How to Buy Bayern Munich Tickets: A Visitor's Guide
Our guide for visitors explains how to actually buy tickets for a Bayern Munich match, from the official ballot to safe resale options.

5 Essential Tips for Buying Bayern Munich Tickets as a Visitor
Getting tickets to see Bayern Munich is one of the toughest challenges in European football. The club is a giant, the Allianz Arena holds 75,000 people, and almost every single match is sold out well in advance. For a visitor planning a trip from another country, the process can feel completely overwhelming. We've been there, and we know how frustrating it is.
This list is the straightforward plan we wish we'd had on our first trip. We've ordered our tips chronologically to follow the exact path you'll take, from the moment you decide to go until you have a ticket in your hand. We'll cover the official club process, the one secondary market we trust, and how to avoid the scams that target visiting fans.
1. How to buy Bayern Munich tickets officially
Let's start with the official way, because it's the cheapest. Bayern Munich sells nearly all its 75,000 seats through its own channels, primarily via a ticket request system known as 'Anfragen'. This isn't a simple online shop where you can just buy a ticket. It's a ballot. You register your interest for a specific match, and if demand exceeds supply, which it always does, the club runs a lottery to see who gets to buy a ticket.
For popular matches, the system is immediately 'overbooked', and your chances as a non-member are slim. If you fail in the ballot, your next official option is the 'Zweitmarkt', the club's official secondary market, usually requires club or fanclub membership. This is where season ticket holders and successful ballot members can sell their tickets back to other fans at face value. It's a great system, but tickets appear sporadically, often not until the week of the match itself.
This is the fundamental problem for anyone traveling for a game. While the official route guarantees a fair price, it offers zero certainty. Planning flights and hotels around a ticket you *might* win in a lottery, or one you *might* grab from the Zweitmarkt a few days before kickoff, is a recipe for a very stressful trip. We recommend trying, but don't make it your only plan.
2. Where to buy Bayern Munich tickets safely as a tourist
For anyone planning a trip from abroad, the uncertainty of the official channels is a dealbreaker. You can't book flights and hotels based on a ticket you *might* win in a lottery. This is where the verified resale market becomes the only sane option. Yes, you will pay more than face value. What you're buying isn't just a ticket, it's certainty. It's the peace of mind that comes from having your seat confirmed before you spend a single euro on travel.
The resale world is full of scams, so you can't just dive in anywhere. We don't recommend buying from social media, forums, or from touts on the street. Instead, we use a ticket comparison site that vets the sellers for you. Our go-to is TicketCompare. It aggregates listings from multiple trusted resale platforms, so you can see the available inventory and compare prices in one place. It cuts out the guesswork and the risk of dealing with fake tickets. Platforms like these offer buyer guarantees, secure payment processing, and customer support, things you'll never get from a stranger online. For Bayern matches, this is the most reliable way to get a legitimate ticket.
3. When do Bayern Munich tickets go on sale?
Timing is everything when it comes to Bayern tickets. You're planning an international trip months in advance, but the official ticket systems don't offer that kind of certainty. The moment the season's fixtures are announced is the moment you should start your research. For almost every home game, the official request portal is immediately 'overbooked', so waiting around for a general sale that will never happen is the biggest mistake you can make.
The timeline for tickets follows a predictable, if frustrating, pattern. First, the official ballot happens well in advance, but your chances are low. Next comes the Zweitmarkt, the club's official resale platform. This is where tickets start to appear, but often not until the final weeks or even the week of the match, which is too late for most travelers. All the while, verified resale markets have tickets available, but prices will fluctuate based on demand, the opponent, and how close it is to matchday.
This leaves you with a strategic choice based on your tolerance for risk. Buying a ticket from a verified reseller months in advance locks in your seat. You'll pay a premium, but you get the certainty needed to book flights and hotels without stress. The alternative is to wait. Watching the Zweitmarkt and resale sites in the final week can sometimes land you a cheaper ticket, but it’s a gamble. You risk prices going up or, worse, finding nothing at all and being stuck in Munich without a seat.
Fixtures released? Start your research immediately.
High-demand match? Assume the official ballot will fail and focus on your resale strategy.
Need certainty for travel? Buy from a verified reseller as soon as your flights are booked.
Have some flexibility? Monitor the official Zweitmarkt in the two weeks before the match.
Feeling lucky? Watch resale prices in the final 48 hours, but have a backup plan for what you'll do if you don't get one.
Never wait until you land in Munich to find a ticket. The days of finding spares outside the ground are long gone.
