The Anfield league meeting between Liverpool and Newcastle United in 2025/26 was played on 31 January 2026 and finished Liverpool 4-1 Newcastle United. This page should therefore be read as an archive and a buying-reference guide for future Anfield league meetings between the clubs, not as a live sales page for that completed match.
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When buyers look at Liverpool tickets for Newcastle at Anfield, the real decision is usually not whether demand exists. It is usually about where to sit, how much view quality matters, whether you need seats together and which delivery method best fits the trip. That is what tends to separate a good purchase from a rushed one.
This is also a fixture where practical details matter. The away area, mobile entry, bag rules, matchday transport and the difference between standard seating and hospitality all shape the day just as much as the badge on the listing.
This is not the same kind of market as a derby, but it still attracts sustained interest. Buyers tracking Newcastle United tickets know that away demand for Anfield is strong, travel from the north-east is workable for supporters willing to commit early, and Liverpool home demand stays high for almost every Premier League date at this stadium.
There is also a football reason the fixture stays active in the ticket market. Liverpool and Newcastle have produced high-scoring meetings, late twists and a run of Premier League games that often feel more open than the usual top-end chess match. That makes the game attractive to buyers who want a real occasion without paying the absolute peak rates usually attached to Liverpool against Manchester United or Everton.
Hospitality adds another layer. Newcastle away days at major grounds tend to draw client hosting, weekend travellers and buyers who want the day organised from arrival to final whistle. Once those buyers focus on the same short package list, availability can tighten fast.
Yes, though usually not through the club route once the stronger-demand phases have passed. The Premier League's ticket information page says Liverpool home league sales are generally prioritised for members, and Liverpool's own availability pages regularly show members-only windows, registrations or limited later access for selected fixtures.
That is why the secondary market matters for non-members, overseas buyers and supporters who decide later in the cycle. For this fixture, that route is often the clearest way to compare available seats once the first wave of primary inventory has already been taken.
It is still important to be strict on listing details. Liverpool's visiting supporters guidance tells fans without tickets not to travel, so buyers should focus on clear section information, quantity, delivery type and whether the seat is really suited to the supporter profile in the group.
Price movement here usually comes down to five things: seat location, general demand, kick-off timing, where the match sits in the wider season and whether the listing is standard seating or hospitality. Central lower rows, cleaner pairs and packages with lounge access usually sit above the entry point, while upper-tier seats and less central angles often offer the softer end of the market.
| Ticket Type | Resale Price Range | Best For | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upper tier / less central | £115 – £170 | Buyers aiming for the lower entry point | Usually the starting area for value, though row height and angle matter a lot. |
| Longside standard | £165 – £250 | Buyers wanting a balanced match view | Often, the most searched standard option for this fixture. |
| Lower tier / central | £240 – £360+ | Supporters who want a stronger pitch view | Pairs and small groups in these areas can disappear quickly. |
| Premium seating | £360 – £650+ | Travellers, occasional buyers and client hosting | Usually trades on comfort, centrality and cleaner access. |
| Hospitality / VIP | £550 – £1,400+ | Buyers prioritising service and a fuller day | Ranges vary by package tier, drinks inclusion, meal format and seat position. |
Prices reflect typical resale ranges and may change as demand and availability shift closer to the match.
The Anfield seating plan is useful because this ground does not trade only on prestige. It trades on feel. Some buyers want the whole-pitch picture from higher rows, some want the closeness of lower longside seating, and some want the match wrapped into a lounge-led day that removes most of the guesswork.
