Liverpool vs Wolves tickets for the 2025/26 Premier League meeting at Anfield now sit in the archive after a 2-1 Liverpool win on Saturday, 27 December 2025, in front of 60,466. Ryan Gravenberch scored on 41 minutes, Florian Wirtz added his first Liverpool goal a minute later, and Santiago Bueno gave Wolves hope after the break, leaving this fixture as a useful reference point for how Liverpool vs Wolves demand, seating and away access tend to work at Anfield.
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For supporters comparing this fixture with other Liverpool tickets, resale demand usually sits below the biggest Anfield showpieces but above the softest home dates on the calendar. The guide below focuses on how buyers judge stand choice, delivery, away access, hospitality and matchday planning when Liverpool hosts Wolves.
Anfield now operates at just over 61,000 after the Anfield Road expansion, but much of that capacity is already tied up in season tickets, memberships and hospitality packages. That leaves a relatively tight slice of open circulation for any Liverpool home match, including visits from clubs outside the title-race bracket.
This fixture does not usually trade at derby or title-decider levels, but it still attracts Liverpool regulars, first-time visitors and overseas buyers who want an Anfield match without waiting for the rarest dates on the calendar. A Wolves trip also brings a committed travelling support from the West Midlands, which keeps pressure on the away allocation.
The demand profile is shaped by Liverpool's home following and Wolves tickets sold through the away side's own schemes. For buyers on the resale market, the practical question is not whether the match matters, but which stand, delivery type, and timing window offer the best balance of value and certainty.
Liverpool's direct sales route is weighted towards season-ticket holders and members, with remaining stock usually filtered through member sales or controlled releases. For non-members, genuine open access through the club is uncommon for Premier League fixtures at Anfield.
That is why many buyers end up using a resale marketplace. A resale route lets you compare section, row, quantity and delivery type without needing club priority status. It is especially useful for international visitors, late planners plus corporate buyers who miss the original sales window.
The closer the fixture gets, the more the market tends to narrow. Better-positioned seats often disappear first, while listings that remain close to kick-off are more likely to involve compromises on exact block, row or delivery method.
Resale pricing is driven by market conditions rather than a single club-set figure. Stand location, row, pair availability, kick-off slot, delivery method and the wider Premier League weekend all affect what buyers see in live listings.
For this fixture, the market usually sits in a lower, middle and premium range rather than reaching the sharp spikes seen for title rivals or derby opponents. Lower-tier corners and less central positions tend to sit in the more accessible part of the market, while Main Stand central seats, premium rows and hospitality move into a more expensive bracket.
Read listing notes carefully before you commit. Seat location, mobile-transfer timing, safe-standing context, plus any access restrictions, matter as much as headline price. Those details often decide whether a listing is good value or only looks that way at first glance.
The table below uses broad resale bands in GBP rather than fixed promises. Live prices can still move materially as supply changes.
| Tier | Typical seat type | Indicative resale band | Who it suits |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 | Upper corners, less central rows | Under £150 | Budget-conscious buyers who mainly want to be inside Anfield |
| Tier 2 | Lower corners and upper sideline seats | £150 to £225 | First-time visitors balancing view and spend |
| Tier 3 | Better sideline seats and stronger lower-tier views | £225 to £325 | Buyers prioritising cleaner sightlines |
| Tier 4 | Central premium rows in standard areas | £325 to £450 | Travellers who want one of the better standard-seat options |
| Tier 5 | Hospitality and premium packages | £450+ | Corporate groups and comfort-led buyers |
Anfield divides naturally into four distinct matchday experiences: the Main Stand, the Kop, the Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand and the Anfield Road End. Before buying, it helps to study both the Anfield seating plan and the wider Anfield tickets landscape, because a seat's value depends heavily on whether you want atmosphere, a broad television-style view or easier logistics with children and older guests.
