No fixture in English football carries the same weight as Liverpool against Manchester United. Two cities, two dynasties, 40 league titles split between them and a rivalry that predates the Premier League by the better part of a century. When United visit Anfield in the 2025/26 campaign, Liverpool vs Manchester United tickets move faster than almost any other league fixture on the calendar, and the resale market is often the only practical route to a seat.
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Anfield holds just over 61,000 after the Anfield Road Stand expansion, and a sizeable chunk of that capacity is locked to season-ticket holders and members. The club's home fixtures at Anfield sell out quickly through members-only ballots for this specific match, which pushes most neutral and international buyers towards verified resale platforms. Prices swing hard depending on how each side sits in the table, the kick-off slot and broadcast interest.
If you are planning to buy for this match, getting the seating geography right matters. A Kop ticket feels nothing like a Main Stand hospitality seat, and the Anfield Road End behaves differently again. The sections below break down the price bands, the stands, the away-fan rules and the delivery mechanics so you can make an informed call before committing.
This fixture is one of the most heavily followed league fixtures in English football, routinely drawing one of the largest global broadcast audiences of any Premier League match. That visibility drives a knock-on effect in ticket demand: travelling fans, neutrals from overseas, hospitality clients and corporate groups all converge on the same match window. Demand for seats against Manchester United at Anfield sits among Liverpool's highest home league-demand levels of the season.
The away allocation is the standard Premier League 3,000, which is about as concentrated as away interest gets in the English top flight. United's travelling support snap those up through their own membership and loyalty schemes well before any wider release, and any remaining home-ticket availability is usually absorbed quickly through member sales. Hospitality can be among the first products to tighten for this fixture, often six to nine months before kick-off.
The second layer of demand comes from the historical weight of the fixture. Anfield has hosted some of the most memorable meetings between these clubs, from Dirk Kuyt's 2011 hat-trick to the 7-0 win in March 2023 and Harry Maguire's late winner in October 2025 that ended a nine-year United drought at the ground. Each new chapter feeds the next.
Liverpool FC's own sales channels favour season-ticket holders and paid members. Tickets for this match are distributed through controlled members-only ballots and additional member sales for eligible supporters. The club's own site is the first port of call for those inside the membership scheme, but if you sit outside it, the odds of landing a seat through the club are slim.
A verified resale marketplace is the realistic alternative for most non-members. Ticket holders who can no longer attend list their seats, and buyers can compare stands, prices and delivery types before committing. This is a common route for international buyers, latecomers and neutrals. It also means sellers with restricted resale on their own club channels have a legitimate route to move unwanted tickets.
Expect supply to tighten in the final fortnight. Most members-only ballots close early, corporate hospitality sells out well in advance, and the marketplace price curve usually climbs as kick-off approaches. Buying three to six weeks out tends to give the best balance of choice and price for this specific fixture.
Resale prices for this match are shaped by five factors. Seat location drives the biggest swing: a Kop ticket behind the goal rarely matches a halfway-line Main Stand seat. Demand spikes around fixture announcements and in the week of the game. Kick-off timing matters too, with weekend evening slots costing more than midweek or lunchtime windows. Competition context shifts the needle when either club is pushing for a title or fighting relegation. Finally, the hospitality tier determines whether you are paying for a seat alone or a full matchday package with dining and lounge access.
| Ticket Type | Resale Price Range | Best For | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upper tier / less central | £180 – £320 | Budget-conscious buyers who still want to be inside Anfield | Usually found in upper Anfield Road or upper Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand |
| Longside standard | £260 – £480 | Balanced view and strong matchday feel | Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand and lower Main Stand sections |
| Lower tier / central | £420 – £750+ | Close-to-pitch action and pitch-level sightlines | Central Main Stand lower and central Dalglish Lower are the strongest regular seats |
| Premium seating | £700 – £1,400+ | Padded seats, premium sightlines, in-seat service | Includes Main Stand premium bowl and Founders-adjacent tiers |
| Hospitality / VIP | £1,200 – £4,500+ | Full matchday experience with dining and lounge access | Founders Club, Anfield Beat Lounge, Premier Club and executive boxes |
Prices reflect typical resale ranges and may change as demand and availability shift closer to the match.
Anfield is made up of four stands: the Main Stand, the Kop, the Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand and the Anfield Road End. The redeveloped Main Stand and the expanded Anfield Road End have reshaped the capacity picture in recent years, and the premium seating options around the Main Stand now sit at a different price point to the rest of the ground.
