Champions League away days: how to do a midweek football trip
There's nothing quite like a European night under the lights in a foreign stadium — the anthem, the noise, a city buzzing for one match. A Champions League away day is one of the best short trips a football fan can take. The trick is that midweek European fixtures take a bit of planning to do well, especially getting into the ground as a neutral or visiting fan.
Here's how to put one together.
First, the ticket reality
This is the part that catches people out. For big European matches:
- Away allocations are small and usually sold through your own club to members — if you're following your team, get on the membership/loyalty points early.
- Home-end tickets for the host club are often members-only too, and selling on unofficial sites risks invalid tickets and ejection.
- Neutrals have the easiest time with group-stage matches and smaller clubs, where general sale is more open, than with knockout nights at the giants.
- Official club channels and the official hospitality packages are the safe routes. Treat "guaranteed tickets" from random resellers with deep suspicion.
Decide what you're realistically able to get before you book flights.
Pick the city as much as the match
Half the joy is the trip itself, so weigh the destination:
- Atmosphere classics: Dortmund's Yellow Wall, a night at the San Siro (Milan), Anfield (Liverpool), the Bernabéu (Madrid). These are bucket-list grounds.
- Great city + football combos: Lisbon, Barcelona, Munich, Naples — places that are a brilliant weekend even aside from the game.
- Easy logistics: central-European cities with cheap flights and good metros make the away day low-stress.
A midweek fixture means you can fly in, see the game, and have a day either side to enjoy the city.
Building the weekend
A reliable shape for a Champions League trip:
1. Fly in the day before the match — never the same day, in case of delays. 2. Stay central, near the metro, so the post-match journey back is easy (stadiums empty 60,000+ people at once; plan the route out). 3. Match day: get to the ground early for the build-up and the anthem — the atmosphere peaks well before kickoff. 4. Day after: sleep in, see the city, fly home rested.
Practical tips
- Get to the stadium early and know your exact gate — segregation and security are strict at European matches.
- Keep colours sensible in unfamiliar areas; visiting fans are usually directed to specific sections and routes for a reason.
- Public transport is your friend — stadium car parks are a nightmare at full time; trains and metros clear the crowd fastest.
- Have a backup plan if you can't land tickets: many cities have huge fan zones or great sports bars where the away-day atmosphere is half the fun anyway.
- Travel insurance and a flexible hotel cover you if the fixture date moves (European nights occasionally shift for broadcast or weather).
Get the ticket question sorted first, pick a city you'd want to visit anyway, and a Champions League away day becomes the kind of weekend you'll be retelling for years.
Before you go
A few practical bits worth sorting before you travel.
Tickets & attractions
Skip-the-line tickets for the sights and things to do around the game.
Browse tickets →Airport & transfers
A driver waiting at arrivals — fixed price, no surge after the final whistle.
Book a transfer →Tours & experiences
Make a trip of it — city tours and day trips around the fixture.
Browse experiences →Rent a car
Driving between host cities? Compare hire cars.
Compare cars →Stay connected
An eSIM with data the moment you land — tickets, maps and the group chat.
Get an eSIM →Travel insurance
Cover for the trip and the unexpected — sort it before you travel.
Get covered →