The Kop remains the emotional centre of the stadium and is the obvious choice for buyers chasing noise and tradition. The Main Stand upper section offers some of the clearest panoramic sightlines in the ground. The Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand is often calmer and more neutral in feel, while the Anfield Road End combines away allocation logistics in the lower section with strong, raised views from the redeveloped upper section.
| Stand | Atmosphere | View | Typical buyer fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Main Stand | Strong, but less relentless than the Kop | Excellent sideline view, especially higher up | Travellers, neutrals and premium-seat buyers |
| Kop | The loudest home section | Behind-goal perspective, more emotional than tactical | Supporters who want the classic Anfield atmosphere |
| Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand | More measured and family-friendly | Reliable all-round pitch view | Families, mixed groups and first-time visitors |
| Anfield Road End Upper | Lively but less iconic than the Kop | Strong raised look down the pitch | Buyers seeking value with a clean overview |
| Anfield Road End Lower | Away-focused in the visiting section | Lower-angle view close to the goal | Away supporters and buyers targeting the visitors' end |
Wolves supporters are usually placed in the lower Anfield Road section, with the allocation operating around the standard 3,000-seat Premier League away limit. For this fixture, the practical issue is not simply the seat number but how you approach the ground and which turnstiles you use.
Liverpool's 2025/26 visiting-supporters guide instructs away fans to use Q and R turnstiles and approach Anfield Road from the direction of 97 Avenue because there is no current access from the Arkles Lane side. The same guide says visiting fans' turnstiles open two hours before kick-off and advises supporters to arrive early for searches and security checks.
Wolves distribute away tickets through their own internal criteria, so the designated away section is usually gone before neutral buyers ever see the fixture. Anyone buying outside that channel needs to understand the risk profile clearly. Home areas are not a substitute for behaving like an away end. Stewards can act if supporter behaviour is incompatible with the section.
| Topic | Practical detail | Buyer takeaway |
|---|---|---|
| Allocation | Standard Premier League away allocation, roughly 3,000 | Supply is limited and typically absorbed quickly |
| Location | Lower Anfield Road section | Best for committed Wolves supporters |
| Approach route | Use 97 Avenue approach for away entry | Plan arrival route before matchday |
| Turnstiles | Q and R for visiting fans | Do not assume a generic stadium entrance applies |
| Timing | Turnstiles open two hours before kick-off | Earlier arrival reduces stress and queue risk |
Anfield hospitality is concentrated around the Main Stand and appeals to a different type of buyer from the regular home and away sections. The attraction is less about pure atmosphere and more about certainty, comfort, padded seating and a less rushed pre-match experience.
For Liverpool vs Wolves, hospitality normally sits at the premium end of the resale market rather than functioning as a bargain alternative. Even so, some buyers prefer it because it reduces friction around arrival, seating quality and group organisation.
| Package type | What it usually includes | Typical price position | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Entry-level lounge | Shared lounge, food offering, padded seat | Premium | First-time hospitality buyers |
| Main Stand premium lounge | Upgraded dining, stronger seat position, hosted setting | High premium | Clients, special occasions and travelling groups |
| Executive box | Private box, hosting environment, group-focused service | Top premium | Corporate entertainment and larger parties |
| Hospitality resale listing | Varies by seller and package | Variable premium | Buyers who missed the original package window |
Delivery matters more than many first-time buyers expect. For Liverpool home fixtures, mobile transfer is usually the simplest route, but resale listings can still vary by seller, lead time and format.
Before booking, check whether the ticket is being transferred digitally, issued as an e-ticket, delivered by courier or collected locally. That timing question becomes especially important for overseas buyers and anyone travelling to Liverpool on the day of the match.
| Delivery type | How it works | What to check |
|---|---|---|
| Mobile transfer | Digital forwarding to the buyer's device | Transfer deadline, app requirements and battery readiness |
| E-ticket | PDF or digital file sent in advance | Name requirements and scan clarity |
| Courier | Physical ticket delivered to an address | Cut-off timing and hotel or home delivery details |
| Local collection | Ticket handed over near the stadium or city centre | Precise collection point and time window |
A careful buyer usually gets more from this market than a rushed one. These eight steps keep the process clean and reduce avoidable mistakes.
Step1
Confirm fixture details
Confirm the fixture details shown on the live listing before you compare seats.
Step2
Create or sign in
Create or sign in to your 1BoxOffice account so you can complete checkout smoothly.
