Bilbao cityscape with San Mames Stadium and Iberdrola Tower

How to Get San Mames Stadium Tickets in Bilbao

Athletic Bilbao have never been relegated from La Liga. Not once, not ever, across more than a century of Spanish football. Only two other clubs can say that — Real Madrid and Barcelona. The difference? Athletic only sign players who are Basque or were trained in the Basque Country. It is the most extreme squad policy in professional football, and the stadium where they play — San Mames — carries the full weight of that identity.

Bilbao cityscape with San Mames Stadium and Iberdrola Tower
San Mames sits in the Deusto district, just across the river from the old town. The Iberdrola Tower next to it has become Bilbao’s most recognizable skyline marker alongside the Guggenheim.
Crowded football stadium packed with fans during a match
Match day at a packed stadium. Athletic’s home fans are notoriously loud. Opposing teams regularly name San Mames as one of the hardest grounds to play at in Spain.

The current San Mames opened in 2013, replacing the original 1913 stadium that stood on the same spot for exactly a hundred years. The old ground earned the nickname “The Cathedral” because Athletic’s home record there was so imposing that visiting it felt like entering a place of worship. The new stadium kept the name and, somehow, the atmosphere.

Football fans cheering and celebrating in a packed stadium
The atmosphere at San Mames on match day is something else entirely. Basque football culture runs deep, and the songs and chants have been passed down through generations.

How the Stadium Tour Works

The San Mames Museum and Stadium Tour is a self-guided experience, which I actually prefer for sports venues. You get an audio guide and wander at your own pace through the museum section first, then onto the stadium itself. The museum covers over a century of Athletic Bilbao history — shirts, trophies, match footage, interactive displays where you can test your knowledge of the club. The stadium section takes you through the tunnel, onto the pitch side (not the actual pitch on non-match days, but close enough), into the press room, and up to the VIP boxes.

Empty stadium rows of seats in a football ground
Walking through empty stands that hold 53,000 people on match day hits differently. The scale only sinks in when you are standing in the middle of it with no one else around.

The whole thing takes roughly an hour if you read everything, less if you’re just there for the photos. At $19, it is one of the cheapest stadium tours in Europe — Camp Nou charges nearly three times that, and the Bernabeu is even more. For football fans, it is a no-brainer. For non-fans, the Basque culture angle and the architecture of the building itself make it more interesting than a typical stadium tour.

Football stadium seats and pitch viewed from upper tier
Stadium tours let you see perspectives the cameras never show. The view from the top tier down to the pitch gives you a real sense of how steeply the stands are raked.

One thing the audio guide could do better: it assumes you already know Spanish football. If you don’t follow La Liga, some of the historical references go over your head. But the interactive exhibits fill in enough context that you won’t feel completely lost.

The Best San Mames Tours to Book

1. San Mames Museum and Stadium Tour — $19

San Mames Museum and Stadium Tour in Bilbao
The museum section is surprisingly well put together. You walk through Athletic’s history chronologically, and the interactive screens let you dig into specific matches and players.

This is the standard tour and the one most visitors should book. Self-guided with an audio guide, covering both the museum and the stadium areas. You’ll walk through the tunnel, visit the dressing rooms, see the press conference area, and get pitch-side access. At this price point, it is easily the best value stadium tour in Spain. Our full review covers all the practical details including exactly what you see at each stop.

Football on a green pitch with stadium seating in background
San Mames’ pitch is immaculate. The groundskeeping team is locally famous, and the grass is a point of pride. Even the museum has a section dedicated to pitch maintenance.

2. All Iron Tour: Guggenheim and San Mames with Lunch — $301

Bilbao All Iron Tour combining Guggenheim and San Mames
The All Iron Tour is named after Athletic Bilbao’s nickname. It combines two of Bilbao’s defining landmarks into a single guided day with lunch included.

This is the premium option for visitors who want everything in one day. A local guide takes you through the Guggenheim Museum (with deeper context than the audio guide provides), then on to San Mames for the stadium tour, with a traditional Basque lunch in between. The price is steep — this is not a budget option — but it covers two of Bilbao’s top attractions plus a proper meal. Check our full review for a breakdown of exactly what the five hours include. Only makes sense if you were going to visit both the Guggenheim and San Mames anyway.

Match Day Tickets vs Museum Tour: Which Should You Book?

If your dates are flexible, try to attend an actual match. The stadium tour is interesting, but it cannot replicate the atmosphere of 53,000 Basque fans singing in unison. Athletic’s home schedule is on the La Liga website, and tickets for most matches (not derbies or Champions League) are surprisingly available, typically between 30 and 80 euros depending on the seat.

Football stadium illuminated at night during a live match
Night matches at San Mames are special. The white exterior of the stadium glows under floodlights, and the atmosphere inside is louder than any recording can capture.

But here is the realistic situation for most travelers: you’re in Bilbao for 2-3 days, your dates are fixed, and there may not be a match during your visit. The museum tour is the reliable option. It is available most days (closed on match days and some public holidays), doesn’t need flexible scheduling, and gives you a thorough understanding of what makes this club different.

Night football match at a packed stadium with floodlights
Even if you’re not a die-hard football fan, the energy of a live match is hard to explain until you’ve been in the stands. It is worth rearranging your schedule for.

How to buy match tickets. Go through the official Athletic Bilbao website (athletic-club.eus). Third-party resellers charge significant markups. Tickets go on sale about 2-3 weeks before each match. For the big fixtures — Real Sociedad, Barcelona, Real Madrid — they sell out quickly and often go to socios (members) first. Mid-table opponents are usually available up to match day.

