Santiago Bernabéu Stadium tickets & tours | Price comparison

Santiago Bernabéu Stadium

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Legendary, polished, and loud with football memory, Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, often simply called the Bernabéu, is the Real Madrid C.F. home in Chamartín. The Tour Bernabéu takes you into the museum, the panoramic stadium view, locker rooms, and dugouts, with the modern roof, screens, and trophy story all close enough to feel real.

For a first visit, start with a timed Classic Tour ticket because it gives the clearest stadium-and-museum route and protects you from high-demand slots around weekends and fixtures.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Classic Stadium and Museum Tickets

Choose these timed tickets for the main Tour Bernabéu route, including the Real Madrid C.F. Museum, panoramic stadium view, locker rooms, and dugouts when available.
Madrid: Tour Bernabéu Entry Ticket
4.5(36056)
 
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Santiago Bernabéu Stadium: Real Madrid Football Match
 
tiqets.com
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Santiago Bernabéu Stadium and FC Real Madrid Museum Entry Ticket
 
viator.com
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Guided Bernabéu Tours

Use a guided option if you want club-history context, a more personal pace, and help reading the stadium beyond the trophy photos.
Bernabéu Stadium & Real Madrid Museum Tour + Megafan option
4.6(940)
 
getyourguide.com
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Santiago Bernabéu Stadium Guided Tour
4.3(298)
 
headout.com
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Santiago Bernabéu Stadium: Guided Tour
3.7(46)
 
tiqets.com
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Santiago Bernabeu Stadium Real Madrid Private Tour & Tickets
5.0(5)
 
getyourguide.com
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See all Guided Bernabéu Tours

Real Madrid Match Tickets

Pick match tickets when the live roar matters more than backstage access, and check the final kickoff time before locking in your Madrid plans.
Real Madrid vs Athletic Bilbao
 
p1travel.com
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Madrid City and Bike Combos

These formats suit visitors who want to fold the stadium into a wider Madrid route by bike, e-bike, or panoramic city tour.
Santiago Bernabeu Electric Bike Tour in Madrid
5.0(1)
 
viator.com
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Madrid BIKE or EBIKE experience: Santiago Bernabeu Stadium and picnic
5.0(1)
 
viator.com
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6 tips for visiting the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium

1
Choose the classic route
If this is your first Bernabéu visit, book the Classic Tour before looking at upgrades. It gets you into the museum, viewpoint, locker rooms, and dugouts when the route is fully open, so you leave with the stadium story rather than only a shop bag.
2
Check the fixture gap
If you care about the locker rooms and dugouts, avoid match days and the day before a home match. The tour can still run before kickoff, but those spaces close around fixtures, and that can turn a dream route into a shorter museum stop.
3
Watch Line 10 works
In 2026, do not assume the Santiago Bernabéu Metro stop is business as usual. The Cuzco-to-Nuevos Ministerios stretch is under works, with the free S10 bus covering the gap along Paseo de la Castellana. Checking this before you leave saves a hot-platform surprise.
4
Use the Concha Espina entrance
With a mobile ticket, go straight to the tour access on Avenida de Concha Espina instead of drifting toward matchday gates. Arrive a little early, especially on weekends, so the first thing you notice is the stadium bowl, not a queue.
5
Leave bags elsewhere
If you are between hotel check-out and a train or flight, store luggage before you reach Chamartín. Large objects and suitcases are not allowed, and the stadium has no cloakroom, so traveling light keeps the visit from ending at security.
6
Pair one football extra
After the tour, pick one follow-up, not a city marathon. Legends: The Home of Football keeps the football story going in the center, Sorolla Museum gives you a calmer nearby museum, and Estadio Metropolitano is better saved for a separate stadium-comparison day.

Ticket and tour options at Santiago Bernabéu Stadium

The right ticket depends on whether you want a museum-first visit, a guided football story, live match noise, or a broader Madrid route. Decide that first, and the Bernabéu becomes much easier to book.

