Tottenham vs Manchester United is the most globally watched Premier League fixture at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, which is not a north London derby. Broadcast syndication to more than 150 territories combines with a Manchester United travelling base drawn from across England and beyond, plus a fixture history that runs back to 1910. Together, these factors compress into a single match week. Tottenham vs Manchester United tickets disappear from club ballots faster than any other Tottenham home fixture outside the Arsenal game. Resale supply also tightens from the moment the date lands on the schedule.
Thousands trust 1BoxOffice
The venue sharpens the demand profile. Tottenham Hotspur tickets for a United visit are tied to a 62,850-capacity ground, the largest club stadium in London, with the 17,500-capacity South Stand operating as a single tier behind the goal.
A United visit typically draws a packed house, a heavier away travelling contingent than almost any other visiting club and a volume of international buyers looking to slot a matchday into a London trip.
The sections below break down what drives resale pricing for this fixture, what you can expect across different stand tiers, how the away-fan allocation works and how the delivery mechanics operate before kick-off. If you are comparing options, the details here should let you buy with your eyes open.
Manchester United carry the largest single-club fan base in English football. Their visit to the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium is one of the most-travelled away days on their schedule. Away-supporter demand for this fixture consistently exceeds the 3,000-seat allocation, with Manchester United members outside the top loyalty tiers regularly missing out. That travelling demand feeds directly into resale activity for home-section listings from neutrals who want to be on the ground.
Broadcast selection shapes the second layer of demand. The fixture is picked up by Sky, TNT Sports and Premier League Productions in most matchweeks, which pushes kick-off into prime weekend or Sunday evening slots. Internationally, it is routinely the most-watched Premier League broadcast of its matchweek. That global pull lifts hospitality bookings from Asia, the Middle East and North America well before domestic buyers enter the market.
The sporting context has changed in recent seasons, but the pull has not. United are no longer the title-winning machine of the Ferguson era, yet the fixture still arrives with Champions League and European qualification implications most years. Tottenham have won three of the last five Premier League meetings against United across both grounds, which has added competitive tension to a fixture that used to run one way.
The club's own site prioritises season-ticket holders and One Hotspur members first, with any remaining capacity working through members-only ballots. For a United visit, general sale is effectively non-existent in a normal season. When pockets do release, they clear in minutes. Home ends are also segregated by One Hotspur membership tier. Walking up and buying through club sales channels is realistic for almost no one outside the membership structure.
A verified resale marketplace is the practical alternative for non-members. Season-ticket holders who cannot attend list their seats through approved resale routes. The marketplace then aggregates those listings alongside brokered stock. You can compare stands, blocks, delivery methods and hospitality tiers in one place before checkout, which is not possible through the club's own site. For most international buyers, latecomers and neutrals, this is the only route that gives real choice.
Supply tightens earlier for this fixture than for a mid-table home match. Hospitality clears out six to nine months ahead of kick-off, the members-only ballots close weeks in advance, and by the final ten days, the resale market is thin. Booking three to six weeks before kick-off tends to produce the strongest mix of availability and price.
Resale pricing for this fixture moves on five variables. Seat location drives the widest price swing: a South Stand single-tier seat rarely sits at the same price point as a halfway-line West Stand lower. Demand spikes around the fixture's kick-off announcement and again in the final fortnight.
Kick-off timing matters, with weekend prime-time slots priced higher than midweek or lunchtime windows. Competition context shifts the curve when either side is in a title race or chasing European qualification. Hospitality tier decides whether you are buying a seat or a full matchday package with dining and lounge access.
| Ticket Type | Resale Price Range | Best For | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upper tier / less central | £150 – £280 | Budget-minded buyers, first-time visitors | North Stand upper corners, West Stand upper corners, pockets of the East Stand upper |
| Longside standard | £250 – £420 | Balanced price and sightline | East Stand lower, East Stand upper central blocks, West Stand upper closer to halfway |
| Lower tier / central | £380 – £800+ | Central sightlines, closer to the pitch | West Stand lower central, South Stand single-tier central blocks, East Stand lower central |
| Premium seating | £700 – £1,500+ | Padded seats with lounge access | The H Club, The Sixteen Fifty, The Goal Line, padded halfway seats with dedicated bar |
| Hospitality / VIP | £1,100 – £3,500+ | Full matchday experience | The Tunnel Club, On Four, Sky Lounge, Chairman's Club, fine dining with ex-player hosts |
Prices reflect typical resale ranges and may change as demand and availability shift closer to the match.