Getting to San Mames

The stadium is in the San Mames district, about a 15-minute walk from the old town (Casco Viejo). The metro is the easiest option — San Mames station is on Line 1 and Line 2, and the exit literally puts you at the stadium’s doorstep. If you’re walking from the Guggenheim, it is about 20 minutes along the Nervion river. Pleasant walk. No need for a taxi.

Bilbao river with city buildings and green trees on a sunny day
The walk along the Nervion from the old town to San Mames passes through the modern side of Bilbao. On a clear day, it is one of the most pleasant urban walks in northern Spain.
Autumn view of a river in Bilbao with orange foliage and modern skyline
Bilbao in autumn is underrated. The foliage along the river turns copper and gold, and the city feels calmer without the summer travelers.

On match days, the area around the stadium fills up hours before kick-off. The bars along Sabino Arana Kalea serve pintxos and local beer, and the pre-match atmosphere is part of the experience. Get there early — finding a spot at the bar within an hour of kick-off is a challenge.

Why Athletic Bilbao’s Policy Matters

I want to explain the Basque-only policy because it changes how you experience the stadium. Athletic only signs players who were born in the Basque Country or who were trained in a Basque youth academy. No exceptions. They have maintained this since the club’s founding in 1898. Think about what that means: while Barcelona spends hundreds of millions on global superstars, Athletic builds its entire squad from a region of about 3 million people.

Football fans with flags cheering in a stadium during daytime
Basque identity is inseparable from Athletic Bilbao. The red and white colours, the Basque flag flying in the stands, the songs in Euskara — this is more than a football club.

The result? A connection between club and community that doesn’t exist anywhere else in football at this level. Every player in the squad grew up within a short drive of San Mames. The fans didn’t just watch these players develop — they might have gone to school with them or their families. When you walk through the museum, this context transforms what could be a generic stadium tour into something with genuine emotional weight.

Panoramic view of an empty football stadium and pitch
Modern stadiums can feel sterile when empty. San Mames somehow retains its character. The way the stands curve over the pitch creates an intimacy you don’t get at bigger grounds.

And the fact that they’ve never been relegated, despite this self-imposed limitation, is arguably the most impressive achievement in European football. The museum does a good job of putting this into context — you see the moments where the club nearly went down and how the Basque policy shaped their identity through both glory and near-disaster.

The History of San Mames

The original San Mames opened on August 21, 1913. It was named after the nearby church of San Mames — St. Mammes, a Christian martyr — not after any football connection. The local press called it “The Cathedral” because the church was next door, but the name stuck because Athletic’s home record was so dominant that the stadium itself became a kind of sacred ground.

Guggenheim Museum Bilbao alongside the Nervion river and city skyline
Bilbao’s transformation from industrial port city to architectural destination started with the Guggenheim in 1997. The new San Mames, built in 2013, continued that reinvention.

For a hundred years, the old ground hosted La Liga matches, Copa del Rey finals, and Spanish national team games. By the early 2000s, it was showing its age. The club debated renovating versus rebuilding, and eventually chose to tear down and build new — a decision that split opinion in Bilbao. The new stadium, designed by ACXT Architects, opened in 2013 with 53,289 seats and a distinctive white exterior membrane that glows at night. It hosted matches during the 2014 FIBA Basketball World Cup and several Euro 2020 group stage games.

Guggenheim Museum Bilbao reflecting in the Nervion River at dusk
Bilbao at dusk, with the Guggenheim reflecting on the Nervion. If you’re visiting San Mames, the Guggenheim is less than 20 minutes away on foot. Do both.

What Else to Do in Bilbao

Bilbao is a compact city and easy to explore on foot. After the stadium tour, you’re well-positioned to hit the other major sights without needing transport.

Illuminated Zubizuri Bridge in Bilbao reflecting in the river at night
The Zubizuri Bridge at night. Calatrava designed it and locals either love it or hate it. The glass floor is slippery when wet, which is most of the time in Bilbao.
Guggenheim Museum Bilbao at night with river reflections
The Guggenheim is even more dramatic after dark. The titanium panels catch every light source and the spider sculpture out front looks genuinely otherworldly.

The Casco Viejo (old town) is the best area for pintxos — the Basque version of tapas. Plaza Nueva has the highest concentration of good bars, but the side streets off Calle de la Tenderia are where locals actually drink. Order a txakoli (the local slightly sparkling white wine) and a gilda (anchovy, olive, and pepper on a stick). That is the Bilbao starter kit.

Aerial view of Bilbao showing Guggenheim Museum and surrounding urban landscape
Bilbao from above. The city wraps around the Nervion river in a tight valley. You can walk from one end of the centre to the other in about 40 minutes.

More Bilbao and Spain Guides

If the San Mames visit has you hooked on Bilbao, there’s plenty more to explore in the Basque Country and beyond. A boat tour along the Nervion river shows you the city from the water and covers the industrial harbour district that most walking travelers miss. The day trip to Gaztelugatxe — that dramatic island hermitage made famous by Game of Thrones — is about an hour’s drive from the city and worth every minute. If you’re heading to Barcelona next, the Camp Nou stadium tour makes for an interesting comparison with San Mames, though the experience is very different (and significantly pricier). And for something lighter, Barcelona’s walking tours are an excellent way to get oriented in a new city.

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