Step3
Set your budget and priority
Decide your spending limit, then choose whether atmosphere, view or hospitality matters most.
Step4
Filter listings
Filter listings by quantity, stand, seat position and delivery type to narrow your options.
Step5
Review listing notes
Read all conditions carefully, including safe standing, restricted views or timing details.
Step6
Check delivery timing
Make sure the delivery window fits your travel plans, hotel check-in and matchday arrival.
Step7
Complete payment
Only proceed with payment once seat details and delivery method meet your needs.
Step8
Track your order
Keep your booking details ready and use the Track Order page to monitor fulfilment before the match.
This fixture often rewards patient comparison more than panic buying. Buyers who are flexible on exact stand and row usually find more sensible value than those who insist on one very narrow block.
For many visitors, the sweet spot is not the absolute cheapest seat and not the most expensive premium row either. It is often a solid mid-range sideline or raised-end seat that delivers a cleaner view than the budget end of the market without moving fully into hospitality territory.
If you are travelling from abroad, value also means reducing risk. A slightly more expensive mobile-transfer listing that arrives cleanly can be a better value than a cheaper listing that leaves you guessing about handover or timing.
Anfield attracts a large international crowd. Liverpool vs Wolves is one of the more approachable fixtures for travellers who want the Anfield experience without the heaviest premium attached to a derby or title rival. That does not make it easy, but it does make it more manageable if you plan properly.
International buyers should favour clarity over improvisation. Delivery timing, accepted payment method, seat quantity and stadium approach are all more important when your travel costs sit outside the ticket itself.
If you are flying in for the match, leave time on either side of the fixture where possible. Television changes, weather disruption and ordinary city-transport delays all matter more when you are trying to reach the ground from an unfamiliar base.
Anfield sits roughly three miles north of Liverpool city centre. Matchday bus services from Liverpool ONE plus central points are widely used, while Sandhills remains a popular rail interchange for supporters using the Soccerbus route. Parking close to the ground is heavily constrained. The surrounding streets are not the place to improvise on the day.
Liverpool's visiting-supporters guide also confirms that Anfield is cashless in stadium areas and notes that alcohol is served on the away concourse but cannot be consumed in view of the pitch. The same guide allows only A5-sized handheld bags as standard, with larger bags considered only in medical circumstances and normally requiring approval in advance.
Safeguarding rules matter too. Liverpool states that all children under 16 must be accompanied by an adult aged 18 or over. Children without an accompanying adult can be refused entry.
Liverpool and Wolves are two of the original Football League clubs, so the fixture carries more historical depth than its recent top-flight rhythm might suggest. Wolves have spent long spells outside the Premier League era's top flight, which is why Anfield league meetings between the clubs have arrived in clusters rather than every single season.
The modern Premier League stretch has largely favoured Liverpool at Anfield. Wolves have made matches awkward, especially during stronger periods under Nuno Espirito Santo, but Liverpool's home record in this fixture has been solid and often comfortable.
The 27 December 2025 meeting had an emotional layer because it was the first Anfield league match between Liverpool and Wolves since the death of Diogo Jota in July 2025. Reuters reported Jota's death on 3 July 2025 after a car crash in Spain. Liverpool's match report later confirmed that Gravenberch marked his goal with Jota's crocodile celebration before Wirtz scored his first goal for the club in the same game.
Liverpool's club report and major match reports agree on the key details: Liverpool won 2-1, Gravenberch scored on 41 minutes, Wirtz scored on 42, and Bueno replied on 51 in front of a crowd of 60,466.