The Tottenham Hotspur Stadium is built around four stands: the South Stand, the North Stand, the East Stand and the West Stand. The South Stand is a single tier holding 17,500. It is the largest home-end kop in the United Kingdom, and it carries the loudest sustained noise in the ground. The West Stand is home to the club's most expensive premium seating and the Royal Box hospitality tier.
The Tottenham Hotspur Stadium seating plan is worth studying before you commit, because sightlines, atmosphere and price bands vary sharply between blocks.
Listings for Tottenham Hotspur Stadium tickets normally specify the stand, tier and block you are buying into.
| Area | What It Suits | Pricing Bracket | General Guidance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Longside lower | Balanced atmosphere with strong central sightlines | Mid to upper | East Stand lower and West Stand lower central; closest to the halfway line |
| Longside upper | Wider pitch perspective and a drop in price from lower-tier central | Entry to mid | West Stand upper and East Stand upper; corner blocks are the most affordable |
| Behind the goal | Home-end atmosphere and traditional terracing feel | Mid | South Stand single tier runs 17,500 seats with the strongest sustained noise in the ground |
| Premium seats | Padded seating with lounge access and shorter queues | Upper | The H Club, The Sixteen Fifty, The Goal Line, concentrated in the West Stand |
| Hospitality | Full matchday package including food, drink and post-match access | Top tier | The Tunnel Club, On Four, Sky Lounge, Chairman's Club, concentrated in West and pitchside zones |
Manchester United supporters are usually housed in the away allocation in the north-east corner area of the upper tier. The allocation is the standard Premier League visiting contingent of around 3,000 seats, below five per cent of the ground.
Matchday routing is managed by stewarding and police on the approach roads around the stadium, with away supporters kept separate from home blocks through buffer zones and controlled entry points.
| Supporter Type | Best Approach |
|---|---|
| Home fans | South Stand for the heaviest atmosphere, West Stand for central sightlines and hospitality access, East Stand for a balanced price-to-view trade-off |
| Away supporters | Manchester United's 3,000-seat allocation is usually placed in the upper-tier away section, with access controlled by stewarding; this goes out through United's credit-based member priority system well before general sale |
| Neutral buyers | Upper tier corners in the West or East Stand through verified resale listings; wearing away colours in home sections risks refused entry, so dress |
Segregation is enforced on matchday. Away-colour shirts or visible Manchester United branding in home sections will be picked up on the concourses and by stewarding in the seating bowl.
The club reserves the right to refuse entry or eject without refund where supporters are in the wrong area.
Hospitality at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium runs across several tiers, from sports-bar lounges at the entry level up to the pitchside Tunnel Club with glass-walled tunnel views. Each package bundles a numbered padded seat with access to a dedicated lounge, food and drink service and a matchday programme. Most lounges open two and a half to three hours before kick-off and remain open for an hour after the final whistle. The range covers casual lounge formats, fine dining options and pitchside experiences.
| Hospitality Option | Typical Buyer | Main Appeal |
|---|---|---|
| The H Club | Entry-level hospitality buyers, groups | Sports-bar lounge format with padded seat, street-food dining, casual matchday feel |
| Sky Lounge / On Four | Mid-range corporate buyers | Pitch-view lounge, hot buffet dining, post-match access, padded central seating |
| The Chairman's Club | Fine-dining buyers, Royal Box guests | Three-course silver-service dining, premium halfway-line padded seat, dedicated bar |
| The Tunnel Club | Premium buyers, ex-player host seekers | Glass-walled tunnel views, pitchside padded seats, chef-led menu, former-player appearances |
Ticket delivery varies by listing type. Reading the listing notes before checkout is the single biggest source of matchday friction if skipped. Most resale tickets for this fixture arrive as mobile entry through the marketplace app, or a club-channel transfer link, with e-tickets and paper tickets used less commonly.
| Delivery Type | What to Check |
|---|---|
| Mobile transfer | Confirm the app or wallet type required, make sure you have the same smartphone on matchday and arrive with a charged battery |
| Club-channel e-transfer | Check whether the seller is transferring through a club account; read any name-change notes and the timing of the transfer window |
| E-ticket / PDF | Download and save offline before leaving for the ground; print a backup if the listing requires it |
| Paper ticket / collection | Confirm the collection point and cut-off time; these are rarer but still appear for hospitality packages |
Bring a valid photo ID in case it is requested at the turnstile, and charge your phone fully before leaving home. Screenshots of mobile tickets are usually not accepted; the ticket needs to be live in the named app or wallet.
