REVIEW · GLASGOW
Glasgow: Ibrox Stadium Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by RANGERS FOOTBALL CLUB · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Ibrox shows its secrets in 90 minutes. This guided stadium tour takes you through the home of Rangers Football Club, with all-access stops like dressing rooms, the Trophy Room, and time in the tunnel and dugout. The marble staircase inside the Archibald Leitch Main Stand is my favorite visual moment.
What I like most is the way you get beyond the seats and into matchday spaces. You’ll see the dressing rooms, listen to stories, and then literally run down the tunnel before taking your seat in the dugout. One consideration: the tour involves walking and stairs, so if mobility is limited, plan carefully and bring help if you need it.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You Should Expect
- Edmiston House Start: Check-In Near the Rangers Museum
- Inside the Archibald Leitch Main Stand: Marble Staircase Photos That Feel Like a Movie
- Dressing Rooms and the Stadium’s Hidden Corridors
- Trophy Room, Blue Room, and the Managers’ Spaces
- Running the Tunnel and Sitting in the Dugout
- Timing, Pace, and What 1.5 Hours Feels Like
- Who This Tour Is For (And Who Might Reconsider)
- Price and Value: Is $36 Worth It?
- Practical Tips Before You Go
- Should You Book the Ibrox Stadium Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Ibrox Stadium tour?
- Where do I meet the tour guide?
- What’s included in the price?
- Is the Rangers Museum ticket included?
- Is the tour in English?
- Is there anything I need to reserve in advance?
Key Highlights You Should Expect

- Marble staircase in the Archibald Leitch Main Stand: classic Ibrox design you can actually stand on and photograph.
- Home and away dressing rooms: real matchday rooms, not just viewing from the stands.
- Trophy Room and staff spaces: including the Trophy Room plus areas like the Blue Room and old Managers Room.
- Tunnel access and dugout seating: the best photo moment plus a real sense of the sideline perspective.
- Guides who bring the club to life: tours are led in English, and many guides add personal Rangers stories (I’ve seen examples like Lawrence, John, Billy, Karen, Christine, and William).
- Photo stop with the stadium backdrop: a built-in moment for your group selfie.
Edmiston House Start: Check-In Near the Rangers Museum

Your tour begins at Edmiston House, with check-in at the main entrance before you’re guided over to the Ibrox Main Stand entrance. It’s a straightforward handoff: you’ll meet the guide, then walk to the stadium as part of the experience, rather than figuring everything out yourself.
One practical note up front: the Rangers Museum entry ticket is not included in the tour price. If you want to add museum time, you can buy the ticket separately ahead of time or at the door, but the stadium tour itself doesn’t depend on it.
If you’re visiting on a day when Rangers are playing nearby, I like arriving with your shoes on and your camera ready. The start is easy, but once you’re inside the stadium, you’ll want to move quickly through photos and viewpoints without rushing.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Glasgow.
Inside the Archibald Leitch Main Stand: Marble Staircase Photos That Feel Like a Movie

Ibrox is old-school football architecture, and the big standout moment is the marble staircase in the Archibald Leitch Main Stand. This is the place where the stadium stops being a building and becomes a landmark you can feel.
The tour gives you time to take in the details rather than treating this like a quick stop. You’re not just looking up at the staircase; you’re close enough to notice the finishing and the scale, which makes the photos come out better and honestly feels more special than standing behind a barrier.
Even if you’re not a lifelong Rangers fan, this part works. It’s one thing to hear about historic stadiums. It’s another to stand in a space that was designed to impress, matchday after matchday.
Dressing Rooms and the Stadium’s Hidden Corridors

The core reason to book a stadium tour is access, and this one leans hard into it. You’ll explore the home dressing room and away dressing room, getting the kind of inside look that you can’t get on a normal matchday.
Walking through these spaces changes how you picture the match. Instead of only thinking about the 90 minutes on the pitch, you start thinking about what happens before the teams come out: the nerves, the rituals, the prep.
You’ll also move through key stadium corridors on the way to the more famous stops. That flow matters. It keeps the tour from feeling like a checklist and turns it into a matchday storyline you can follow step by step.
Trophy Room, Blue Room, and the Managers’ Spaces

The Trophy Room is a major highlight because it’s where the club’s achievements become visible, not abstract. You’ll spend time in this area as part of the guided walk, and it tends to be one of the best places for lingering.
The tour doesn’t stop at trophies, though. You’ll also get to experience the atmosphere in the Blue Room and the old Managers Room. These spaces help you understand how the stadium has functioned over generations: a place for teams, staff, and leadership, not just crowds.
Some tours may also include stops like the Waddell Members Lounge and the charity room, depending on the day’s route. If those areas are included for your group, it’s a great bonus because you’ll see more of the stadium’s social and administrative side, not just the football face.
Running the Tunnel and Sitting in the Dugout