Classic stadium and museum tickets

Best for first-time visitors, families, and anyone who wants the essential Real Madrid C.F. story without overcomplicating the day. The Classic route gives you the museum, panoramic stadium view, locker rooms, and dugouts when open, with enough freedom to linger by the 15 European Cups. Choose this if you want the clearest value and a fixed time slot. Book now.

Guided Bernabéu tours

Choose a guided tour if you already know the basics or want someone to connect the museum, stands, renovation, and match culture into one story. This format works especially well for football fans who care about why certain trophies, players, and European nights matter. It costs more, but it can make the stadium feel less like a checklist. Book now.

Real Madrid match tickets

Pick a match ticket if your priority is the sound of Chamartín at full volume. This is not a behind-the-scenes visit, so think in terms of seat view, kickoff confirmation, security timing, and post-match transport. It is the strongest emotional format, but the least flexible one. Book now.

Madrid city and bike combinations

Great when the stadium is one chapter in a wider Madrid day rather than the whole reason for the trip. Bike, e-bike, and panoramic-city formats can link the Bernabéu with Plaza Mayor, Puerta del Sol, Cibeles, or other central icons. Choose this when you want orientation and football in one practical package. Book now.

Inside the new Bernabéu

The modern Bernabéu works because old football memory and new event technology sit in the same building. You move from European Cups and locker-room mythology to a stadium built for screens, concerts, and changing formats.

Real Madrid C.F. Museum and 15 European Cups

The museum is the emotional engine of the tour. Shirts, images, medals, and the 15 European Cups turn Real Madrid C.F. from a name on the façade into a sequence of nights, players, and celebrations. Give this part time, especially if you are visiting with someone who knows the club only from a few famous names.

Locker rooms, dugouts, and stadium viewpoint

The viewpoint gives you the scale first: tiers, roof, screen, and the strange hush of an empty football cathedral. The locker rooms and dugouts add the human scale, where players prepare before walking into that noise. Around matches, those spaces can close, so book with the fixture calendar in mind.

Realmadrid Games and interactive moments

Realmadrid Games changes the tone of the visit from looking to playing. The add-on uses avatars, challenges, and football-skill tests in the stadium galleries, which makes it especially useful for families or repeat visitors who want movement after the museum. Add it when energy is high, not when everyone is already tired.

The 21st-century stadium

The new Bernabéu is not just a polished shell around an old ground. Its retractable roof and pitch, Halo 360 video scoreboard, and event-ready interior explain why the stadium now feels like a Madrid venue as much as a football home. If the pitch is hidden during your tour, that is part of the point: the building changes shape for the calendar.

How to plan a Chamartín football stop

A good Bernabéu visit is compact, but the logistics deserve respect. Treat the stadium as the anchor of a north-Madrid half-day, then choose one clean continuation instead of trying to fold in the whole city.

Timing your Bernabéu visit

Book the first practical morning slot if you want calmer museum rooms and easier photos by the viewpoint. Late afternoons can work well too, but fixture days change the whole rhythm. If a home match sits close to your travel date, choose either the tour or the match as the main event, not both squeezed into a fragile plan.

Transport during Line 10 works

The current Line 10 works make the usual Metro advice less simple in 2026. Use the free S10 bus for the closed Cuzco-Nuevos Ministerios stretch, or aim for Cercanías to Nuevos Ministerios and continue by bus or on foot if the weather is kind. On match nights, build in extra time around Paseo de la Castellana because buses and traffic tighten near kickoff.

Nearby pairings after the tour

For a calm cultural reset, move south to Sorolla Museum. For a full football day, continue later to Legends: The Home of Football near the center, or save Estadio Metropolitano for a separate comparison with Atlético territory. Las Ventas Bullring works when you want another big Madrid arena story, while Buen Retiro park and Prado Museum are better as a central half-day rather than an afterthought.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should I plan for the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium tour?

