Liverpool: Liverpool Football Club Museum and Stadium Tour

REVIEW · LIVERPOOL

Liverpool: Liverpool Football Club Museum and Stadium Tour

  • 4.810,764 reviews
  • 1.5 hours
  • From $33
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Operated by Liverpool Football Club · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Anfield has a gravity all its own. This tour pairs the LFC Museum with a guided walk through stadium rooms, finishing at the famous player’s tunnel and This is Anfield sign. Two things I love are the way the museum uses interactive displays to explain the club’s story, and the chance to sit in the KOP for that proper Anfield angle. One consideration: you do not get access to the pitch, and dressing-room access can be limited the day before a home match.

It’s only about 1.5 hours, starting at Stadium Tours Reception in the Main Stand, so you can fit it into a half-day without wrecking your schedule. You’ll have live guides plus audio and a multimedia handset, which keeps the pace steady for kids and grown-ups. At around $33 per person, it feels like good value if you want more than just a quick stadium glance.

Key Things That Make This Tour Worth Your Time

Liverpool: Liverpool Football Club Museum and Stadium Tour - Key Things That Make This Tour Worth Your Time

  • Main Stand start for early skyline-and-pitch views before you go indoors
  • LFC Museum entry included, including the Champions exhibition with the Premier League trophy
  • Hands-on audio + multimedia handset to keep details clear as you move around
  • Big-match spaces like the press area, dugout, and managerial areas (no pitch access)
  • Player’s Tunnel photo moment including touch time at This is Anfield
  • Guides with personality and multiple languages supported through the audio system

Entering Anfield: Main Stand Views That Set the Mood Fast

Liverpool: Liverpool Football Club Museum and Stadium Tour - Entering Anfield: Main Stand Views That Set the Mood Fast
Your tour starts at Stadium Tours Reception at the Main Stand in Anfield. I like this approach because you’re not immediately trapped in a hallway listening to football facts. You begin with the kind of view that makes everything else land harder.

From there, you get that classic stadium feel: a clear sense of the pitch sightlines and how the stands wrap around the action. You also get a taste of Liverpool’s city skyline from the stadium—small detail, big payoff. It helps you understand why matchday at Anfield feels different even if you’re new to the club.

You’ll usually notice the flow right away: you move as a group, but you’re not herded like a cattle car. One of the best parts is the “don’t rush you” style. Several visitors praised the easy route and the fact they could keep moving at a comfortable pace, which matters if you’ve got kids or you just want time to look closely.

You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Liverpool

The LFC Museum: 135 Years Told Like You Can Actually Remember It

Liverpool: Liverpool Football Club Museum and Stadium Tour - The LFC Museum: 135 Years Told Like You Can Actually Remember It
The ticket includes entry to The LFC Museum, and that’s not just a bonus room. It’s a full story engine.

As you walk through the museum, you travel through time—starting with where it all began—and you build a timeline that sticks. You’re not just seeing photos. You’re working through interactive displays that explain eras, key moments, and the club’s evolution over more than 135 years.

Then there’s the silverware context. The museum highlights all six European trophies, which is the kind of detail that makes sense fast once you’re seeing it in a physical space. It’s also updated with recent storylines. The 2024/25 season experience includes a new exhibition called Champions, with interactive moments and the Premier League trophy on display. If you’re visiting around the season, this is the part that feels most current.

I also like the museum for non-fans. Even if you don’t follow Liverpool every week, it gives you enough context to understand why the stadium rooms matter later. Without that, a tunnel visit can feel like a themed photo stop. With it, you get the emotional reason behind it.

Guided Walkthrough Spaces: Press Areas, Dugout, and Matchday Energy

Liverpool: Liverpool Football Club Museum and Stadium Tour - Guided Walkthrough Spaces: Press Areas, Dugout, and Matchday Energy
After you’ve got the history in your head, the stadium tour brings you into the working parts of the matchday setup.

You’ll visit must-see spaces including the press conference room and areas tied to the match-day flow. You’ll also see the managerial dugout, which is a real eye-opener. It’s one thing to watch from a TV angle. It’s another to stand in the space where decisions happen and look out toward where the players move.

Your guide helps connect the dots. And if you like a bit of humor, you’re in luck—multiple guides are described as funny, engaging, and genuinely passionate about the club.

Specific guide names mentioned by visitors include Roger, Tony, Gordon, Ray, Gary, Liam, Joe, Brain, Dave, Alan, Charles, and Mario. I can’t guarantee who you’ll get on your date, but the pattern is clear: the human energy from the guides is a big reason people keep rating this tour so highly.

A practical note: the tour includes onsite tech support. The multimedia handset helps you follow along while the guide talks. On top of that, your audio guide is available in many languages, including Spanish, Thai, Chinese, English, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Arabic, Japanese, Norwegian, Dutch, and Portuguese. That’s useful if your group has mixed language comfort.

Dressing Rooms and the KOP Seat: Where the Game Feels Real

Liverpool: Liverpool Football Club Museum and Stadium Tour - Dressing Rooms and the KOP Seat: Where the Game Feels Real
The tour includes access to the home team dressing room and the lead-in spaces around it. This is one of those “I didn’t know I needed this” experiences. You get to see where your heroes prepare, which changes how you think about the match from the inside.

The important limitation is timing. Dressing rooms cannot be visited the day before a home match. So if you’re planning around a fixture, you’ll want to pick dates carefully. Also, the pitch itself is not included—so while dressing-room access is a major win, you won’t be stepping onto the playing surface.

One of the standout moments from visitors is sitting at the KOP. If you’ve ever watched the famous section from afar, being seated there gives you scale. It helps you understand crowd perspective and how sound and pressure must build during a match.