If there’s one part of the tour that makes people grin, it’s the tunnel moment. You get the unique opportunity to run down the tunnel before heading out for the dugout experience.
This is where I’d tell you to slow down and take in what the stadium looks like from that path. You’re moving from the protected, behind-the-scenes world into the exact direction the teams face, and it hits different than seeing the pitch from the stands.
Then comes the dugout seating. Sitting where legendary players and managers have sat is the kind of statement that could sound cheesy on paper, but in person it’s grounding. You’re not just taking a seat—you’re placing yourself at the edge of the action, with a clear line of sight to the field.
The tour also builds in a photo moment with the stadium as your backdrop, so you can capture the memory right after the tunnel/dugout adrenaline.
Timing, Pace, and What 1.5 Hours Feels Like

The tour runs about 1.5 hours, and the timing works well for most people. It’s long enough to cover the main inside spaces, but short enough that you’re not exhausted by mid-tour.
Pace shows up in the reviews as well: people appreciate not being rushed and getting time for photos. If you like a tour where the guide explains as you walk, this length usually feels comfortable. If you’re traveling with kids, it’s also a practical slot because it’s not a whole afternoon commitment.
Still, remember: it is a stadium tour inside a working venue. That means stairs, walking between sections, and some surfaces that aren’t made for strolling slowly in sneakers only. Comfortable shoes are a must.
Also worth noting: the tour is in English and led by a live guide, which matters if you want questions answered as you go.
Who This Tour Is For (And Who Might Reconsider)

This is a great fit if you’re looking for an authentic Rangers experience, not a generic stadium photo-op. It’s also a strong choice for families, including younger kids, because many guides keep things upbeat and interactive.
Older Rangers fans often love it too, since the stops feel tied to the club’s identity: the Trophy Room, managers’ areas, the dugout, and the story of Ibrox itself. Even if you aren’t deep into the sport, the architecture and access make it interesting.
The one group I’d flag is anyone with mobility concerns. The tour is wheelchair accessible in general, but it still involves walking and stairs, including dramatic stair areas. If that’s you, you’ll want to think ahead: ask what routes are used on the day and plan for extra effort in the most stair-heavy segments.
Price and Value: Is $36 Worth It?

At around $36 per person for a 1.5-hour guided tour, the value comes from access, not souvenirs. You’re paying for inside entry to spaces that are normally off-limits: dressing rooms, the tunnel, the dugout, and the Trophy Room, plus multiple photo-friendly viewpoints.
If you only came to see the pitch from outside, you’d miss the point of this tour. But if you want the full matchday feel—through the spaces players use before kickoff—this is the kind of price that starts to look reasonable fast.
It also helps that the experience includes a guide. That’s not just narration; it’s the thread that connects the spaces: why each room matters, what’s been done there, and how the stadium’s design supports the club’s culture.
Just keep in mind the Rangers Museum entry is separate if you want it. If you’re choosing between museum time and stadium time, prioritize what you want most: the matchday inside access is the centerpiece here.
Practical Tips Before You Go

Bring comfortable shoes. This tour moves you through multiple areas and includes steps. If weather is ugly, dress for it, since you’ll still be walking between the meeting point and stadium entry.
If you’re booking and you care about a specific lounge experience, there’s one extra detail: reservations are required to visit the Blue Sky Lounge. Your tour still includes major inside spaces, but if that lounge is on your must-see list, plan accordingly.
For photo lovers, I’d treat the tunnel and dugout parts as your prime moments. The selfie backdrop comes after, so you’ll get both the dramatic stadium-angle shots and a clear group photo to take home.
And if you’re a fan who likes hearing stories tied to real people and moments, this tour is set up for that style of telling. Guides often bring club pride and humor into the walk, and you’ll feel it in how they connect each stop back to Rangers.
Should You Book the Ibrox Stadium Tour?
Yes, you should book this tour if you want an inside look at Rangers FC in a historic stadium, with access to the dressing rooms, Trophy Room, tunnel, and dugout. It’s also a solid choice for families and for fans who want the club story without a rushed, sprint-through format.
Hold off or plan extra if mobility is a challenge, because walking and stairs are part of the experience. If you can handle that with the right preparation, you’ll likely come away feeling you saw the stadium the way matchday participants would recognize it.
FAQ
How long is the Ibrox Stadium tour?
The tour lasts about 1.5 hours.
Where do I meet the tour guide?
Meet the tour guide at the main entrance of Edmiston House, and then you’ll be led to the Ibrox Main Stand entrance to start.
What’s included in the price?
The price includes the Ibrox Stadium tour and a live guide.
Is the Rangers Museum ticket included?
No. You need a separate ticket to visit the Rangers Museum.
Is the tour in English?
Yes, the tour guide provides the tour in English.
Is there anything I need to reserve in advance?
If you want to visit the Blue Sky Lounge, reservations are required.

