Step1
Search for the match
Visit 1BoxOffice.com and search for "Tottenham vs Manchester United" or browse Premier League fixtures.
Step2
Create or log in to your account
Register or sign in via the 1BoxOffice registration page.
Step3
Review ticket listings
Check stand, block, approximate row, number of seats, and price per ticket.
Step4
Select your tickets
Add tickets to your basket and confirm seats are together if booking for a group.
Step5
Check delivery details
Review delivery type (e-ticket, print-at-home, physical, or club transfer) and seller instructions.
Step6
Enter payment details
Pay securely using major credit cards through 1BoxOffice.
Step7
Complete your purchase
Receive a confirmation email with order details and delivery timeline.
Step8
Track your order
Use the 1BoxOffice order tracking page. E-tickets usually arrive within 24–72 hours, while physical tickets are shipped via courier.
1BoxOffice has operated as a verified secondary marketplace since 2006, with a 150% money-back guarantee and a trusted-seller network behind every listing.
International buyers can pick delivery methods that match their arrival window. Most resale listings support mobile transfer or e-ticket delivery that does not require a UK address. If you need the ticket live before you board a flight, filter for instant delivery or e-ticket listings at the top of the search; these tend to price slightly higher but remove any worry about collection windows. For groups travelling together, the seat-together filter on the listing page confirms whether seats are guaranteed adjacent, which matters more than stand preference for a lot of overseas buyers.
Fixture dates for United visits shift more than most matchweeks because broadcast selection prioritises the pairing. Kick-off can move by a day or into a Sunday evening window several weeks after the initial schedule release. Book flexible travel or read the cancellation clauses on your hotel before committing, and check the fixture page for updated kick-off times in the fortnight before matchday.
Tottenham and Manchester United first met competitively in 1910 and have been top-flight rivals for most of the years since. The Premier League era opened with United dominant and Spurs chasing. That pattern held through most of the Ferguson years.
Teddy Sheringham's move from White Hart Lane to Old Trafford in 1997, the 5-3 Spurs defeat at Old Trafford in September 2001 after leading 3-0 at half-time and United's repeated late winners at White Hart Lane built a fixture that Spurs fans associated with heartbreak through the 1990s and 2000s. Mauricio Pochettino's Spurs closed the gap from 2014 onwards, and the balance of league wins has moved back and forth ever since.
The move to the new stadium in April 2019 reset the matchday context. The old White Hart Lane fixtures were played inside a tight 36,000-capacity bowl; the new ground is almost twice the size and carries a louder, sustained home-end atmosphere. United's recent record at the new stadium has not matched their White Hart Lane history. Spurs have now beaten United at home across multiple seasons under different head coaches. The fixture now tends to arrive with European qualification implications rather than title-race stakes, but the broadcast pull has not faded.
What makes the fixture distinctive at this venue is the combination of volume and competitive flux. United's travelling support fills the away allocation and spills into neutral resale demand, Spurs' home end has carried more sustained noise than White Hart Lane ever did, and recent results have swung between both clubs rather than running one way. Few fixtures at the ground produce that mix of broadcast pull and outcome uncertainty.
| Metric | Total |
|---|---|
| Matches played | 7 |
| Home wins | 2 |
| Away wins | 2 |
| Draws | 3 |
| Home goals | 9 |
| Away goals | 11 |
| Biggest home win | 2-0 |
| Biggest away win | 0-3 |
| First EPL meeting at current stadium | 19 Jun 2020 |
| Most recently played home EPL meeting | 08 Nov 2025 |
Figures compiled from the match-by-match record below. Source: Premier League match database, club match reports and ESPN.
| Date | Score |
|---|---|
| 08 Nov 2025 | 2-2 |
| 16 Feb 2025 | 1-0 |
| 19 Aug 2023 | 2-0 |
| 27 Apr 2023 | 2-2 |
| 30 Oct 2021 | 0-3 |
| 11 Apr 2021 | 1-3 |
| 19 Jun 2020 | 1-1 |
All scores cross-checked against ESPN match reports, the Premier League match database, Sky Sports match coverage and both clubs' own match reports. Results cover Premier League home fixtures at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, which opened in April 2019.