Anfield tickets for Liverpool against Newcastle usually split into clear buying patterns. Behind-goal seats lean more towards atmosphere, longside rows lean more towards the viewing angle, and hospitality sits apart as a comfort-and-service decision rather than a pure seat decision.
| Area | What It Suits | Pricing Bracket | General Guidance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Longside lower | Buyers who want closeness to the pitch | Mid to high | Main Stand and Lower Sir Kenny Dalglish positions usually command a premium because the view feels immediate without losing structure. |
| Longside upper | Supporters who want the whole game in front of them | Mid | Often a strong compromise between price and sightline, especially for first-time visitors. |
| Behind the goal | Atmosphere-first buyers | Low to mid | The Kop carries the classic Anfield feel, while the Anfield Road end varies more depending on the exact section. |
| Premium seats | Occasion buyers and business guests | High | Usually chosen for comfort, entry flow and a cleaner seat position rather than raw noise. |
| Hospitality | Buyers who want the day planned out | High | Packages range from sports-bar access to full dining-led lounge products with inclusive drinks. |
Liverpool's visiting supporters guide places visiting fans in the Anfield Road Stand and directs them to entrances Q and R. The same guide says away supporters must approach Anfield Road from the direction of 97 Avenue, with no current access from the Arkles Lane side, and advises supporters to turn left when leaving after the game.
That matters because the wrong ticket can make the whole day harder than it needs to be. Buyers should match the listing to the supporter identity in the group rather than assuming any available seat will do.
| Supporter Type | Best Approach |
|---|---|
| Home fans | Choose Liverpool sections in the Main Stand, Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand, the Kop or non-segregated parts of the Anfield Road Stand. |
| Away supporters | Look for listings clearly placed in the visitors' area of the Anfield Road Stand and use the Q and R approach from 97 Avenue. |
| Neutral buyers | Pick a calmer longside seat unless you are certain which supporter environment suits your group better. |
Anfield offers enough variation in hospitality to suit very different budgets and expectations. Liverpool's hospitality material ranges from sports-bar formats with lighter inclusions to dining-led lounges with table service, inclusive drinks and stronger seat positions in the Main Stand or Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand.
| Hospitality Option | Typical Buyer | Main Appeal |
|---|---|---|
| Reds Bar | Fans wanting an entry hospitality option | Sports-bar atmosphere, one drink included and a match ticket in Block KG of the Lower Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand. |
| Brodies | Groups and lively premium buyers | Anfield Road sports-bar setting, casual food, sociable pre-match atmosphere and match seating linked to that end of the ground. |
| The Beautiful Game | Buyers wanting a polished lounge experience | Modern British dining, attentive service, inclusive drinks and Main Stand seating. |
| The Chemistry Lounge | Higher-end occasion and corporate buyers | A more refined matchday lounge setting, stronger service levels and a seat position aimed at comfort as much as view. |
The gap between tiers is not only about food. It is about seat location, how private the lounge feels, whether drinks are part of the package, and how much of the day is handled for you before you even reach the turnstile. Liverpool's current matchday lounge set is better understood through The Reds Bar, Brodies, The Beautiful Game and The Chemistry Lounge than through broader seasonal hospitality naming.
Liverpool uses digital stadium entry at Anfield, with the club's NFC guidance stating that tickets are digital on a smartphone in the form of an NFC pass. On the resale side, buyers may also see PDF delivery, local collection or arranged handover depending on the listing and how close to kick-off the order is placed.
| Delivery Type | What to Check |
|---|---|
| Mobile NFC pass | Check the transfer steps, device compatibility and whether each guest needs their own pass on their own phone. |
| PDF / e-ticket | Read the seller note carefully and make sure the stated format matches the entry instructions. |
| Local collection | Confirm the collection point, time window and what ID will be needed before you travel. |
| Hotel or hand delivery | Make sure the named hotel, meeting window and contact details all work with your matchday plan. |
Always read the listing notes in full, bring valid photo ID and make sure the phone used for entry is charged before you leave for the ground.
Step1
Search the fixture and filter the listings
Search the fixture and filter the available listings by stand, quantity, delivery type and price.
Step2
Create your buyer profile
Create your buyer profile through Register so your account, delivery details and order information are ready before checkout.
Step3
Compare the exact section and listing details
Compare exact section, row and listing notes rather than deciding only by the headline price.
Step4
Choose the seat type that suits your day
Choose whether standard seating, a stronger longside view or hospitality suits the day you want.