For most visitors, 90 minutes to 2 hours works well for the museum, stadium viewpoint, locker rooms, dugouts, photos, and shop. Add about 1 more hour if you book Realmadrid Games.
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What is included in the Classic Tour?

The Classic Tour usually includes the Real Madrid C.F. Museum, an interior panoramic stadium view, locker rooms, and dugouts. A press-room visit may be added temporarily when available, and the route can change around events.
Read more.

Should I choose a guided tour or self-guided ticket?

Choose the self-guided Classic Tour if you want the strongest first-visit value and flexible pacing. Choose a guided tour if you want stories behind the trophies, renovation, and Real Madrid C.F. match culture.
Read more.

Can I visit on a Real Madrid match day?

Yes, but with limits. On match days, Tour Bernabéu normally runs only until 5.5 hours before kickoff, and locker rooms and dugouts are closed on match days and the day before home matches.
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Will I see the pitch during the tour?

You should expect a stadium view, not always a match-ready pitch. The grass can remain underground in its maintenance area and is installed on the surface for matches, so the field may look different during tours.
Read more.

What is the best time to visit the Bernabéu?

For a calmer visit, book an early non-match weekday slot. Christmas, New Year, weekends, school holidays, and fixture periods can feel crowded around the museum, viewpoint, and shop.
Read more.

How do I get to Santiago Bernabéu Stadium in 2026?

Check Line 10 before traveling. The Cuzco-Nuevos Ministerios section is suspended until the end of 2026, so the free S10 replacement bus, Cercanías via Nuevos Ministerios, and EMT buses on Paseo de la Castellana are useful alternatives.
Read more.

Is Santiago Bernabéu Stadium good for families?

Yes, especially for children who like football, trophies, screens, and interactive moments. Keep the day simple, and consider Realmadrid Games only if your group has enough energy for an extra active hour.
Read more.

Can I bring luggage to the Bernabéu?

Avoid it. Large objects, strollers, and suitcases are not allowed if they could block evacuation, and Santiago Bernabéu Stadium has no cloakroom. Store luggage before you reach Chamartín.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Tour Bernabéu usually opens Monday to Saturday from 9 am to 7 pm, and Sundays and public holidays from 9:30 am to 6:30 pm. It closes on December 25 and January 1.

On match days, the tour can usually be taken only until 5.5 hours before kickoff. Locker rooms and dugouts close on match days and the day before match days, and stadium events can alter the route or hours.

tickets

Online general-public prices start from €35 for the Classic Tour, €42 for Classic Flexible Time, €57 for Classic Tour plus Realmadrid Games, and €54 for a Guided Tour. Ticket-office prices are usually higher, and Madridista discounts may apply.

Classic tickets include the Real Madrid C.F. Museum, panoramic stadium view, locker rooms, and dugouts when the route is open. Tickets are tied to the selected date and time, so choose carefully before payment.

address

Santiago Bernabéu Stadium
Avenida de Concha Espina 1
28036 Madrid
Spain

how to get there

The stadium stands in Chamartín by Paseo de la Castellana and Plaza de Lima. In a normal network pattern, the closest Metro stop is Santiago Bernabéu on Line 10, with Nuevos Ministerios useful for Cercanías trains and airport links.

For 2026 visits, check Line 10 before you travel: the Cuzco-Nuevos Ministerios section is suspended until the end of the year, with free S10 buses serving the stadium area. EMT buses 14, 27, 40, 43, 120, 126, 147, and 150 also stop nearby.

accessibility

The stadium has lifts and reduced-mobility access for events, but exact routing, seating, and lift operation can vary by service or fixture. If step-free movement matters, confirm the route before booking and allow extra time around Plaza de Lima, especially while the Metro station works continue.

luggage

Do not rely on storing luggage at Santiago Bernabéu Stadium. Large objects, strollers, and suitcases are not allowed if they can obstruct evacuation, and the stadium has no cloakroom.

Bring only a small day bag for tours or matches, and use city luggage storage before you reach Chamartín if you are traveling between hotel, station, and airport.
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