Yes, through a verified resale marketplace. Club sales channels prioritise season-ticket holders and One Hotspur members through members-only ballots. General sale for the United fixture is effectively non-existent in a normal season. Resale is the realistic route for non-members.
Filter for mobile transfer or e-ticket delivery at checkout. These do not require a UK address; they arrive directly to your phone or email, and they suit overseas buyers who cannot collect in person. Check the delivery window note on the listing before paying.
Five factors drive it: seat location, demand level, kick-off timing, competition context and hospitality tier. United's travelling support and the fixture's broadcast pull compress all five at once, producing resale curves well above an average Tottenham home match.
Book three to six weeks out, target upper-tier corner blocks in the East or West Stand, stay flexible on quantity and set a price alert. Midweek kick-off slots, when they apply, are priced below weekend windows.
Hospitality is offered across every tier at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, from the entry-level H Club up to the pitchside Tunnel Club. Availability tightens earliest for this fixture, and premium lounges regularly sell out six to nine months before kick-off.
A numbered padded seat, access to a dedicated lounge opening two and a half to three hours before kick-off, food and drink service, a matchday programme and post-match access. Higher tiers add three-course dining, ex-player hosts and pitch side experiences.
VIP packages at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium combine the most central padded seating with premium lounges such as the Tunnel Club and Chairman's Club. Inclusions usually cover fine dining, champagne reception, dedicated bar service and ex-player appearances.
Three to six weeks before kick-off tends to produce the strongest availability at sensible prices. Earlier releases carry premium tiers first, while the final fortnight sees prices climb as supply thins and casual buyers enter the market.
The ground has four stands: the South Stand single-tier home kop of 17,500, the North Stand upper and lower, the West Stand with premium and hospitality zones and the East Stand with mid-range lower and upper seating.
Manchester United's 3,000-seat allocation is usually placed in the upper-tier away section on the north-east side of the ground. Home sections surround the away block. Segregation is stewarded tightly on matchday.
No. Visible Manchester United shirts, scarves or branded gear in home sections risk refusal of entry and ejection without refund. If you are buying home-side tickets as a neutral or travelling United fan, wear neutral clothing on matchday.
No. The United away allocation is distributed exclusively through Manchester United's membership and ticket-priority scheme. Home-supporting fans in the away end risk ejection. Segregation is enforced strictly for this fixture.
The allocation is the standard Premier League 3,000 seats. United distribute through its credit-based priority system, which rewards members with the longest attendance history first. Members with fewer away credits tend to miss out on this fixture.
Yes, by using the seat-together filter and the listing-notes check. The filter flags listings where adjacent seats are guaranteed. Many resale listings for this fixture come in pairs and fours; larger groups are possible, but thinner on the ground close to kick-off.
Mobile transfer dominates, followed by club-channel e-transfer and e-tickets. Paper tickets and collection are rarer and usually confined to hospitality packages. Listing notes spell out the delivery type and timing before you buy.
Yes for e-ticket and mobile transfer listings marked as instant. These price slightly higher than listings with a later transfer window, but remove any uncertainty around delivery timing for travelling buyers.
Three to six weeks out is the sweet spot for most buyers. Listings have time to be posted, sellers are not yet rushing to reprice, and the range of stands and price bands is still broad. The final fortnight tends to concentrate higher prices and a thinner supply.
Bags larger than A4 size are not permitted. Small bags are searched at the turnstile. There is no cloakroom facility at the ground, so travel light and carry only essentials on matchday.
Bags larger than A4 size are not permitted. Small bags are searched at the turnstile. There is no cloakroom facility at the ground, so travel light and carry only essentials on matchday.
Yes. The ground has family sections with reduced-price junior tickets in designated blocks. Children over a certain age need their own ticket. United visits tend to be louder than an average home match; parents of younger children should pick family-section listings specifically.
Seven Sisters and Tottenham Hale on the Victoria line are the closest Underground stations, roughly a 20 to 25-minute walk. White Hart Lane overground sits closer to the ground. Parking around the venue is extremely limited on matchday; public transport is the practical choice.
Data sourced from Tottenham Hotspur match reports, Manchester United match reports, ESPN match records, Sky Sports match coverage, the Premier League fixture and match database, Sports Mole head-to-head archives and Transport for London matchday travel guidance.
Buy Tottenham vs Manchester United tickets through 1BoxOffice, a verified marketplace established in 2006 with a 150% money-back guarantee. For a fixture this tight on availability, the smarter move is securing the right seat and delivery type before the late-market squeeze.