Step5
Check whether the seats are together
Check whether the seats are together, separated by an aisle or listed as singles before you commit.
Step6
Review the delivery method
Review the delivery method and make sure it fits your travel schedule and phone setup.
Step7
Complete checkout when the listing fits
Complete checkout when the listing matches your budget, supporter profile and timing needs.
Step8
Track your order after purchase
Use Track Order to follow fulfilment and keep the matchday instructions in one place.
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International buyers usually care first about certainty, then about seat position. Digital entry is often the cleanest fit for overseas travel, though buyers still need to check whether the listing is an NFC pass, a mobile transfer, a PDF or a collection arrangement because each one affects how early you need to arrive and which device you will need at the turnstile.
Seats together also need careful reading. Pairs are regularly available for this fixture, while larger groups can narrow more quickly, especially in better-value ranges. Buyers building flights or hotel plans around the game should also leave room for fixture movement because broadcast selection can still move the date or kick-off time.
Liverpool against Newcastle at Anfield has built a strong Premier League identity of its own. This is not a fixture defined only by one era or one famous scoreline. It has produced title-race tension, late winners, chaotic end-to-end football and a long run of Anfield meetings where Liverpool have usually found a way to control the outcome without the games ever feeling flat.
That is part of the buying appeal. Supporters are not just paying for a big stadium and two recognisable clubs. They are paying for a fixture that often opens up, creates moments and carries a sense that something sharp can happen quickly, whether the market expects a home win or not.
What makes the fixture distinctive is that it often gives buyers both things at once: the structure of a major home date and the looseness of a game that can still break open. At Anfield, that combination has made Liverpool against Newcastle one of the more entertaining premium-tier league tickets outside the classic derby and title-race headliners.
Sources for the history section: 11v11 match records, Statbunker match logs, Premier League match pages, ESPN reports, Transfermarkt match records, and Liverpool's published ticketing, hospitality and visiting-supporters information.
| Metric | Total |
|---|---|
| Matches played | 31 |
| Liverpool wins | 25 |
| Newcastle United wins | 1 |
| Draws | 5 |
| Liverpool goals | 77 |
| Newcastle United goals | 27 |
| Biggest Liverpool win | 4-0 |
| Biggest Newcastle United win | 2-0 |
| First Premier League meeting at Anfield | 16 Apr 1994 |
| Most recent home Premier League meeting | 31 Jan 2026 |
Source note: totals are calculated from the full match-by-match list below, compiled from 11v11 home records for Liverpool against Newcastle United and cross-checked against Premier League, ESPN and Transfermarkt match pages for recent meetings.
| Date | Score |
|---|---|
| 31 Jan 2026 | 4-1 |
| 26 Feb 2025 | 2-0 |
| 01 Jan 2024 | 4-2 |
| 31 Aug 2022 | 2-1 |
| 16 Dec 2021 | 3-1 |
| 24 Apr 2021 | 1-1 |
| 14 Sep 2019 | 3-1 |
| 26 Dec 2018 | 4-0 |
| 03 Mar 2018 | 2-0 |
| 23 Apr 2016 | 2-2 |
| 13 Apr 2015 | 2-0 |
| 11 May 2014 | 2-1 |
| 04 Nov 2012 | 1-1 |
| 30 Dec 2011 | 3-1 |
| 01 May 2011 | 3-0 |
| 03 May 2009 | 3-0 |
| 08 Mar 2008 | 3-0 |
| 20 Sep 2006 | 2-0 |
| 26 Dec 2005 | 2-0 |
| 19 Dec 2004 | 3-1 |
| 15 May 2004 | 1-1 |
| 02 Sep 2002 | 2-2 |
| 06 Mar 2002 | 3-0 |
| 05 May 2001 | 3-0 |
| 25 Mar 2000 | 2-1 |
| 28 Dec 1998 | 4-2 |
| 20 Jan 1998 | 1-0 |
| 10 Mar 1997 | 4-3 |
| 03 Apr 1996 | 4-3 |
| 04 Mar 1995 | 2-0 |
| 16 Apr 1994 | 0-2 |
Source note: 11v11 Liverpool record against Newcastle United, cross-checked against Premier League match archives, ESPN reports for recent seasons and Transfermarkt match listings.
