Bernabeu Tour & Museum + Royal Palace Madrid
- Santiago Bernabéu Stadium: Museum Entry
- Royal Palace of Madrid
- City Tour Madrid: Audio Guide App
Enter into Real Madrid’s legendary arena as club history, trophies, and famous match moments surround you on the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium tour
9 options • from $47.74
+ 1 other top thing to do
Combine Santiago Bernabéu Stadium with other Madrid favorites. Some things are better together.
You can also book guided versions of the Tour Bernabéu, as well as bundles that include hop-on hop-off buses, Madrid city passes, and combined tickets that cover other major sights. All of these are built around the Tour Bernabéu, not around match tickets.
What it is: This is the standard Tour Bernabéu ticket. You walk at your own pace (or sometimes in a group) through the Real Madrid C.F. Museum, see the stadium from high vantage points, and access selected behind-the-scenes areas. Because of ongoing renovations, the exact route and sections open to visitors can change.
Best for: All football fans, families, and anyone who wants a close look at one of the world’s most successful football clubs.
What it is: These are official tickets to a live Real Madrid game at the Santiago Bernabéu. You can attend La Liga fixtures, Champions League nights, and other competitions. This is a game-only ticket. It does not include the Tour Bernabéu, museum entry, or any behind-the-scenes access. Prices are dynamic and usually much higher than standard tour tickets.
Best for: Football fanatics who want live action and arrange travel dates around the match schedule rather than general sightseeing.
What it is: This is a premium version of the Santiago Bernabéu tour. An expert guide leads you through the stadium and museum, giving detailed background on the club, its legends, tactics, and biggest victories. You follow a set route and can ask questions as you go.
Best for: Dedicated fans and history lovers who want the most complete and detailed Real Madrid tour available.
What it is: These bundles combine tickets Bernabéu tour access with a Madrid hop-on hop-off bus ticket. You travel around the city on a sightseeing bus, and one of the stops is right by the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium. You then use your included Tour Bernabéu ticket to enter the stadium.
Best for: First-time visitors to Madrid who want an easy, flexible way to see the city and include the stadium on the same ticket.
What it is: Major Madrid city passes often include the Tour Bernabéu as one of the highlight attractions. With one pass, you gain access to multiple museums, monuments, and tours across several days, for a single upfront price.
Best for: Tourists planning a multi-day trip to Madrid who want to see a long list of attractions, including the Santiago Bernabéu, without buying each ticket separately.
What it is: These are packages that combine the Tour Bernabéu with another top Madrid sight, such as the Royal Palace or the Prado Museum. You lock in access to both, often for less than buying each one on its own.
Best for: Efficient travelers who like clear, fixed plans and want to cover both the stadium and another flagship Madrid attraction in a single, well-organized day.
You start in a museum packed with screens, touch displays, archive footage, and soundscapes. You swipe through historic line-ups, tap to watch classic goals, and follow the club’s rise decade by decade on giant walls of video and light.
Then you reach the Trophy Room. The space glows with glass, steel, and polished surfaces. In front of you, the 14 UEFA Champions League trophies stand in a long, glittering row. Silver cups reflect the lights above, each one marked with a season, an opponent, a final. Around them, you see La Liga titles, Copa del Rey cups, World Club trophies, and individual awards. The room feels dense with history, as if every wall and display carries another story of a final, a comeback, or a legendary player.
From the museum, you walk up into the stands and emerge at one of the highest points of the stadium. The space opens out in front of you in a single, wide view. You see every seat, every tier, and the green rectangle of the pitch set out clearly below.
Above it hangs the new retractable roof, with its modern structure and lighting rigs. You can picture the stadium closed on a big European night, lit in club colors. From up here, you understand the scale of the ground and how the redevelopment has reshaped it into a modern arena.
Next, you head down toward pitch level. The seats rise above you, and the grass lies just beyond the barriers. You stand at the edge and look across the field where legends have scored, tackled, and lifted trophies.
You sit in the dugout, in the same type of seats used by the manager and players. From there, the pitch seems closer, the touchline just a few steps away. You see the stadium from their point of view: the distance to the goals, the technical area, the benches, and the tunnel entrance. It is easy to imagine match day noise rolling down from the stands around you.
The players’ tunnel is one of the most emotional parts of the tour for many fans. You follow the same route the team takes, from inside the stadium bowl toward the light at the pitch entrance. Club colors, badges, and images line the walls, reminding you of big nights and famous squads.