Recent Premier League meetings at Anfield show the balance of this fixture clearly. Liverpool has controlled the home side of the matchup in the modern era, even when individual games have been tighter than expected.
| Metric | Figure |
|---|---|
| Recent Premier League games listed below | 8 |
| Liverpool wins | 8 |
| Draws | 0 |
| Wolves wins | 0 |
| Liverpool goals | 16 |
| Wolves goals | 5 |
The table below focuses on the recent verified Premier League record at Anfield rather than leaving incomplete placeholder rows in the file.
| Season | Date | Result |
|---|---|---|
| 2025/26 | 27 Dec 2025 | Liverpool 2-1 Wolves |
| 2024/25 | 16 Feb 2025 | Liverpool 2-1 Wolves |
| 2023/24 | 19 May 2024 | Liverpool 2-0 Wolves |
| 2022/23 | 1 Mar 2023 | Liverpool 2-0 Wolves |
| 2021/22 | 22 May 2022 | Liverpool 3-1 Wolves |
| 2020/21 | 6 Dec 2020 | Liverpool 4-0 Wolves |
| 2019/20 | 29 Dec 2019 | Liverpool 1-0 Wolves |
| 2018/19 | 12 May 2019 | Liverpool 2-0 Wolves |
Liverpool and Wolves have also met in domestic cups, but league buying behaviour is different from draw-dependent cup ties. For most buyers, this page is about understanding how a standard Anfield league fixture of medium demand behaves rather than chasing the volatility of cup allocations.
That distinction matters because Liverpool vs Wolves is usually a cleaner planning exercise than a last-minute knockout tie. Seating, delivery and away access are easier to judge when the fixture sits on the normal league calendar.
For a buyer without Liverpool membership access, the direct club route can feel closed before it really begins. A resale marketplace fills that gap by surfacing individual listings with clearer seat and delivery information than the average buyer would otherwise see.
The advantage is comparison. Instead of waiting on a slim direct-club chance, you can judge what is actually available across the market and decide whether to prioritise price, view, quantity or certainty.
The trade-off is that buyers must read listing notes with discipline. That is where the real value decision lives, especially on a match that is less scarce than a derby but still active enough for weak listings to disappear alongside strong ones.
These answers are written for buyers who want practical detail rather than one-line replies. For this fixture, the important points are usually delivery method, away-end location, child-entry rules, expected demand and how much flexibility you need around travel and seating choice.
The 2025/26 Premier League meeting at Anfield was played on Saturday, 27 December 2025. Liverpool won 2-1 in front of 60,466, so this page now works best as an archived buying guide and demand reference for a fixture that has already taken place. That matters because buyers looking at similar future Liverpool home matches can use it to judge pricing patterns, seat types and away-fan arrangements.
Ryan Gravenberch scored first on 41 minutes, and Florian Wirtz added Liverpool's second on 42 before Santiago Bueno replied on 51. The goals matter editorially because the match is remembered both for Wirtz's first Liverpool goal and for Gravenberch using Diogo Jota's crocodile celebration. For ticket-page purposes, it also explains why this fixture still draws attention after the final whistle.
Yes, many non-members use verified resale listings when club-controlled access is limited. The key is to compare stand, quantity and delivery method carefully before you book, because availability on the resale market is not the same thing as an open club sale. Buyers who read listing notes properly usually avoid the problems that come from rushing a purchase just because a seat appears available.
Wolves supporters are placed in the lower Anfield Road visiting section. Liverpool's visiting supporters' guide directs away fans to Q and R turnstiles via the 97 Avenue approach, which is more useful in practice than a broad statement about the away end alone. If you are travelling as a Wolves supporter, entry route and turnstile details matter just as much as the block location itself.
Liverpool's visiting supporters' guide says away-fan turnstiles open two hours before kick-off. Arriving early helps with searches, finding the right approach roads and avoiding the late squeeze that builds once large numbers converge on the away end at the same time. It also gives you a margin if transport into the ground area runs slower than expected.
The Kop is the clear choice if atmosphere comes first. Buyers who want the loudest traditional home-end experience usually start there, even if pure viewing value can be stronger elsewhere in the ground. The trade-off is that an atmosphere-first seat is not always the calmest or easiest choice for a first-time visitor or a family group.
For many first-time visitors, the Main Stand upper or the Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand offers the easiest all-round viewing experience. Those areas usually balance sightlines, comfort and orientation better than a pure atmosphere-first choice behind the goal. If you want to see the shape of the match clearly and enjoy the stadium without worrying about steep trade-offs, those are sensible places to start.
