How much does a football trip abroad cost?
Short answer: there's no single figure, but it's easiest to think in five buckets — the match ticket, flights, accommodation, local transport and food, and a buffer for extras. A no-frills league weekend (budget airline, hostel, cheap-category ticket) can be genuinely affordable; a marquee fixture or a final with premium seats and a peak-weekend hotel can cost many times more. The biggest single variable is almost always the fixture itself and how late in the competition it falls.
"How much does it cost?" is the first question and the hardest to answer honestly, because the same city and the same stadium can produce wildly different totals depending on the game and when you book. So rather than quote a number that'll be wrong for your trip, here's how to build your own estimate — and where the money actually goes.
Think of every football trip as the sum of five buckets:
| Cost bucket | What drives it | How much you control it |
|---|---|---|
| Match ticket | The fixture, the competition stage, your seat category | High — pick the game and category |
| Flights | Route, how early you book, midweek vs weekend | High — timing and flexibility |
| Accommodation | City, area, how far ahead, peak match weekend | High — area and booking date |
| Local transport & food | City, taxis vs public transport, how you eat | Medium — habits on the ground |
| Extras & buffer | eSIM, insurance, a tour, the unexpected | Medium — easy to forget, worth planning |
Where does the money actually go?
For most ordinary trips, the two biggest lines are flights and accommodation, and the match ticket is often smaller than people expect for a regular-season game. That flips completely for marquee fixtures and finals, where both the ticket and the hotel spike at once. Understanding which kind of trip you're planning tells you where to focus:
- An ordinary league game: the ticket is usually the smallest of the big three. Your total is mostly flights plus beds, so book those early and you've done most of the work.
- A marquee fixture or derby: ticket prices climb and resale climbs faster; hotels in the city fill for the weekend. Both big levers move against you at once.
- A final or a major tournament: the most expensive of all — peak demand on tickets, flights and hotels simultaneously. Our Champions League final ticket guide covers why the showpiece is in a class of its own.
How do you keep the cost down?
The three levers that move the total most are which fixture, how early, and midweek versus weekend. After that, it's habits on the ground:
- Pick a less glamorous fixture. An ordinary league game is a fraction of a final and often just as good a night out.
- Book early and consider midweek. Flights and hotels are cheapest furthest from the date, and a midweek game — like a Champions League away day — often undercuts a weekend.
- Travel light and split costs. Hand luggage only on a budget carrier, and a group splitting an apartment, both move the per-person number a long way.
- Stay one hop out and use public transport. A bed a short metro ride from the centre, plus trains over taxis, saves steadily across a weekend.
- Buy the ticket from official sources. Overpaying a tout — or buying a fake — is the most expensive mistake of all. Read how to buy tickets safely first.
A few honest truths about the budget
- The fixture matters more than the city. The same city can be cheap or eye-watering depending on the game — choose the match before you fall in love with the destination.
- Don't forget the buffer. An eSIM, travel insurance and a contingency for the unexpected are small lines that people leave out and then regret.
- Cheapest isn't always best value. A bed you can't get back to after the final whistle is a false economy — pay a little more to be near transport.
- Currency and timing swing the total. Booking months ahead in a strong-value city beats a last-minute dash to a pricey one.
What order should you book in?
- If the game is hard to get into, secure the ticket route first — there's no point booking flights for a match you can't get into.
- If it's an easy league game, flexible flights and a refundable bed first lets you lock the trip and add the ticket later.
- Always finish with a bed you can actually get back to after the game, near good transport.
Our honest pick
If keeping the cost sensible matters most, build the trip around an ordinary league fixture rather than a final: it's the single biggest saving you can make, and the atmosphere on a good league night rivals far pricier games. Book flights and accommodation early — they're usually your two largest lines — lean towards a midweek game, and travel light. Spend a little of what you save on a bed near transport so the night doesn't end with a long, costly trek back, and put a small buffer aside for an eSIM, insurance and the unexpected. Save the final-weekend splurge for when the fixture itself is the whole point of the trip.
Common questions
How much does a football trip abroad cost?
There is no single figure, but a useful way to think about it is five buckets: the match ticket, flights, accommodation, local transport and food, and a buffer for extras. A no-frills league weekend on a budget airline with a hostel and a cheap-category ticket can be surprisingly affordable, while a marquee fixture or a final with premium seats and a peak-weekend hotel can cost many times more. The single biggest variable is usually the fixture itself and how late in the competition it falls.
What is the biggest cost on a football trip?
For most trips it is a toss-up between the flights and the accommodation, with the match ticket often smaller than people expect for a regular-season game. The exception is marquee fixtures and finals, where ticket prices and surge-priced hotels both spike. Booking early, travelling midweek and avoiding the biggest matchups are the three levers that move the total most.
How can I do a football trip abroad cheaply?
Pick a less glamorous fixture, fly midweek on a budget carrier with hand luggage only, stay in a hostel or a place one transport hop out of the centre, and buy a cheaper-category ticket from official sources. A group splitting an apartment and using public transport instead of taxis can bring the per-person cost down a long way. The cheapest trips are built around an ordinary league game, not a final.
Should I book the match ticket or the flights first?
Secure the ticket route first if the game is hard to get into, because there is no point booking flights for a match you cannot get into. For easy-to-access league games, you can often book flexible flights and accommodation first and the ticket later. The safe order is: confirm you can get a genuine ticket, then lock in flights and a bed you can actually get back to after the game.
Are football trip costs higher for finals and big matches?
Yes, substantially. Finals and marquee fixtures drive up ticket face value, push resale prices to many times face, and cause host-city hotels to sell out and surge for the weekend. The same trip to an ordinary league fixture can cost a fraction of a final weekend. If budget matters most, an early-round or regular-season game is far better value and often just as good a night.
Related guides
- How to buy tickets for big sporting events safely
- Champions League away days: how to do a midweek football trip
- World Cup 2026: the host cities and how to plan a trip
Next steps: protect the biggest line by reading how to buy tickets safely, plan an affordable midweek trip with our Champions League away-days guide, or weigh up the bucket-list options in the best events worth travelling for.
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 →