REVIEW · SEVILLE
Sevilla: Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán Stadium Entry Ticket
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Sevilla FC · Bookable on GetYourGuide
One walk changes the way you see a city. This 1.5-hour Sevilla FC stadium entry lets you go from the museum to the locker room and out to the pitch, guided by an audio app.
I especially liked the up-close pitch moment after you’ve built context in the museum. And I really appreciated the self-guided layout—you can take your time at each room instead of feeling rushed between photos.
One thing to consider: the tour is audio-led, so you’ll want your phone ready and comfortable with the app workflow (headphones can be a big help).
In This Review
- Key things I’d plan around
- Entering Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán at Puerta 2
- The museum route: how Sevilla FC’s story comes alive
- Jerseys, trophies, and the rooms that explain what Sevilla wins
- VIP areas: what stadium power actually feels like
- The media room and press-conference moment
- Locker room to tunnel: the match-day feeling you can’t fake
- Walking the pitch area: what you should notice
- Audio guide in 9 languages: how to make it work smoothly
- Price and value: why $16 can work even if you’re not a superfan
- Timing: getting the most out of 1.5 hours
- Who this stadium tour is best for
- A practical heads-up before you book
- Should you book this Sevilla FC stadium entry?
- FAQ
- What’s included in the Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán stadium entry ticket?
- How long does the experience take?
- Where do I meet for the tour?
- Is there a tour guide included?
- Do I need to download an app for the audio guide?
- What languages are available for the audio guide?
- Can I skip the ticket line?
- Is the booking refundable if I change plans?
- What access do I get inside the stadium?
Key things I’d plan around

- Pitch access through the locker room tunnel for that real match-day feeling
- A museum route that starts with the club’s beginnings and the early days of Spanish football
- Trophies, jerseys, and photo displays that connect hardware to memorable eras
- VIP and director-style areas that make the stadium feel like more than a venue
- A media room experience where you can treat it like a mock press moment
- Audio guide in 9 languages so you’re not stuck listening to whatever’s loud in the background
Entering Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán at Puerta 2

Your visit starts at Puerta 2, and the ticket includes entry to Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán Stadium plus an audioguide app. The big practical win here is that you skip the ticket line, which matters in a stadium setting where everyone funnels to the same doors.
From the start, the experience is designed for movement at your pace. You’re not waiting for a guide to gather everyone. Instead, you follow the route through the stadium’s key spaces and let the audio layer add the story.
A few more Seville tours and experiences worth a look
The museum route: how Sevilla FC’s story comes alive

I like stadium museums when they do two things at once: they explain the club and they show you why the club still feels important. This one does both. You begin with the club story, tracing Sevilla FC’s path from its inception in 1890 and covering the origin moments that helped shape early football in Spain.
Expect the museum to act like a timeline you can walk through. The displays focus on key people and roles—players, coaches, and presidents—so you understand this is a club built by many kinds of work, not only by match-day heroics.
There’s also a strong sense of scale to the museum. You’ll move from early football context into more modern football narratives, with plenty of objects that help you picture how the club evolved.
Jerseys, trophies, and the rooms that explain what Sevilla wins
After you’ve set the stage, the museum shifts into the part most football fans came for: jerseys, trophies, and photographs. This is where the audio guide becomes especially useful, because it helps you look longer at what you might otherwise skim.
You’ll see major trophies associated with Sevilla FC’s big successes, including La Liga, five Copa del Rey titles, and European/Spanish super-cup wins such as the Supercopa de España and Supercopa de Europa. Even if you don’t know every detail of those competitions, the audio narration helps you understand why those rooms matter.
A nice touch here is that the trophy displays are arranged to make the achievements feel connected rather than separated. You’re not staring at trophies in isolation—you’re seeing a club identity take shape as you walk room to room.
VIP areas: what stadium power actually feels like

One of the most fun parts of this visit is being allowed into exclusive stadium areas. The VIP box is there for a reason: it shows you how different the stadium feels when you’re higher up and closer to the decision-making side of the club.
When I’m touring a stadium, I’m always looking for perspective. VIP spaces give you that perspective fast. You can look out from a more “club president” point of view and imagine how match-day looks when you’re watching the game with a job attached to it.
You also get a sense of how the stadium is staged—not only for fans, but for the people who manage press, strategy, and operations. Even without a live match, those spaces help you read the building like it’s an engine.
The media room and press-conference moment

Another standout stop is the media room, where the tour experience leans into the theatre of football. You can step into the kind of space where questions get asked and where players learn how to respond under lights.
In practice, this means you’re not just walking past a room—you’re inside the “press vibe.” It’s a small thing, but it makes the whole stadium feel more real, especially if you’re visiting with kids or anyone who likes interactive moments.
The stadium also includes areas where you can picture the day-to-day flow around the pitch. Some visits include seeing director-style seating and other match-area zones, which helps you connect the media room to the rest of the stadium’s working side.
Locker room to tunnel: the match-day feeling you can’t fake