The Anfield seating plan is worth studying before you buy, because the difference between a lower-tier central seat and an upper-tier corner is significant both in price and in experience. Listings will usually tell you which stand and block you are buying into, so cross-reference against the map before committing.
| Area | What It Suits | Pricing Bracket | General Guidance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Longside lower | Fans who want close pitch action and atmosphere | Mid to upper | Lower Main Stand and lower Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand give balanced sightlines and quick bar access |
| Longside upper | Wider view of play and tactical patterns | Mid | Upper Main Stand and upper Dalglish Stand sit further from the pitch but show the shape of the game better |
| Behind the goal | Traditional matchday experience with chanting sections | Varies by tier | The Kop is the home supporters' end and carries the loudest vocal support; the Anfield Road End lower has been rebuilt and expanded |
| Premium seats | Comfort and central sightlines without full hospitality | Upper | Main Stand premium bowl sits halfway up with padded seating, in-seat service and improved access routes |
| Hospitality | Matchday dining, lounge access and former-player appearances | Top tier | The Main Stand houses the Anfield Beat Lounge and executive boxes, the Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand contains Premier Club and the Anfield Road End upper tier is home to Founders Club |
The away end at Anfield is in the lower tier of the Anfield Road End, in blocks AL6, AL7, AL8 and AL9. The standard Premier League 3,000 allocation places United supporters behind the goal in the northernmost corner of the ground. Browsing Anfield tickets on the fixture page will show you which blocks and stands are currently listed, so you can see availability across the ground before narrowing your search.
| Supporter Type | Best Approach |
|---|---|
| Home fans | Buy into the Kop, Main Stand or Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand. The Kop carries the heaviest home-end atmosphere; the Main Stand gives central sightlines and access to hospitality |
| Away supporters | Travelling Manchester United fans are allocated blocks AL6 to AL9 in the lower Anfield Road End. The allocation is almost always 3,000, so supply on general resale is limited |
| Neutral buyers | Avoid wearing visible away colours in home sections. Neutral-friendly options include the upper Main Stand and the Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand, where the atmosphere is lively without being partisan |
Neutral buyers should note that Liverpool vs Manchester United is treated as one of the highest-demand fixtures by the club. That usually means tighter matchday controls and a heavier stewarding and policing presence than for a lower-demand fixture.
Hospitality at Anfield is spread across several stands. The redeveloped Main Stand houses lounges and premium seating tiers, while the Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand contains the Premier Club suites. The Founders Club Lounge sits in the upper tier of the Anfield Road End, with seats behind the goal and panoramic views across the pitch. Each package comes with a numbered padded seat, access to a dedicated lounge with food and drink service and a matchday programme. Many lounges open two and a half to three hours before kick-off and stay open for an hour after the final whistle.
| Hospitality Option | Typical Buyer | Main Appeal |
|---|---|---|
| Anfield Beat Lounge | Fans wanting a music-themed, relaxed matchday feel | Located in the Main Stand, themed around Liverpool's musical heritage, casual sports-bar dining and bar service before and after the match |
| Premier Club (Shanks or Paisley suites) | Groups and regulars who want consistent premium access | Padded central seating in the Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand, three-course dining, former-player Q&A sessions, half-time and full-time refreshments |
| Founders Club Lounge | Buyers wanting the highest on-site hospitality tier | Located in the upper tier of the Anfield Road End, which offers panoramic pitch views, fine dining, Champagne reception and premium wine list |
| Executive Boxes | Corporate groups of 10 and private parties | Glass-fronted private box, self-contained dining and bar, prime central sightlines in the Main Stand |
Delivery methods vary by seller and by stand. Read the listing carefully before you buy: some tickets are forwarded to your phone through a club app, some come by secure courier, and some are collected locally on matchday. Always bring a valid photo ID that matches the lead booking name where required, and charge your phone before you set off for the ground if your entry is mobile-only.
| Delivery Type | What to Check |
|---|---|
| Mobile/digital | Compatible app installed, phone fully charged, screen brightness up at the turnstile, and any transfer steps completed at least 24 hours before kick-off |
| E-ticket (PDF) | Name match with ID if required, printed back-up if possible and QR code readable |
| Courier delivery | Delivery address confirmed at checkout, tracking number monitored and signature arrangements in place if you are travelling |
| Local pick-up | Pick-up point confirmed in the listing notes, ID for collection and time window checked to avoid missing the seller |
Always read the listing notes in full. Restricted-view seats, away-section resale bans and obstructed sightlines are disclosed there, and ignoring them is one of the most common reasons buyers end up disappointed on matchday.
The buying flow is designed to be straightforward. Eight steps take you from fixture search to secure confirmation:
Step1
Open the listing page and confirm the fixture details
Open the Liverpool vs Manchester United listing page and check the date, kick-off time and venue confirmation at the top of the fixture card.
