Mase wrote:Hscotty0 wrote:that stadium rocking like that was something else. crazy it is like that every weekend in the bundesliga and the have a hell of a record there. do the have the record for most consecutive sell out or something. i think only bayern have a longer home record of wins than dortmund.
Tickets are about 20p for Bundesliga matches I think. I’m sure they have a cap on ticket prices over there
The Yellow Wall
Germany's most famous standing terrace is the Südtribüne at Borussia Dortmund's Westfalenstadion, which can house over 24,000 standing fans. However, while famed for its atmosphere, tickets on the "Yellow Wall" are also the most expensive standing season tickets in the league at €240, or €14.11 per game.
Most of the spots on the Südtribüne belong to long-term season ticket holders, but a limited number of individual match tickets (Tageskarten) do go on sale for each home game. Demand is high but if you do manage to get one, they cost more and again are the most expensive in the league at €18.50. A 20% surcharge applies for the biggest two home games of the season: the Revierderby against Schalke and the so-called Klassiker against Bayern Munich.
As for Bayern, yes, you literally can watch the perennial German champions for €10. Less, in fact, with a standing season ticket on the Südkurve terrace costing just €160, or €9.40 per game – the third cheapest in the league. Individual standing tickets, if you can get one, cost €15, plus a €1 processing fee.
Before the pandemic, Bayern actually offered the joint-cheapest season tickets in the Bundesliga but, having increased their prices, that crown now belongs solely to Wolfsburg, who remain very much the people's choice at €145. That's just €8.50 per game.
Admittedly, you have to watch Wolfsburg but, like we said, DW is considering getting one, so you can stand and suffer with us.