Yes, many buyers use the resale market for this fixture because member sales can absorb a large share of the primary inventory. The important thing is to use a trusted marketplace and read the listing notes carefully before you pay.
Yes, international buyers target this fixture regularly. The main check is whether the delivery method fits your travel plans and phone setup, especially if the ticket is sent as an NFC pass.
Prices move with demand, seat location, pair availability, kick-off timing and the wider context of the season. Hospitality tiers and central longside rows usually sit above the entry market.
Upper-tier seats and less central blocks are usually the first place to look. Single seats can also offer stronger value than pairs when the market becomes uneven.
They often are, though the package range can tighten quickly once weekend travellers and corporate buyers start moving. Always check the package description rather than assuming two lounges offer the same thing.
That depends on the lounge. Some products offer a lighter sports-bar format with one drink, while others include table dining, inclusive drinks, a match programme and a stronger seat position.
VIP-style products usually sit at the top end of the hospitality range. They may include upgraded dining, broader drinks coverage, more private lounge space and a premium seat location.
Yes, but make sure the listing is tied to this exact fixture. A stadium page or seating page helps with research, though the match ticket itself must clearly match Liverpool against Newcastle at Anfield.
Most of Anfield operates as home seating outside the segregated visitors' area in the Anfield Road Stand. Buyers wanting a straightforward home-supporter environment usually focus on the Main Stand, Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand, the Kop or clearly non-away parts of Anfield Road.
The away section is in the Anfield Road Stand. Liverpool's visiting-supporters guide directs visiting fans to entrances Q and R with approach from the direction of 97 Avenue.
That is not a good idea. Even where entry is not blocked, wearing away colours in home-heavy sections can create an awkward or uncomfortable day.
That is not advisable and can create entry or stewarding issues. Buyers should always match the ticket to the supporter identity of the person using it.
Away allocations for big Premier League games are controlled through the away club's own route and eligibility rules. That is one reason resale demand rises when regular away access is not available to most fans.
Yes, pairs are common enough, though larger groups usually narrow first in the better-value ranges. Buyers who need three or four together should act earlier if the exact grouping matters.
Mobile NFC passes, digital transfer, PDF or e-ticket fulfilment, local collection and arranged handover can all appear depending on the listing. The seller's note should be treated as the working instruction for that order.
They can appear, especially with digital formats, but not every digital ticket is released instantly. Always check whether the transfer is immediate, later the same day or tied to a release window.
Buyers who care most about section choice usually move earlier. Buyers who are more flexible on seat position sometimes wait longer, knowing the price may soften in some areas while the overall choice becomes narrower.
Liverpool's visiting supporters' guide says only small handheld bags up to A5 size are permitted, alongside club-store clear carrier bags with store purchases. Larger bags may be permitted at the club's discretion where they contain medication or medical equipment that cannot fit inside an A5-size bag.
Yes, though Liverpool's stadium regulations say children under 16 must be accompanied by an adult aged 18 or over. The standing area is not suitable for children under 14, so younger supporters are usually better placed in calmer seated sections.
Liverpool's travel guidance points supporters towards Lime Street for mainline arrivals, the 917 express from the city centre and the Soccerbus from Sandhills Station. Public transport is usually the easiest option on a busy Anfield matchday.
Sources used across this page: 1BoxOffice fixture, team and stadium pages, Liverpool FC ticket availability pages, Liverpool FC visiting-supporters guidance, Liverpool FC hospitality package pages, Liverpool FC NFC entry guidance, Liverpool FC travel information, Premier League ticket information, 11v11 match records, Statbunker match logs, ESPN match reports, Transfermarkt match listings and worldfootball.net season indexes.