Step2
Create a buyer account or register
Create a buyer account or register with your name, email address and contact number. This is required before checkout.
Step3
Filter listings and use the stadium map
Filter listings by price, stand, number of seats together and delivery type. Use the interactive stadium map to narrow the view.
Step4
Open a listing and review the details
Click a listing to see the exact block, row details where disclosed, ticket notes and estimated delivery window.
Step5
Select your tickets and add them to the basket
Select the number of tickets you need and add them to your basket. Seats together are grouped automatically in most listings.
Step6
Review the total and delivery method
Review the total, including any service fee, before confirming. Check the delivery method one more time against your travel plans.
Step7
Complete secure checkout
Complete secure checkout. 1BoxOffice has operated since 2006 as a verified marketplace with trusted sellers and a 150% money-back guarantee if a valid ticket fails to materialise, which is why many international and last-minute buyers use it for high-demand fixtures like this one.
Step8
Track your order after purchase
After purchase, use the track your order tool to follow the delivery status and any seller updates.
Overseas buyers make up a significant slice of resale traffic for this match. Mobile delivery is usually the preferred option for travelling fans because it removes the courier complication, and most sellers now use digital forwarding through the Liverpool app or a verified e-ticket format. Read the listing carefully to confirm your delivery type and window before booking flights around it.
Seats together requests are handled on a best-available basis, and the likelihood of securing a block of four or more falls sharply as kick-off approaches. If you are booking for a group, book early and be flexible on the exact row. Fixture dates can also shift at short notice for broadcast reasons, so build a day either side of the published date into your travel plan and keep an eye on fixture update notifications from your seller.
The Premier League era has added 34 chapters to this rivalry at Anfield, starting in 1992/93 when Mark Hughes and Brian McClair edged a 2-1 result for Alex Ferguson's side. The early years of the competition were a period of United dominance, with Liverpool trying to hold the line while their northern rivals chased titles. Even so, Anfield was rarely a comfortable destination for United: Robbie Fowler's brace in December 1995 and Jamie Redknapp's winner in March 1995 kept Liverpool competitive at home during that era.
The rivalry shifted again during the Rafael Benitez and Ferguson years, with matches like Torres' opener in October 2009, Dirk Kuyt's 6 March 2011 hat-trick and the unforgettable Mohamed Salah masterclass in April 2022 defining the modern chapter. Jürgen Klopp's Liverpool turned Anfield into one of the most feared home grounds in Europe, and the rivalry reached a statistical peak on 5 March 2023 when Cody Gakpo, Darwin Nunez and Mo Salah each scored twice in a 7-0 demolition, Liverpool's heaviest ever competitive win over United.
What sets Liverpool vs Manchester United at Anfield apart is the sheer weight of context each fixture carries. Even in years when one side is well clear of the other in the table, the match tends to produce outlier results and memorable individual performances. The modern Anfield Road End expansion has added more neutral and international seats, which has broadened the matchday audience without reducing the intensity on the pitch.
Data sourced from ESPN match reports, the Premier League's published match archive, Sky Sports football coverage, Sports Mole, Liverpool FC's published match reports and Manchester United's published matchday records.
| Metric | Total |
|---|---|
| Matches played | 34 |
| Home wins | 12 |
| Away wins | 14 |
| Draws | 8 |
| Home goals | 51 |
| Away goals | 38 |
| Biggest home win | 7-0 |
| Biggest away win | 1-3 |
| First EPL meeting at Anfield | 6 March 1993 |
| Most recently played home EPL meeting | 19 October 2025 |
Totals are calculated from the match-by-match list below. All figures cover Premier League fixtures at Anfield only.
| Date | Score |
|---|---|
| 19 Oct 2025 | 1-2 |
| 05 Jan 2025 | 2-2 |
| 17 Dec 2023 | 0-0 |
| 05 Mar 2023 | 7-0 |
| 19 Apr 2022 | 4-0 |
| 17 Jan 2021 | 0-0 |
| 19 Jan 2020 | 2-0 |
| 16 Dec 2018 | 3-1 |
| 14 Oct 2017 | 0-0 |
| 17 Oct 2016 | 0-0 |
| 17 Jan 2016 | 0-1 |
| 22 Mar 2015 | 1-2 |
| 01 Sep 2013 | 1-0 |
| 23 Sep 2012 | 1-2 |
| 15 Oct 2011 | 1-1 |
| 06 Mar 2011 | 3-1 |
| 25 Oct 2009 | 2-0 |
| 13 Sep 2008 | 2-1 |
| 16 Dec 2007 | 0-1 |
| 03 Mar 2007 | 0-1 |
| 22 Jan 2006 | 0-1 |
| 15 Jan 2005 | 0-1 |
| 09 Nov 2003 | 1-2 |
| 01 Dec 2002 | 1-2 |
| 04 Nov 2001 | 3-1 |
| 31 Mar 2001 | 2-0 |
| 11 Sep 1999 | 2-3 |
| 05 May 1999 | 2-2 |
| 06 Dec 1997 | 1-3 |
| 19 Apr 1997 | 1-3 |
| 17 Dec 1995 | 2-0 |
| 19 Mar 1995 | 2-0 |
| 04 Jan 1994 | 3-3 |
| 06 Mar 1993 | 1-2 |
Scores cross-referenced across ESPN match reports, the Premier League's own match archive, Sky Sports, Sports Mole, Liverpool FC's published match records and Manchester United's published matchday records.
