The best sporting events worth travelling for
Short answer: the best event to travel for is the one whose vibe and host city you'd love regardless of the result. For sheer scale, nothing beats the FIFA World Cup. For atmosphere on a single night, a Champions League knockout tie or a fierce derby. For spectacle, the Olympics or a marquee Formula 1 round. For an event that doubles as a great holiday, a tennis Grand Slam or a summer cricket Test. Match the occasion to what you actually want, book a bed you can get back to, and buy only from official sources.
"Worth travelling for" is doing a lot of work in that sentence. A bucket-list event you've seen a hundred times on TV can be a disappointment in person if the view is poor, the city is a slog, or you've spent the rent on a ticket. The events below are the ones that genuinely reward the airfare — but each rewards a different kind of traveller, so the honest answer is never a single name.
Here's the quick version before the detail:
| If you want… | Go for… | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Scale & a city transformed | FIFA World Cup, the Olympics | An entire city or country taken over for weeks — the biggest occasions in sport |
| Atmosphere on the night | Champions League knockout, a big derby | Ninety minutes of a stadium singing as one — hard to top for noise |
| Spectacle & glamour | Formula 1 marquee round, boxing in Las Vegas | Pure occasion — dazzling, loud, expensive, unforgettable |
| An event that's also a holiday | Tennis Grand Slam, a cricket Test, the Tour de France | Long, relaxed days in a city or landscape you'd happily visit anyway |
What makes an event actually worth the trip?
Before picking, it helps to judge every event on the same four things — because the brochure version and the real version can be miles apart:
- Atmosphere: will the crowd carry the occasion, or is it a corporate, quiet affair? A half-empty group game has none of the magic of a knockout night.
- Spectacle: is it genuinely better in person? Some sports gain enormously from being there (the speed of F1, the scale of an Olympic stadium); others you arguably see better on TV.
- Value: what does the whole trip cost — ticket, beds, flights, the city around it — and is the experience worth it? Finals and marquee matchups carry a steep premium.
- Difficulty: how hard is it to get in? The very biggest events sell through official ballots months ahead, and that shapes how far in advance you must commit.
The events worth crossing a border for
The FIFA World Cup — the biggest of them all. A whole host country lives and breathes football for a month, fans from everywhere mixing in fan zones and squares. The 2026 tournament runs from June 11 to July 19 across the USA, Canada and Mexico — sixteen host cities in three countries, which makes it as much a logistics puzzle as a trip. Unmatched for scale and the feeling of being part of something global.
Champions League knockout nights — peak club football atmosphere. A two-legged tie under floodlights, a travelling end in full voice, ninety minutes of a stadium singing as one. The midweek away day is one of the great football trips — and the final is the showpiece, though by far the hardest ticket of the season to get hold of honestly.
A marquee Formula 1 Grand Prix — speed and spectacle. Being trackside is nothing like the TV: the noise, the speed in your chest, a whole city taken over for the weekend. But races differ wildly as trips — our guide to which Grand Prix to pick walks through atmosphere versus glamour versus value, because Monza feels nothing like Monaco.
The Olympic Games — spectacle on a city-wide scale. Sixteen days, dozens of sports, an entire city remade for it. Tickets to finals and marquee sessions are a lottery, but smaller sessions can be brilliant value and a way into the buzz without the headline price.
A tennis Grand Slam — the event that's also a holiday. Wimbledon, the French, US or Australian Open are long, relaxed, sun-soaked days; ground passes get you onto outside courts for a fraction of show-court prices, and the host city is a destination in its own right.
A summer cricket Test or a Six Nations rugby weekend. Slow-burn, sociable, deeply atmospheric in their own way — a day of Test cricket or a championship rugby city in full song makes a superb long-weekend trip built around good company as much as the sport.
A few honest truths
- Finals are the worst value and the hardest tickets. The earlier round, the group stage, the regular-season fixture — almost always cheaper, easier and often just as good a night out.
- The host city matters as much as the sport. You're there days, not hours. Pick an event in a place you'd enjoy even if your team lost or the racing was dull.
- Some sports are better on TV. Be honest about whether you're going for the action or the occasion — both are valid, but they lead to different choices.
- Book the trip around a bed you can get back to. The single most common regret is a hotel you can't reach after the final whistle. Sort that before the ticket.
Where should you buy tickets?
- Buy from official sources — the governing body, the club, the venue or its named ticketing partner — to avoid invalid resale tickets.
- For the biggest events, enter the official ballot early. World Cups, the Olympics and Champions League finals sell through lotteries you must enter months in advance.
- Treat unofficial resale with caution. If you're buying secondhand, read our guide to buying tickets safely first — the red flags are easy to spot once you know them.
Our honest pick
If you want the single most rewarding trip in sport and you only do one, we'd point you to the FIFA World Cup: nothing else turns a whole country into a festival the way it does, and even without a ticket the fan zones and squares are worth the journey. For something you can do most years without a lottery, a Champions League away day gives you the best ninety-minute atmosphere in club football for a fraction of final prices. Treat a marquee Grand Prix or Olympic finals as the spectacle splurge, and a tennis Grand Slam as the one that doubles as a proper holiday. Whichever you choose, build the trip around a city you'd love regardless, lock in flights and a reachable bed first, and buy from official ticketing.
Common questions
What is the best sporting event to travel for?
There is no single best — it depends what you want. For sheer scale and a whole city taking over, the FIFA World Cup is unmatched. For atmosphere on a single night, a Champions League knockout tie or an Old Firm-style derby. For spectacle, the Olympics or a marquee Formula 1 round. For an event that's also a brilliant holiday, a Grand Slam tennis tournament or a summer Test cricket match. Pick the one whose vibe and host city you'd enjoy regardless of the result.
Which sporting event has the best atmosphere?
For raw, sustained noise it is hard to beat a big European football night — a Champions League knockout game or a fierce league derby — where the whole stadium sings for ninety minutes. Major-final atmospheres such as a World Cup or Euros knockout, Italy's Monza for Formula 1, and college American football Saturdays are also famous for it. Atmosphere depends far more on the fixture and the crowd than on the sport itself.
What is the most affordable major sporting event to attend?
Regular-season and group-stage fixtures are almost always cheaper than finals. A league football match, an early-round tennis day at a Grand Slam, a day of Test cricket, or General Admission at a hilly Formula 1 circuit can all be excellent value. The cost is driven less by the sport and more by how late in the competition you go and how marquee the matchup is.
How far in advance should you book a major sporting event trip?
For the biggest events — a World Cup, the Olympics, a Champions League final, a marquee Grand Prix — start six to twelve months ahead, because hotels near the venue and the best transport sell out long before the event and prices climb. For regular-season league games you can often book a few weeks out. Always secure flights and a bed you can actually get back to before you worry about anything else.
Where should you buy tickets for big sporting events?
Buy from official sources — the governing body, the club, the venue or their named ticketing partner — to avoid invalid resale tickets. For the very biggest events, tickets are sold through official ballots or lotteries you must enter months in advance. Treat unofficial resale sites with caution, and read a dedicated ticket-safety guide before you pay for anything.
Related guides
- World Cup 2026: the host cities and how to plan a trip
- Which F1 Grand Prix should you go to? A fan's guide
- Champions League away days: how to do a midweek football trip
Next steps: before you commit, work out what a football trip abroad really costs, read how to buy tickets safely, and start planning with our World Cup 2026 host-cities guide.
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