4. Where are the best seats at the Allianz Arena?
Once you made your decision to buy a ticket, the next question is where you'll actually be sitting. The Allianz Arena is a modern bowl, but different sections have completely different personalities. The heart of the atmosphere is behind one of the goals, the Südkurve, in the huge standing section. With around 9,300 fans packed in, this is where the noise comes from. It's an incredible experience, but it's intense and you'll be on your feet for the whole match. The seats along the long sidelines offer a more traditional, panoramic view of the action, better for watching the tactical side of the game unfold.
For visitors, the best spot depends entirely on what you're looking for. If you want raw, unfiltered atmosphere, aim for the lower tiers behind the goal. For a classic view of the whole pitch, we'd pick a seat somewhere near the halfway line, even if it's in an upper tier. These often represent the best value. Families should look for seats near the designated family entrance by the south Meeting Point, as the vibe there is much calmer. The one area to avoid at all costs is the away section. Every stadium has a dedicated block for the opposition's fans, and if you end up there by mistake in Bayern colours, you'll have a miserable time and will likely be removed by stewards.
For fans with accessibility needs, the club has dedicated seating and services. Because these arrangements need to be made in advance, we strongly recommend contacting the club's ticket office directly through their official website or telephone hotline well before your planned matchday to ensure they can accommodate you.
For pure atmosphere: Get as close to the standing section (Südkurve) behind the goal as you can.
For the best tactical view: Pick a seat along either of the long sidelines.
For the best value: Upper tier seats along the sideline offer a great panoramic view for a lower price.
For families: Look for tickets near the designated family entrance for a calmer experience.
Crucial check: Always double-check your ticket is not in the away section.
Accessibility: Contact the club directly and well in advance for any specific seating needs.
5. How to avoid Bayern Munich ticket scams
The desperation for Bayern tickets creates a perfect hunting ground for scammers. We've seen it all. The most common red flags are sellers on social media who DM you with a sob story, unofficial websites with no physical address, and anyone demanding payment via a direct bank transfer. Be especially wary of offers for paper tickets. Like most major clubs now, Bayern's ticketing is primarily digital, so a promise to mail you a physical ticket is almost certainly a scam.
Your best line of defense is how you pay. Never, ever use a payment method that you can't reverse. A scammer asking for a bank transfer, a wire, or payment through a cash app knows that once your money is gone, it's gone for good. Always insist on using a credit card or PayPal's 'Goods & Services' option. These methods have built-in fraud protection and give you a clear path to dispute the charge and get your money back if you receive a fake ticket or no ticket at all. If a seller refuses to use one of these, walk away. It's that simple.
Ultimately, the only way to be 100% sure you're getting a real ticket is to stick to the official channels we've already covered or use a resale marketplace that offers a buyer guarantee. Legitimate digital tickets are delivered securely through an official app or portal, not sent as a simple PDF attachment from a random email address. The peace of mind from knowing your ticket will actually scan at the gate is worth any premium you might pay over a shady deal from a stranger online.
Red Flag: Any seller messaging you directly on social media.
Red Flag: Websites with no physical address or verified reviews.
Red Flag: Pressure to pay immediately using a bank transfer or cash app.
Red Flag: Any offer of a paper ticket being mailed to you.
Red Flag: Prices that are significantly below the market rate for a sold-out match.
Red Flag: A seller's refusal to use PayPal Goods & Services or a credit card payment processor.
What We Cut: Hospitality Packages
We've deliberately left official hospitality packages off our main list. They are a guaranteed way to get a ticket, especially for overbooked matches, but they're not for everyone. Think of them as the VIP route: premium seats, food, drinks, and a much calmer atmosphere, often geared towards corporate events, business meetings, or major celebrations.
We cut them because they're a world away from the standard matchday experience. The cost is in another league entirely, and our goal is to help the average traveling fan get a regular seat in the stands. If you have a big budget and want to guarantee a ticket for a huge Champions League night, they're a legitimate option available through the club. But for the pure football trip, we think your money is better spent on the tickets we've already covered.
FAQ
Is it actually possible for a tourist to get Bayern tickets?
Yes, but it's very difficult through official channels. The club's ballot is almost always overbooked, making the most reliable route for a visitor using a verified resale marketplace to guarantee a seat before you book travel.
What's the difference between the 'ticket request' and the 'Zweitmarkt'?
The 'ticket request' is a lottery you enter for a chance to buy a ticket. The 'Zweitmarkt' is the club's official resale platform where fans sell tickets they can't use, but they appear sporadically and often too late for international planning.
Are Bayern Munich tickets digital or paper?
Bayern's ticketing is primarily digital, delivered through an official app or portal. We'd be very wary of anyone offering to mail you a physical paper ticket, as it's a common sign of a scam.