Yes. Club sales channels favour season-ticket holders and paid members, but verified resale marketplaces give non-members a realistic route to a seat. Most international buyers and neutrals end up buying this way.
International buyers typically use verified resale platforms that support global delivery and mobile forwarding. Mobile and digital tickets remove most courier complications, and listings disclose delivery windows before you commit. Build travel flexibility around potential fixture movement.
Five factors drive the swings: seat location, demand spikes in the week of the match, kick-off timing, the competitive state of each club and hospitality tier. Central lower-tier seats and hospitality suites move first and cost the most.
Book three to six weeks before kick-off, widen your search to upper tiers and less central blocks and set a hard ceiling before you start shopping. Splitting a group of four into two pairs across adjacent rows usually gives a stronger value than insisting on a block of four.
Hospitality sells out first for this fixture, often six to nine months in advance. Returns can appear on resale platforms in the final fortnight, but supply is tight and prices firm.
A padded central or longside seat, lounge access, a matchday programme and food and drink service that varies by package. Many lounges open two and a half to three hours before kick-off and close around an hour after the final whistle.
VIP packages add extras on top of standard hospitality: premium dining, Champagne reception, former-player Q&A sessions, private lounge access and enhanced matchday service. Founders Club and executive boxes sit at the top of this scale.
Yes. Listings for this specific match sit under the fixture page, not the general stadium page. Always confirm the date and kick-off window before checkout so you are not buying into a different Anfield match.
The Kop is the loudest home end, followed by the lower Main Stand and lower Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand. Upper tiers give a better tactical view but with slightly less vocal intensity.
Away supporters sit in the lower Anfield Road End in blocks AL6 to AL9. The allocation is the standard Premier League 3,000 seats. Check the club's published matchday guide for the designated away entry point.
No. Wearing visible away colours in home sections is against club rules and can lead to ejection or a ban. If you are a United fan sitting in a home area, leave the club shirt and scarf at home.
No. The away end is reserved for travelling Manchester United supporters and is enforced with ID checks and resale restrictions. Home fans buying tickets listed as away allocation risk being turned away at the turnstile.
The visiting club receives 3,000 tickets as standard for Premier League away fixtures at Anfield. Those seats are distributed through United's own membership and loyalty scheme and are not sold by Liverpool.
Seats together are handled on a best-available basis and are easier to secure earlier in the sales window. Pairs are much more common than blocks of four on resale platforms for this fixture.
Mobile or digital forwarding, e-ticket PDFs, courier delivery and local pick-up are the main options. The delivery method is disclosed in each listing and depends on the seller and the stand.
Some mobile and PDF listings deliver instantly after purchase. Others are time-locked until the club releases tickets to the seller. Always check the delivery window on the listing.
Three to six weeks before kick-off usually gives the best balance of choice and price. Earlier than that, and hospitality tends to dominate the listings; later than that, and prices climb sharply as supply thins.
Only a small handheld bag up to A5 size is permitted, along with LFC clear carrier bags for store purchases. Backpacks, holdalls and luggage are not allowed. The club runs bag searches at entry, so travel light on matchday and leave larger bags at your accommodation.
Yes, in family areas and with an accompanying adult. Some sections of the ground are not suitable for young children because of the atmosphere and capacity, and the lower Kop and away end are not typically recommended for very young fans.
Anfield is about three miles north of Liverpool city centre. Buses from Liverpool ONE and the city centre run on matchday with dedicated football services, and walking from Kirkdale or Sandhills stations on the Merseyrail Northern Line is popular. Parking is limited near the ground, and residents-only restrictions apply in most nearby streets.
Data sourced from ESPN match reports, the Premier League's published match archive, Sky Sports, Sports Mole, Liverpool FC's published match records, Manchester United's published matchday records and the clubs' published matchday guidance for Anfield.