Then you reach the home team dressing room, or a detailed replica, depending on the current tour route. Inside, you see individual locker spaces laid out in a clean, modern style. Benches, tactical boards, and kit areas show how the space works on a match day. Hydrotherapy pools and treatment areas reveal how players recover and prepare. The room feels calm but focused, like a place built for routine, strategy, and last-minute team talks.
High in the central stand, you enter the Presidential Box. This is the most exclusive section of the Santiago Bernabéu. It is where royalty, club legends, and VIPs watch the game.
You see padded seats lined up on the halfway line, with a clear, central view of the pitch. From here, the field stretches perfectly from one goal to the other, with every corner and stand in sight. The finishings are more refined, the layout more private. You can picture presidents, star guests, and former players taking these very seats on major match nights.
Your tour also leads you into the press room, where the manager and team answer questions after the final whistle. Rows of chairs face a raised podium, with club logos and sponsor panels on the walls.
You can sit in front of the microphones, just as coaches and players do. Many visitors pose for photos behind the desk, pretending to give a post-match statement or answer a tough question. For a moment, you stand where the world’s media focuses after each game, in the place where headlines are set and big stories begin.
You can visit the Santiago Bernabéu almost every day of the year.
Times can change with little notice, so you should always check the official Real Madrid website for the exact schedule on your dates.
If you want the full Santiago Bernabéu tour, avoid match days and the day before major fixtures whenever possible.
You step out of the station and the stadium is right in front of you. You can also use taxis or ride-sharing services, but traffic on match days and weekends can be heavy around the ground.
The tour route can change. Because of ongoing renovations and regular stadium events, the Tour Bernabéu route is not fixed. Sections may close, reopen, or change order without warning.
You should be prepared for a flexible route and understand that access to all areas is never guaranteed.
If possible, bring only a small bag and keep important items with you at all times.
If you have mobility concerns, you should check the latest accessibility information on the official website and consider contacting the stadium in advance to confirm what you can and cannot access on the dates you plan to visit.
You should plan around 1.5 to 2 hours for the standard Tour Bernabéu. If you like to read displays and watch videos in detail, you may take closer to 2.5 hours. Guided tours follow a set pace and often last around 90 minutes.
The Santiago Bernabéu Stadium sits on Paseo de la Castellana, in the Chamartín district of Madrid. The easiest access is by Metro Line 10 to Santiago Bernabéu station, which brings you out right next to the stadium.
Prices change with the season and renovation progress, but adult tickets for the Santiago Bernabeu tour usually sit in a mid-range bracket compared with other major European stadium tours. Children, seniors, and some groups often pay less.
For exact prices on your dates, you should check the official Real Madrid website or trusted ticket sellers.
The standard Bernabéu tour usually includes the Real Madrid museum, the trophy room, a high-level view of the stadium, and selected behind-the-scenes areas like pitchside, the dugouts, and the press room.
Because of ongoing works, access to spots such as the dressing room or players’ tunnel can change. Your ticket description will show what is included on your chosen date.
The classic Tour Bernabéu is mainly self-guided. You move at your own pace through the museum and stadium areas.
You can also book a guided tour ticket, where a specialist guide leads the group and gives extra details and stories about the club.
To book Santiago Bernabéu tickets, you can buy directly through the official Real Madrid website or use reputable ticket platforms.
Make sure you pick the correct product: tickets Bernabéu tour for the stadium visit, or Real Madrid stadium tickets for a live match. Always check the date, time, and what is included before you confirm payment.
For regular league games against smaller clubs, you can often find match tickets if you buy early. For big La Liga fixtures, Champions League ties, and derby games, tickets can sell out quickly and prices rise.
If you are set on a specific match, you should book as far in advance as possible and be flexible on seating category.
Match ticket prices at the Santiago Bernabéu vary widely. Upper-tier seats for lower-profile games can be relatively affordable, while central or lower seats for major matches can be very expensive.
Prices are dynamic, so you should check official Real Madrid sales channels close to your travel dates for accurate figures.
Yes, but with heavy restrictions. On match days, the Tour Bernabéu usually closes about 5 hours before kick-off, and key areas like the home dressing room stay closed all day.
The route is shorter, so if you want the fullest possible Real Madrid tour, you should pick a non-match day.
Some parts of the tour at Bernabéu are accessible by lifts and ramps, but not all sections. Because of the stadium’s design and ongoing renovation works, certain areas with many steps or narrow passages may be difficult or impossible to reach.
If you have reduced mobility, you should contact the stadium in advance and check the latest accessibility information for your chosen dates.