Barcelona

2026 barcelona tickets, games and events

Barcelona Tickets

Step into the world of FC Barcelona and follow the team live by checking ticket availability for upcoming matches across trusted resale sites. From high-profile La Liga fixtures to unforgettable Champions League games and classic El Clásico events, you can easily compare options for all Barcelona games at Camp Nou and secure tickets that match your preferences and budget.

Upcoming Games

  • LaLiga Santander

    Real Sociedad vs Barcelona

    Donostia-San Sebastian, Spain Estadio Anoeta

    Tickets from € 86tickets available
  • LaLiga Santander

    Barcelona vs Real Oviedo

    Barcelona, Spain Estadi Olimpic Lluis Companys

    Tickets from € 103tickets available
  • Champions League

    Barcelona vs FC Koebenhavn

    Barcelona, Spain Estadi Olimpic Lluis Companys

    Tickets from € 149tickets available

About FC Barcelona

Olympic Stadium Montjuïc Companies building with FC Barcelona branding in Barcelona
Olympic Stadium Montjuïc (Companies building) in Barcelona
Entrance gates at Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys in Barcelona
Entrance gates at Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys in Barcelona
Upper tier seating view inside Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys in Barcelona before a match
Upper tier seating and pitch view at the Olympic Stadium Montjuïc, home of FC Barcelona matches
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What do you need to know?

Spotify Camp Nou is currently undergoing a massive €1.45 billion renovation and reopened in November 2025 at a reduced capacity.

Our tip

The club has designed fan routes that pass through shops, cafés and the official megastore Barça Botiga

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The history and atmosphere

The crowd singing "Cant del Barça" and chanting "Més que un club" reflects Barcelona's unique identity as more than just a football club. The club was founded in 1899 and has become a symbol of Catalan pride.

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What to expect

Expect a stadium in transformation. Once complete, the new Camp Nou will hold around 105,000 spectators, making it the largest football stadium in Europe. Full completion is expected in 2027.

How to Find Cheap FC Barcelona Tickets

FC Barcelona represents everything romantic about football — a fan-owned club with a motto that translates as "more than a club," an academy that's produced generations of world-class players, and a stadium that once held over 120,000 people for a single match. For tourists, it's bucket-list stuff: watch Lamine Yamal dribble past defenders, hear the "Cant del Barça" echo around the stands, experience El Clásico against Real Madrid in person.

The current situation: Camp Nou under construction

Let's address the elephant in the room: Camp Nou isn't what it used to be — yet. The stadium reopened in November 2025 after 910 days of exile at the Olympic Stadium, but with only around 45,000 seats initially available. Construction continues on the third tier, the 360° roof, and the new hospitality areas.

Timeline of the renovation:

  • June 2023: Construction begins, Barcelona moves to Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys
  • 2023-24 & 2024-25 seasons: All home matches played at the Olympic Stadium (54,367 capacity)
  • November 22, 2025: Barcelona returns to Camp Nou vs Athletic Bilbao, winning 4-0
  • End of 2025: Capacity expands to approximately 62,500 (Phase 1C)
  • 2026-27 season: Full 105,000 capacity expected, with completed roof and all VIP/hospitality areas

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What this means for tickets:

During the transitional period (2025-26 season), ticket availability is complicated. The reduced capacity means fewer seats for general sale, while the club is reorganizing its season ticket structure for the 23,000 members who held passes during the Montjuïc exile. Prices for the inaugural matches were notably high — €199 for the cheapest seats at the first game — though they've since normalized.

The positive: you're witnessing history. The new Camp Nou will be Europe's largest stadium, with modern facilities that rival any venue on the continent. Attending during construction means seeing the transformation in progress.

The negative: uncertainty. Match-by-match availability is unpredictable, some sections remain closed, and the club is prioritizing members who supported them during the Montjuïc period.

The official route: great prices, brutal odds

Like Real Madrid, FC Barcelona is owned by its members (socios). The club has approximately 145,000-150,000 socios who pay annual dues and have voting rights on major decisions, including presidential elections. Unlike Real Madrid, Barcelona has recently opened membership to anyone worldwide — no family connections required.

