Holidays in Italy

Where to buy football tickets in Rome

Football in Rome is more than just football, and attending even an ordinary series A match in the Italian Championship will bring you incredible emotions and impressions that will last a lifetime. It remains only to buy tickets, which is very easy to do using the instructions below.

  • Important: tickets can be bought in advance on the Internet at the official partnerone website ticketone.it in the Calcio section. You need to know Italian or English, an electronic ticket will be sent to your mail, it is enough to save it on your phone or print it. See step-by-step instructions for registering on the site.

Our adventures in buying football tickets in Rome will start from the church of Santa Maria Maggiore. Your job at the Piazza dell'Esquilino is just a 10-minute walk from Termini Central Station. This is how Santa Maria Maggiore looks from Via Cavour.

We turn around 180 degrees and cross the road. A ticketing point is located on the left side of the Piazza dell'Esquilino.

If you get to Santa Maria Maggiore by bus 70 or 71 and get off at the Esquilino-Cavour stop, then looking at the church just turn right and you will see a bar, and next to it is the box office with the sign Orbis.

That way. The cash desk is open seven days a week from 9-30 to 13-00 and from 16-00 to 19-30.

How much are the tickets

The cost of football tickets in Rome depends on the importance of the match. For an ordinary series A match, prices will start from 15-20 euros, and for matches of the Champions League or championship leaders, for example, Roma - Juventus tickets will be in the range of 35-100 euros, depending on the tribune.

Children under 5 years old are free. An interesting fact is that for young people under 14 years old, fans over 65, as well as women, significant discounts are provided. For example, for an ordinary Roma - Parma match in the Distini Nord / Sud sector, an ordinary ticket costs 35 euros, fans under 14 and over 65 go for 24 euros, and women for 31 euros. Such is the pricing policy.

Which sector to buy tickets for

The most prestigious and expensive is the Tribuna Monte Mario Top tribune. The cheapest - the fan-made Curva Nord and Curva Sud - this is where you need to go for super sensations. A slightly more relaxed version of Distini Nord or Sud.

Stadium layout

Attention: you can buy football tickets cash only. Since the tickets registeredthen with you be sure to have any ID. Even a photocopy will do.

How to buy in advance

Tickets for a regular championship match can be bought even in a day or two. Usually tickets for top matches appear in 2-4 weeks and closer to the date only the most expensive places remain. If you order a transfer from Sergio, then for some matches he will be able to get you tickets and transfer them to the airport. You can contact your friends in Rome, send them photocopies of your IDs, money and ask you to buy tickets in advance.

Club shops of Roma and Lazio clubs

If you are a fan of one of the Roman clubs Roma or Lazio, then tickets can be purchased at one of the company stores. Fan sectors are available only to holders of annual subscriptions, but central stands are usually available.

Roma Fan Shop Addresses in Rome

  • Piazza Colonna, 360;
  • Via Collatina, 858, Centro Commerciale “RomaEst”;
  • Viale della Primavera, 23;
  • Via Dario Niccodemi, Centro Commerciale "DIMA";
  • Via di Portonaccio, 68;
  • Via Enrico Ferri, 8, Centro Commerciale “La Romanina”;
  • Via Mario Rigamonti, 100, Centro Commerciale “I Granai”;
  • Via C. Colombo, 1897, Area Commerciale “Parchi della Colombo”;
  • Via Arenula, 82;
  • Via Tuscolana, 1422-1424;
  • Viale Marconi, 271;
  • Official internet fan shop: www.asroma.it/en/tickets/matchday.html

The closest to the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore, The Fans Roma fan shop is located at
Via Merulana 10.

The prices for brand attributes are quite decent. A regular Roma shirt costs 48 euros, and with a surname Totti is already 80 euros.

Of the available attributes, soccer balls cost 20 euros.

Lazio Fan Shop Addresses

  • Via Degli Scipioni 84;
  • Via Gesù E Maria 23;
  • Official website: laziofanshop.it

How to get to Stadio Olimpico

All football matches take place at the Olympic Stadium in Rome Stadio Olimpico. It is located far from the center. It takes about an hour to get there by public transport. Get to the Ottaviano metro station, line A. From there, take the 32 bus in the direction of Stazione Saxa Rubra and get off at the 6th stop Lungotevere Cadorna - Ostello Gioventu. Further on foot, and after 5-10 minutes you will find yourself in the stadium.

Attention: Roman buses stop only on demand. The best option would be to ask the driver in sign language or in Italian to drop you off at the desired stop.

Your way back will be much more fun, since football matches in Rome end at around 23:30, and you will get out of the stadium around midnight. Options are stomping on foot to the center for 7-8 km, looking for a night bus (runs once an hour), a taxi, or ordering an individual round-trip transfer from a friend of our editorial office, Sergio, at ru.rome4.us.

Watch the video: Football in Rome Italy (November 2024).

Popular Posts

Category Holidays in Italy, Next Article

Guy Julius Caesar
Story

Guy Julius Caesar

Gaius Julius Caesar (Gaius Iulius Caesar) - commander, politician, writer, dictator, high priest of Ancient Rome. He came from the ancient Roman clan of the ruling class and consistently sought all government posts, led the line of political opposition to the senatorial aristocracy. He was merciful, but sent to execution a number of his main opponents.
Read More
Spartacus Rebellion - Issue 4
Story

Spartacus Rebellion - Issue 4

In the last issue, Spartak associates drove praetor armies in southern Italy and increased their numbers by freeing up slaves and recruiting a variety of outcasts, which were in short supply both in cities and on the highway. In the Senate, the gladiators were greatly offended and decided to raise rates by throwing two consuls with four legions on the table - about 30 thousand people.
Read More
Caesar's Death, Before and After - Issue 4
Story

Caesar's Death, Before and After - Issue 4

In the last issue, the hit hit Mark Anthony put raking paws both on the state treasury and on the entire archive of the correspondence of the late Caesar, and only the very unexpected testament of the dictator somewhat confused his plans. March 19, taking with him the bloodied rags that were recently the toga of the “father of the nation,” Anthony went with guard to the funeral of Guy Julius.
Read More
Spartacus Rebellion - Issue 2
Story

Spartacus Rebellion - Issue 2

In the last issue, 78 hefty foreheads left the prison and, having joyfully robbed the surrounding rich estates, decided to keep the defenses on Vesuvius. The local forces of law and order in the person of the praetor Claudius, sighing, broke away from blissful idleness and began to forcefully resolve the issue with unbridled slaves.
Read More