Home » Just how affordable is watching Tottenham in 2026?

Just how affordable is watching Tottenham in 2026?

Tottenham Hotspur fans look on with a flag reading 'we're loving Big Ange'. (Photo by Alex Pantling/Getty Images)

Attending a Tottenham Hotspur match at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium can vary significantly in cost, depending on factors like the opponent (match category), seat location, whether it’s a Premier League game, Champions League/European match, or cup tie, and if you’re buying official face-value tickets or through resale.

Official Face-Value Ticket Prices (Premier League Home Matches, 2025/26 Season)Tottenham categorises matches into A, B, and C based on the opponent, with prices frozen from previous seasons. These are adult prices from the club’s official structure (concessions like seniors over 66, young adults under 22, and juniors under 18 get discounts, often 25-50% off).

For fans, it has become increasingly about looking for value, and one very credible online option is to buy Razer Gold gift card, a virtual payment method that can be used on over 42,000 games, in-game credits, and other digital products.

Category C (lower-demand games, e.g., vs Bournemouth, Burnley, Sunderland, Wolves): £38–£81
Category B (mid-tier, e.g., vs Aston Villa, Brentford, Brighton, Crystal Palace, Everton, Fulham, Leeds, Nottingham Forest, West Ham): £49–£96

Category A (high-demand/big rivals, e.g., vs Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United, Newcastle): £71–£109

The lowest prices are typically in upper tiers or shortside stands (e.g., North/South), while premium/longside seats (closer to the pitch, better views) cost more. Family areas offer better junior deals.

These are for direct club purchases, but most home Premier League matches sell out quickly to season ticket holders and members (One Hotspur Membership costs around £45–£55/year and gives priority access). General sale is rare and limited.

Other Costs and Considerations Membership: Often required for access — basic One Hotspur ~£45, plus version ~£55 for better priority.

Season Tickets: £856–£2,367+ (frozen for 2025/26), depending on stand and seat quality (e.g., premium 1882 package higher).

Additional Expenses: Travel to London (if not local), food/drinks at the stadium (premium but pricey), potential hospitality/VIP packages (hundreds to thousands extra for better seats/catering).
Away Games: Much harder/expensive if not an away fan allocation; resale often inflated.

Overall, for a standard Premier League home game: Budget option (upper tier, lower-demand opponent, if you snag official): ~£40–£60.

Typical/good seat: £70–£150+.
High-demand or resale: Easily £200–£500+ per ticket.

Resale/Secondary Market (e.g., via platforms like SeatPick, StubHub, or others): Prices are often higher due to demand. Current listings show home tickets starting from around $76–$100+ USD (roughly £60–£80), but average £300–£800+ equivalent for popular games, and much higher for derbies like Arsenal (e.g., £190+ or more). Champions League matches can start at $90–$200 but average higher.

Follow Us
Latest Newsletter Posts