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Camp Nou, Spain
Camp Nou

Catalonia

Camp Nou

How to visit FC Barcelona's Spotify Camp Nou in 2026: which tour gets you onto the pitch, what the Espai Barça rebuild still keeps shut, and whether it's worth it right now.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Where

Barcelona, Spain

Opening hours

Late March to mid-October: daily, roughly 09:30–19:00. Mid-October to late March: Monday–Saturday about 10:00–18:00, Sundays 10:00–15:00. Last entry is 45 minutes before closing. Closed 25 December and 1 January, and hours flex on match days — confirm on fcbarcelona.com.

Tickets

Barça Immersive Tour (museum + immersive room + audio guide) from about €28 (~£24) adults, ~€21 (~£18) children 6–13 and over-65s, ~€20 (~£17) students. Guided 90-minute tour from about €64 (~£55). The premium Barça Sky Tour from €199 (~£170). Under-6s free. A separate Match Day Tour (game days only, includes a walk onto the pitch and VIP areas) is booked separately.

Time needed

About 1 hour for the self-guided Immersive Tour; roughly 90 minutes for the guided version. Add 15–20 minutes for entry and the walk from the metro.

In short

Visiting Camp Nou

The day-to-day self-guided visit is the Barça Immersive Tour: the FC Barcelona museum, a 360° immersive room and a panoramic viewpoint that — since the stadium reopened for matches in November 2025 — now looks over the real 62,652-seat bowl, not just the building site. The full pitchside experience (tunnel, dressing rooms) is still closed by the Espai Barça rebuild, but a match-day pitch walk has returned on game days only. Book online, allow about an hour, and go in knowing what's open the day you visit. Barça fans will get plenty from the museum and trophies; casual visitors should weigh it against the rest of Barcelona.

How to visit during the rebuild

Set your expectations before you book. The classic Camp Nou tour you’ve seen in old photos — out of the players’ tunnel, pitchside, into the dressing rooms — is still shut on standard tickets while the €1.5bn Espai Barça rebuild finishes. But the picture has moved on: Barcelona returned to play competitive matches here in November 2025, so the everyday visit, the Barça Immersive Tour, now ends at a panoramic viewpoint over the real 62,652-seat bowl rather than a building site. The rest of it is the FC Barcelona museum with its trophy cabinet and Messi-and-Cruyff history, plus a 360° immersive room.

Book online before you go. The standard Immersive Tour runs from about €28 (£24) for adults, around €21 (£18) for children 6–13 and over-65s, and €20 (£17) for students; under-6s are free, and the audio guide is included. Pay up for the guided 90-minute tour (from roughly €64 / £55) only if you want a live guide. The one way to actually walk the pitch right now is the separate Match Day Tour, which runs on game days only and adds the pitch, the VIP areas, the press room and the presidential box — book it well ahead if your trip lands on a fixture. Getting there is easy: Palau Reial or Les Corts on metro L3 (green), or Collblanc on L5 (blue), each a 5–10 minute walk. The stadium car park is gone for the duration, so don’t drive.

Is the Camp Nou tour worth it right now?

Opening hours track the season — roughly 09:30–19:00 daily from late March to mid-October, and about 10:00–18:00 Monday to Saturday in winter (Sundays close at 15:00). A weekday morning at opening is much quieter than the lunchtime crush, and the self-guided visit takes about an hour, so it slots into a half-day. Avoid match days for the standard tour, when hours shift and the area is heaving — unless you’ve booked the Match Day Tour specifically.

This is a fan’s visit, and a better one than it was a year ago now that the viewpoint looks over the working stadium instead of scaffolding. If you genuinely follow Barça, the trophies, the shirts and the immersive room are worth the £24 and the metro ride out to Les Corts. If you specifically want the tunnel-and-pitch experience, your only route is a Match Day Tour — otherwise wait for the full rebuild, expected late 2026 into 2027. Casual visitors with one trip to Barcelona should still put the Sagrada Família or Park Güell ahead of it.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Barcelona city guide.

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Camp Nou FAQs

Can you walk onto the pitch at Camp Nou during the renovation?
Only on the Match Day Tour, which runs on game days and includes a guided walk onto the pitch plus VIP areas, the press room and the presidential box. The everyday self-guided Barça Immersive Tour does not put you pitchside — the players' tunnel and dressing rooms stay shut while the Espai Barça rebuild finishes, expected late 2026 into 2027.
Which Camp Nou ticket should you book?
For most people the standard Barça Immersive Tour (from about €28 / £24) is enough — it covers the museum, the 360° immersive room and the audio guide, and the viewpoint now overlooks the working stadium rather than just scaffolding. Pay up for the guided 90-minute tour (from about €64 / £55) only if you want a live guide, or book the separate Match Day Tour if you're visiting on a game day and want the pitch walk. Book online before you go; midweek mornings at opening are quietest.
Is Camp Nou worth visiting right now?
If you're a committed Barça fan, yes — the trophy cabinet, the Messi and Cruyff history and the immersive room still land, and the panoramic view of the reopened 62,652-seat bowl is far better than the building-site outlook of a year ago. If your heart was set on the classic tunnel-and-dressing-room walkthrough, it isn't running on standard tickets yet, so time it for a Match Day Tour or wait for the full rebuild. Casual visitors with one trip are better off putting Gaudí's sights or the Gothic Quarter first.

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