If you only cared about trophies, you could stop at the museum. But the best part here is what happens later: you reach the spaces that put you in the route players take.
First comes the locker room area, where you can see the kind of space where jerseys hang and routines happen. Then you get the moment that makes the whole tour worth it: stepping toward the pitch from the locker room tunnel.
This is where the audio guide earns its keep. Hearing the fan atmosphere as you approach the pitch helps you translate what you’re seeing into match-day reality. You’re not only looking at the field—you’re feeling how the stadium sounds when supporters are loud and coordinated.
And yes, it really is the kind of moment that makes you pause. You’ll likely notice photos are easy to take here because you’re standing where the action begins, not just in front of it.
Walking the pitch area: what you should notice

You’ll get close enough to picture pre-game rituals and on-pitch dynamics. The stadium doesn’t feel like a distant bowl; it feels like a place you could step into with a uniform and a job to do.
One practical note: you might see signs of work on the pitch area during your visit. A past visit described pitch revitalization underway, so if you notice construction marks or fresh work, it’s not a deal-breaker—just plan your photos with that in mind.
Also remember that this is an audio-led self-paced experience, so the time you take on the pitch-side route matters. If you rush, you’ll just catch the highlights. If you slow down, you’ll actually absorb the spacing—how the tunnel leads into the field, how seating frames your view, and how close the atmosphere feels.
Audio guide in 9 languages: how to make it work smoothly

This tour includes an audioguide app in Arabic, Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, and Spanish. The audio is your main layer of context, and it helps you connect objects (jerseys, trophies, photos) to stories (people, matches, and key eras).
Because it’s self-guided, your biggest risk is a “start-stop” experience—missing the right track of information because you weren’t sure what to do with the app. If you want this to feel effortless, do this before you reach the first exhibit room:
- Bring your phone charged
- Have headphones available
- Give yourself a moment to confirm the audio route has started
You don’t need perfection, but you do want clarity early. A good audio tour feels like a walking documentary; a confusing one feels like background noise.
Price and value: why $16 can work even if you’re not a superfan

At about $16 per person and 1.5 hours, this is one of the more efficient “football immersion” options in Seville. The main reason it holds up on value is the access mix: museum + VIP-style spaces + press/media area + locker room + pitch-facing tunnel access.
If you’re comparing it to longer tours that rely on a live guide, this one saves you time and frustration. You get multiple stadium zones in a fixed window, and you can spend extra minutes where you care most—trophies, pitch photos, or the player spaces.
Even for visitors who aren’t hardcore football followers, the format works because the club story is presented through physical exhibits and roles, not just match statistics. And the stadium spaces make it feel like you’re seeing how a football club operates, not only how it performs.
Timing: getting the most out of 1.5 hours
The official duration is about 1.5 hours, and I’d treat it like a flexible sprint, not a full-day museum visit. You’ll want to arrive ready to move.
Because you can go at your own pace, I suggest a simple approach:
- Spend enough time in the museum to understand who Sevilla FC is and what it’s won
- Keep your energy for locker room + tunnel + pitch-side moments
- Don’t get stuck on one exhibit unless you’re genuinely enjoying it
If the stadium is busy when you arrive, being self-guided can actually help you find calmer pockets for photos. The stadium is well set up for walking routes, and it’s easy to keep moving without getting lost in a crowd.
Who this stadium tour is best for
This experience fits best if you want more than a quick “stand in the stadium and take a picture” stop. You’ll like it if you care about how a club is presented—through trophies, rooms, and the player route.
It’s also a great option if you’re visiting with a mix of interests:
- Football fans will love pitch access, locker room, tunnel, and director/press spaces
- Non-football people can still enjoy the museum angle and the sense of place
Families tend to do well here too, especially because the media room gives a playful, imagine-yourself moment. It’s practical fun, not just a spectacle.
A practical heads-up before you book
A couple details can change how smooth your visit feels. First, confirm you’re comfortable using the audio guide app right away. Second, plan around the pace of a self-guided route—if you’re the type who loves lingering, 1.5 hours can feel quick.
And if you have strong plans later that day, keep a buffer. Stadium visits move through rooms in a predictable flow, but you’ll still want a little slack so you don’t rush the pitch section.
Should you book this Sevilla FC stadium entry?
Yes—if your priority is access. For $16, you’re getting far more than museum-only sightseeing, including the locker room and the chance to experience the player-to-pitch tunnel route. The audio guide adds real context across museum rooms, VIP areas, and the media space, so it doesn’t feel like you’re just ticking boxes.
I’d skip it only if you already know you hate self-guided audio tours, or if you want a live guide to answer questions. Otherwise, this is a smart, time-efficient way to understand why Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán isn’t just a venue—it’s part of Sevilla FC’s identity.
FAQ
What’s included in the Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán stadium entry ticket?
The ticket includes entry to Ramón Sánchez-Pizjuán Stadium plus an audioguide app.
How long does the experience take?
Plan for about 1.5 hours, depending on availability and how much time you spend in each area.
Where do I meet for the tour?
The meeting point is Puerta 2.
Is there a tour guide included?
No. A tour guide is not included; this is an audio guide experience.
Do I need to download an app for the audio guide?
Yes. The experience includes an audioguide app, and you’ll use it during the visit.
What languages are available for the audio guide?
Arabic, Chinese, English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, and Spanish.
Can I skip the ticket line?
Yes. The experience is designed to skip the ticket line.
Is the booking refundable if I change plans?
No. The activity is non-refundable.
What access do I get inside the stadium?
You can access multiple stadium areas including the museum, VIP areas, media room, locker room, and areas that lead to the pitch via the locker room tunnel.


























