov 1992 |
| Most recently played home EPL meeting | 25 May 2025 |
These figures are calculated from the Premier League home-match list below, using Liverpool's Anfield league meetings with Crystal Palace from November 1992 through May 2025.
| Date | Score |
|---|---|
| 25 May 2025 | Liverpool 1-1 Crystal Palace |
| 14 Apr 2024 | Liverpool 0-1 Crystal Palace |
| 15 Aug 2022 | Liverpool 1-1 Crystal Palace |
| 18 Sep 2021 | Liverpool 3-0 Crystal Palace |
| 23 May 2021 | Liverpool 2-0 Crystal Palace |
| 24 Jun 2020 | Liverpool 4-0 Crystal Palace |
| 19 Jan 2019 | Liverpool 4-3 Crystal Palace |
| 19 Aug 2017 | Liverpool 1-0 Crystal Palace |
| 23 Apr 2017 | Liverpool 1-2 Crystal Palace |
| 08 Nov 2015 | Liverpool 1-2 Crystal Palace |
| 16 May 2015 | Liverpool 1-3 Crystal Palace |
| 05 Oct 2013 | Liverpool 3-1 Crystal Palace |
| 13 Nov 2004 | Liverpool 3-2 Crystal Palace |
| 13 Apr 1998 | Liverpool 2-1 Crystal Palace |
| 11 Dec 1994 | Liverpool 0-0 Crystal Palace |
| 28 Nov 1992 | Liverpool 5-0 Crystal Palace |
The score list above is compiled from Liverpool's 11v11 head-to-head record against Crystal Palace, filtered to Premier League home matches at Anfield and cross-checked against Premier League and transfer-record listings for recent seasons.
You can buy through the live fixture page on 1BoxOffice without needing to go through a club membership sale. The main job is to compare listings carefully, confirm section and delivery details, and then complete checkout with the right listing for your plans.
Yes. International buyers can purchase from abroad, but they should pay close attention to the delivery method, schedule movement risk and whether the listing confirms seats together. That matters even more when flights and hotels are part of the plan.
Prices usually depend on stand, row, demand, seat grouping and whether the ticket is standard, premium or hospitality. Late-April Anfield fixtures can stay firm in the market, so ranges may shift closer to the match.
Usually yes, but they are more likely to appear in upper tiers, less central sections or single-seat listings. Buyers who stay flexible on the exact block and row usually give themselves a better chance of finding stronger value.
They can be, depending on live market supply and which premium products are listed at the time. This fixture has a broad Anfield hospitality structure, so availability is not limited to one single premium format.
It depends on the package, but inclusions can cover lounge access, food service, complimentary drinks, matchday programmes and upgraded seating. Some packages are more casual and lively, while others are built around a more formal dining experience.
VIP-style products usually sit at the higher end of the hospitality range and can include executive-style seating, premium lounges and wider food-and-drink inclusions. The exact bundle depends on the listing and the package category attached to it.
Yes. All Liverpool home listings for this fixture are Anfield listings, and you can compare them by section, quantity, price and delivery type on the fixture page. That lets you choose the version of the day that suits you rather than taking a one-size-fits-all route.
The answer depends on what kind of day you want. Some buyers prefer the pull of a more atmospheric end, while others want a more central football view from the Main Stand or Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand.
The visiting supporters' guide places away entry through Q and R from the Anfield Road side, which identifies the away allocation in the Anfield Road end. Palace supporters should look for listings that match that context rather than assuming any home block will suit them.
That is not advisable. Segregation matters at Premier League matches, and buying in the wrong section for the team you support can create a more difficult entry experience.
No, that is not the right approach. The away allocation is intended for visiting supporters, and buying in the correct area for the team you support is the safer and more sensible option.
Away allocations are limited and tied to the visitors' section at Anfield. If you want Palace-supporter seating, review listing notes carefully and make sure the ticket is clearly suitable for the away end before you buy.
Often yes, but availability depends on the live listings at the time you search. If you are buying for a pair or a group, always check the listing notes rather than assuming adjacent seats are included.
Delivery depends on the listing and can include mobile transfer, electronic ticketing or another secure digital method. The delivery line on the listing should be treated as essential reading, not background information.
Sometimes, but not always. Some listings can be transferred quickly, while others are only released closer to the game. The safest approach is to read the delivery timing before you commit.
Earlier usually gives you more choice, especially at Anfield. Even so, the market can move both ways, so smart buyers compare section and delivery quality as well as timing rather than chasing only the first listing they see.
Liverpool's visiting supporters guide says only small handheld bags up to A5 size are permitted, with limited medical exceptions. Larger bags are not part of the standard matchday entry allowance, so travelling light is the sensible option.
Yes, but children under 16 must be accompanied by an adult aged 18 or over according to Liverpool's supporter guidance. Liverpool also states that the standing area is not suitable for children under 14, so section choice matters as much as the ticket itself if you are buying for younger supporters.
Public transport is usually the easiest route. Liverpool's visitor guidance highlights Lime Street as the rail gateway, the Soccerbus from Sandhills Station, and dedicated bus services toward the stadium, while also warning that general paid parking around the ground is very limited.
Sources used across this page include 11v11 match records, Liverpool FC ticket availability pages, Liverpool FC visiting supporters guidance, Liverpool FC NFC and stadium access pages, Liverpool FC hospitality package pages, the Premier League fixtures archive, transfer-record listings for recent match cross-checks, and live 1BoxOffice club, venue and fixture pages.