Face-value prices are reasonable for a top European club — you can sit behind the goal for €50-80 or get sideline seats for €80-120 at standard La Liga fixtures. The challenge is accessing those prices, with members getting priority.

Becoming a Soci (Member)

Barcelona opened its membership to anyone in the world in April 2022, eliminating the previous 3-year waiting period and family requirement. You can now become a socio by completing an online form — a significant change from Real Madrid's closed membership model.

Annual membership fees (2024/25):

  • Adults: €215/year
  • Junior (under 18): €107/year
  • Children (under 11): €51/year

Socio benefits:

  • Voting rights in club elections and referendums
  • Priority access to ticket sales (before general public)
  • Right to join the season ticket waiting list
  • Eligibility for away match ticket ballots
  • Access to the Members' Area at Camp Nou
  • Discounts on museum, tours, and merchandise
  • "Seient Lliure" — the ability to release your seat for specific matches and earn credits

The reality about season tickets: Becoming a socio doesn't guarantee a season ticket. There's a waiting list, and with only 45,000-60,000 seats currently available (expanding to 105,000 by 2027), demand far exceeds supply. The transition period is especially chaotic, with the club prioritizing members who held Montjuïc passes.

Is it worth becoming a socio for ticket access? If you're visiting once or twice, probably not — the €215 fee doesn't guarantee you'll beat the crowds for popular matches. If you're a genuine Barcelona fan planning multiple visits over the years, membership offers meaningful priority and the emotional connection of being a club owner.

Culers Membership

For fans who want some benefits without full socio commitment, Barcelona offers the Culers program — an international fan membership tier.

Culers (Free):

  • Access to games, prize draws, and competitions
  • Wallpaper downloads and free Barça TV content
  • Basic fan community access

Culers Premium (€35/year):

  • Full access to Barça TV+
  • Physical or digital membership card
  • Discounts on match tickets and museum entry
  • Preferential access to official store sales
  • Entry to exclusive prize draws

Important limitation: Culers Premium provides discounts on tickets, not priority access. For popular matches, socios and season ticket holders will still be ahead of you in the queue. Culers Premium is best for fans who want to feel connected to the club and save on merchandise/tours, rather than those specifically targeting match tickets.

Match-by-Match Sales — The Real Order

Barcelona's ticket sales follow a hierarchical structure:

1. Season Ticket Holders (Abonados) Season ticket holders have their seats secured for all home matches. During construction, around 23,000 members held Estadi Olímpic passes; these fans are getting priority consideration as Camp Nou reopens.

2. Socios Without Season Tickets Members can purchase tickets during an early access window, typically 2-3 weeks before the match. For high-demand fixtures (El Clásico, Champions League), this is often when tickets sell out.

3. Culers Premium Culers Premium members may receive a small discount and occasionally early access windows, but they don't have the same priority as socios.

4. General Sale Whatever remains after member sales goes to the general public. For standard La Liga fixtures against lower-table opponents, tickets are usually available. For El Clásico, the Madrid Derby against Espanyol, or Champions League knockouts, general sale tickets are extremely rare.

Current construction-era complexity: The club is reorganizing ticket allocation as Camp Nou's capacity expands. Members who supported the team at Montjuïc are receiving priority for the new stadium. Expect some unpredictability through the 2025-26 season as the system stabilizes.

Verdict on official channels: Barcelona is more accessible than Real Madrid for newcomers — you can become a socio online without family connections. But the Camp Nou reconstruction adds uncertainty, and popular fixtures still sell out to members before general sale opens. For El Clásico or Champions League matches, official channels remain extremely competitive.

Hospitality Packages

The new Camp Nou is designed with modern hospitality in mind. Barcelona expects to generate €120 million annually from VIP seating alone — and they're pricing accordingly.

Camp Nou hospitality features (when fully operational):

  • Redesigned VIP boxes and executive suites
  • Multiple hospitality tiers with catering options
  • Premium sightlines in rebuilt sections
  • New lounges and member areas

Current pricing (varies by fixture):

  • Standard La Liga fixtures: €50-600+
  • Top-four opponents: €300-1,000+
  • Champions League group stage: €700-1,500+
  • El Clásico: €2,000-4,000+ (VIP tickets for the returning matches were listed at €4,000 each)

Verdict on hospitality: The new Camp Nou hospitality offerings are among the most expensive in European football, reflecting the club's ambitious revenue targets. For visitors who must attend a specific high-profile match, hospitality removes the risk — but at a significant premium.