They can be easier in the sense that they serve a different market and sit at a higher price point. They are not a budget route, but they can offer a more straightforward option for buyers who care about comfort, lounge access and a simpler matchday flow. Hospitality also appeals to corporate groups and international visitors who want fewer moving parts around entry and timing.
Mobile transfer is usually the cleanest and most common route for this fixture. Buyers should still confirm timing, device requirements and any app-based steps before travelling, because a digital ticket is only convenient if the handover process is clear in advance. Where delivery timing is vague, that uncertainty should be treated as part of the buying decision.
Yes. International buyers are a regular part of the resale market for Liverpool home games, but they should pay extra attention to delivery timing, stadium approach and travel flexibility. A workable listing for a local buyer can be a poor fit for someone arriving from abroad if the ticket handover window is narrow or the match moves for broadcast reasons.
Yes, but Liverpool states that all children under 16 must be accompanied by an adult aged 18 or over. A child without that accompanying adult can be refused entry, so this is not a rule to leave to guesswork on the day. Families should also think carefully about whether a loud home-end or away-end style location is the right fit for younger supporters.
Liverpool's guide says only small handheld bags up to A5 size are routinely permitted. Larger bags are considered only in medical circumstances and normally require approval in advance, so buyers travelling straight from an airport or hotel should plan around that rule before they reach the turnstiles. Matchday entry becomes much easier when you travel light.
Yes. Liverpool's visiting supporters' guide says contactless or chip-and-pin payment is required in stadium areas, so buyers should not rely on cash once inside the ground. It is a small detail, but it becomes important if you are planning food, drinks or quick purchases on the concourse.
Some away supporters do end up buying neutral or home-area seats when they miss the designated away allocation, but that comes with obvious behaviour expectations. A home section is not an away end, and visible away-end conduct can create problems with stewards or nearby supporters. Anyone choosing that route should understand the difference between getting into the ground and being free to behave like they are in the visiting section.
Direct-club access is typically tight, even though this is not usually one of the most expensive Anfield fixtures. For practical purposes, buyers should assume standard routes will be limited and plan accordingly rather than waiting for an easy late opening that may never come. On the resale side, the fixture is often more approachable than a derby or title rival, but that does not mean it stays loose all week.
Value depends on what you care about most, but raised sideline or upper-end seats often provide a stronger balance of price and view than either the very cheapest corners or the premium rows. Buyers who compare patiently usually do better than those who lock themselves into one block too early. In simple terms, the best-value seat is often the one that avoids both the bottom end of the view and the top end of the price curve.
Premier League dates can move for broadcast reasons, and that matters most to buyers who are booking trains, hotels or flights around a narrow window. You should always check the seller's terms on rescheduling and avoid building a travel plan with no margin for a shift in kick-off slot or matchday. Flexibility is often part of the real cost of attending a league match at this level.
Yes, but the larger the group, the narrower your options usually become. If you need four or more together, booking earlier and being flexible on exact row normally helps because tightly grouped seats disappear faster than scattered singles. Buyers who only focus on one stand can make that problem harder than it needs to be.
It was Wirtz's first Liverpool goal and an emotional afternoon because Gravenberch marked his goal with Diogo Jota's crocodile celebration. That gave the game a significance beyond the result alone and is a big reason the fixture still has editorial value after the date itself has passed. In practical terms, it turned a medium-demand league game into a match supporters are more likely to revisit and talk about.
It can be. The fixture usually gives buyers a better chance of finding workable resale options than the biggest headline dates, while still delivering a full Anfield league atmosphere and a recognisable Premier League opponent. For many first-timers, that makes it a sensible balance between occasion, access and spend.
Compare Liverpool's other 2025/26 Premier League home dates at Anfield below.
Compare Wolves' other 2025/26 Premier League away dates below.
If you are comparing Liverpool vs Wolves tickets, 1BoxOffice gives you a verified marketplace with clearly listed seat details, secure checkout and support built for international plus last-minute buyers. Established in 2006, 1BoxOffice backs every order with a 150% money-back guarantee. Buyers can compare sections carefully, choose delivery that suits their trip and book with more confidence than a last-minute scramble usually allows.