If you travel with kids, you’ll appreciate how the tour structure works. Reviews mention it being stroller-friendly, clean, organized, and offering activities for children. That combination matters, because a stadium tour can otherwise turn into a long hallway slog.

And if accessibility is on your checklist: the tour is wheelchair accessible, and visitors noted attentive help throughout. That kind of support can turn a “possible but stressful” outing into a straightforward one.

The Tunnel Walk and This Is Anfield Sign: The Photo Moment That Actually Means Something

The player’s tunnel is the emotional climax of the tour. You’ll get access to exclusive areas, then you’ll arrive at the This is Anfield sign. Touching it is part of the ritual, and it’s one of the easiest “everyone will want a photo here” spots.

The tunnel walk works because it’s placed late in your experience. You’ve already absorbed the club timeline in the museum, and you’ve already seen the matchday spaces. That makes the tunnel feel less like a theme park corridor and more like a step toward the pitch.

If you’re traveling for a celebration, this is also where small memories get made. One visitor mentioned a birthday moment where Roger captained them to lead the tour out the tunnel. It’s the kind of interaction that’s hard to plan for, but it shows the staff treat the experience like more than a transaction.

Just know what you’re not getting: there’s no pitch access. So expect the tunnel moment to be big, but keep your expectations aligned with the official tour boundaries.

Audio Guides and Multimedia Handsets: Good Tools for Groups

Liverpool: Liverpool Football Club Museum and Stadium Tour - Audio Guides and Multimedia Handsets: Good Tools for Groups
This tour is built for mixed groups. You can have people who want the story, people who want the photos, and people who want quick answers, and the setup helps.

You’ll have a live English tour guide, plus an audio guide offered in a long list of languages. Your audio includes a souvenir set of LFC earphones, and the system is designed to be easy to follow while you walk. Reviews mention the audio guide felt interactive and even included Bahasa Indonesia for some visitors, which helped make it feel special.

The multimedia handset adds another layer. It gives you prompts and video-style context so you’re not left guessing what you’re looking at inside each room.

For families, this matters. If kids get bored during long guided lectures, a device-based track can help keep attention. For adults, it prevents the tour from feeling like one big monologue.

Price and Value: Why About $33 Can Still Feel Like a Bargain

Liverpool: Liverpool Football Club Museum and Stadium Tour - Price and Value: Why About $33 Can Still Feel Like a Bargain
At around $33 per person for a 1.5-hour experience, the value depends on what you want.

If you only wanted a quick stadium look, this could feel like too much. But you don’t just get a stadium lap. You get museum entry, multi-language audio, and access to rooms like dressing areas, press-related spaces, dugouts, and the tunnel setup. Plus, you get a guided route that helps you avoid wandering and missing the big moments.

The museum is the cost-justification engine. Stadium tours without the museum are fine, but the LFC Museum ties everything together—history, trophies, and recent seasons—so the stadium stops make emotional sense.

Also, the staff attention comes through in reviews. People highlight friendly help, smooth organization, and guide personality. When a tour runs well, your time feels respected, and that’s part of value too.

Practical Tips So You Get the Best Version of the Tour

Liverpool: Liverpool Football Club Museum and Stadium Tour - Practical Tips So You Get the Best Version of the Tour
Here’s how I’d set yourself up for a smooth visit:

  • Arrive a little early so you’re not stressed at check-in. Bag security checks can take a moment.
  • Wear shoes you can stand in. This is lots of walking through stadium corridors and rooms.
  • Keep expectations on the pitch in check. It’s not part of this tour, even though you’ll get fantastic stadium views.
  • If you’re visiting around a matchday, remember dressing-room access can be limited the day before a home match.
  • Use the audio when you want detail. If you’re the type who likes facts, the handset and audio keep things clear without stopping the flow.
  • For photos, the tunnel and sign are your must-stop points. Plan your shots there, not at the very start when you’re still orienting yourself.

One more detail that can help: you’re allowed assistance dogs, but pets aren’t allowed. Smoking is also not permitted. And food and drinks aren’t allowed in the tour area.

Should You Book This Liverpool FC Museum and Stadium Tour?

Liverpool: Liverpool Football Club Museum and Stadium Tour - Should You Book This Liverpool FC Museum and Stadium Tour?
Yes, I’d book it if you want the best of Anfield without needing a match ticket. It’s especially worth it when you care about the club’s story and want to step into spaces that most visitors can only see on game day TV.

It’s also a strong pick for families. The route is organized, there’s real thought put into the experience for kids, and visitors have described it as comfortable and not overcrowded. If you’re celebrating a birthday or a special event, the staff interaction can add that extra sparkle.

The main reason to hesitate is simple: you won’t access the pitch, and dressing rooms can be limited depending on match-day timing. If your dream is stepping onto the playing surface, look for a different stadium option.

FAQ

How long is the Liverpool FC Museum and Stadium Tour?

The tour lasts 1.5 hours.

Where do I meet for the tour?

You start at Stadium Tours Reception at the Main Stand in Anfield Stadium.

What is included in the ticket?

Your ticket includes entry to The LFC Museum, the stadium tour, an audio guide, souvenir LFC earphones, and a live tour guide.

Do you get access to the pitch?

No, there is no access to the pitch.

Is the tour wheelchair accessible?

Yes, the tour is wheelchair accessible.

What languages are available for the audio guide?

The audio guide is available in Spanish, Thai, Chinese, English, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Arabic, Japanese, Norwegian, Dutch, and Portuguese.

Are food and drinks allowed during the tour?

No. Food and drinks are not allowed.

Are large bags or luggage allowed?

Luggage or large bags are not allowed, and all bags are subject to security checks.

Can you always access the dressing rooms?

Dressing rooms cannot be visited the day before a home match.

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