Resale platforms: where most fans actually buy

For tourists and international visitors — especially during the Camp Nou transitional period — resale platforms remain the most reliable route to Barcelona tickets. The construction-era unpredictability makes planning difficult through official channels, while resale sites offer guaranteed inventory for most fixtures.

What you'll actually pay

Prices on resale platforms depend on opponent, competition, and seat location. Here's what to expect:

Lower-demand La Liga (bottom-half opponents, midweek fixtures):

  • Behind the goal (Gol): €60-120
  • Sideline upper tiers: €80-150
  • Lower sideline (Lateral): €120-200

Mid-table La Liga (Villarreal, Real Sociedad, Athletic Bilbao):

  • Behind the goal: €80-150
  • Upper sideline: €120-200
  • Lower sideline: €180-300

Top La Liga fixtures (Atlético Madrid, Sevilla, Valencia):

  • Behind the goal: €150-280
  • Sideline: €200-400
  • Premium central: €400-700+

Champions League group stage:

  • Behind the goal: €120-220
  • Sideline: €180-350
  • Premium: €350-600

Champions League knockouts:

  • All sections: €250-700+
  • Premium for quarter-finals onwards: €600-1,500+

El Clásico (vs Real Madrid):

  • The most expensive fixture in Spanish football
  • Behind the goal: €350-700
  • Sideline: €500-1,000
  • Premium central: €900-2,000+
  • VIP packages: €2,000-5,000+

Espanyol Derby:

  • Less expensive than El Clásico but still premium
  • Behind the goal: €100-180
  • Sideline: €150-300

Construction-era premium: During the reduced-capacity period (2025-26), expect slightly elevated prices across all fixtures due to limited supply. As capacity expands toward 105,000 by 2027, prices should moderate for standard La Liga matches.

Tips for getting the best price

  1. 01.
    Book early for certainty, late for savings. If you must attend a specific match, buy 2-3 weeks in advance. If you're flexible and comfortable with risk, prices often drop 48-72 hours before kickoff as sellers clear inventory.
  2. 02.
    Compare across platforms. Prices vary significantly between resale sites. TicketLeft aggregates listings across platforms, letting you compare without checking each site individually.
  3. 03.
    Target midweek fixtures. Tuesday/Wednesday La Liga matches attract less demand than weekend games. If your Barcelona trip is flexible, midweek offers better prices and availability.
  4. 04.
    Consider the opponent. Newly promoted teams early in the season generate minimal buzz. Watching Barcelona play Leganés in September costs far less than facing Valencia in April.
  5. 05.
    Construction-era opportunities. Some fans are staying away until Camp Nou is complete. During the transition, you might find better availability than expected for standard fixtures.
  6. 06.
    Upper tiers offer best value. The cheap seats behind the goal provide genuine atmosphere at accessible prices. Even in the construction period, atmosphere in these sections remains passionate.

Season Ticket Historical Data

SeasonCheapestMost Expensive
2022/2023€150€1200
2023/2024€180€650
2024/2025€160€600
2025/2026€200€1500

Season ticket notes:

  • 2022-23 was the final season at the old Camp Nou before renovation began
  • 2023-24: First season in exile at Olympic Stadium (54,367 capacity); optional pass for members, many chose to suspend season tickets
  • 2024-25: Prices reduced to boost attendance at Montjuïc; approximately 23,000 members held passes; low attendance for some matches despite team success
  • 2025-26: Return to Camp Nou in November 2025; pricing restructured with Montjuïc pass holders given priority; new VIP tiers introduced
  • Approximately 145,000 socios (membership open to anyone worldwide since April 2022)
  • €1.45 billion Espai Barça project underway
  • Full 105,000 capacity expected for 2026-27 season

Avoiding scams!

Stick to established platforms with buyer protection. Facebook Marketplace, Twitter sellers, and strangers outside the ground are risky. If the price seems too good to be true, it probably is.

FAQ on FC Barcelona Tickets