REVIEW · BERLIN
Berlin: Olympia Stadium Entrance Ticket
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Olympiastadion Berlin · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Germany’s biggest bowl is surprisingly walkable. With a simple entrance ticket, I like the freedom to wander and the chance to learn from on-site boards and displays around Olympiastadion Berlin. One catch: this is mostly a self-guided stadium ground visit, so plan around that if you were hoping for an in-depth, inside-only tour.
This is a Category 4 UEFA venue and a very photogenic place to see the scale of the stadium up close. If you want the most access possible, just be ready to look for add-ons, since not every visit includes a full guided program in the areas you might expect.
In This Review
- Key highlights at a glance
- Olympiastadion Berlin: Why this entrance ticket is worth your time
- Price and value: $12 for stadium access, not a full museum day
- What this ticket includes (and what you should expect instead)
- Included
- Not included
- Where you’ll likely spend your time
- Getting there: U-Bahn or S-Bahn makes this easy
- Meeting point: Go to the visitor centre first
- Walking the stadium grounds: the experience is about views and scale
- Start with the big-picture view
- Use the seats like a tool, not a break
- Aim for the pitch-side perspective when available
- Watch your route if there’s construction nearby
- The stadium story: boards and displays do the heavy lifting
- Getting the most out of optional guided access (including English)
- Language can matter more than you expect
- If you want dressing-room access, plan for upgrades
- How long to plan: a 1-day ticket that can still feel like a mini trip
- Practical tips: shoes, weather, and what to do if signage feels unclear
- Who should book this Olympiastadion entrance ticket?
- Should you book? My honest take
- FAQ
- How long is the Olympia Stadium entrance ticket valid?
- Where do I go when I arrive?
- Is a guided tour included with the ticket?
- What should I bring for the visit?
- How do I get to the stadium?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
- Are English guided tours available?
Key highlights at a glance

- Germany’s largest stadium: capacity is listed as 74,475 seats, so the views feel big right away.
- Category four UEFA stadium: useful context if you care about football-grade venues.
- You can roam at your own pace: move around the stadium area without being locked into a group route.
- History you can read on-site: boards and displays give the context as you walk.
- Easy public transport access: the location is set up for arrival by U-Bahn or S-Bahn.
- Plans can vary by language and guide type: some sessions are more guided than others, so choose based on what you want to see.
Olympiastadion Berlin: Why this entrance ticket is worth your time

Olympiastadion Berlin is one of those stadiums that doesn’t feel like just a place for a match. It’s built like a landmark. Even when there’s no game happening, you can feel the scale: the stadium’s listed seating capacity is 74,475, and that number matters because it changes how you experience the space.
With this ticket, I like that the focus is on letting you see the venue from multiple angles. You’re not stuck staring at one view. You can move around the stadium area freely, sit down in seats, and take photos from different blocks to understand the overall shape of the bowl. That sounds simple, but in practice it’s the difference between a quick stop and a satisfying couple of hours.
The second thing I value is the on-site interpretation. There are boards and displays around the grounds that explain what you’re looking at and why it matters. You don’t need a guide to get the basics, and if you do want more context, the site gives you material to connect the dots.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Berlin
Price and value: $12 for stadium access, not a full museum day

The headline price is $12 per person, and the value comes from what you actually get: entry to the stadium grounds for a day. Since you can move around at your own pace, you’re paying for access to the venue experience, not for a scripted itinerary.
It also helps that you’re getting a major, internationally recognizable stadium setting. This isn’t some small local ground. It’s a UEFA Category 4 stadium, and it’s also described as the largest stadium in Germany for international football matches. When a ticket like this works, it’s because you get to translate those labels into real scale: lines of sight, seating tiers, and that sense of being inside something built for big crowds.
Where value can slip is when you realize this is not automatically a full guided-tour package. The activity information says a guided tour isn’t included. Some visits do include guided elements, but the level of guidance can vary, and at least one booking experience notes the ticket felt like entrance only. If you’re the type who wants dressing rooms, staff areas, or a deeper walk-through, you’ll want to plan for an optional guided upgrade.
What this ticket includes (and what you should expect instead)

Let’s keep expectations clean.
Included
- Entry ticket to the stadium
That’s it. The practical meaning: you’re buying access to the venue grounds and self-exploration.
Not included
- Guided tour
In plain terms, you should come ready to explore on your own unless you’ve arranged a guided option separately. Some people describe a guided component as part of their experience, while others explicitly say it did not feel like a tour. That mixed feedback tells me the safest approach is to assume you’re getting an entrance ticket plus opportunities to learn via on-site signage, with guidance potentially available depending on your language and the session.
Where you’ll likely spend your time
Based on how access works here, you can expect to:
- Find good photo angles around the stadium perimeter and bowls
- Sit in seats and look across tiers
- Get views that let you see the stadium’s full capacity layout from different blocks
- Learn through boards and displays rather than a guide narrating every step
If you’re hoping for an experience that includes back-of-house spaces, there’s a strong hint in the info from booking commentary that you might need to pay extra. One comment even suggests spending more if you want to see inside dressing-room areas.
Getting there: U-Bahn or S-Bahn makes this easy
This stadium’s location is described as accessible thanks to nearby U-Bahn or S-Bahn connections. That matters because it means you can avoid long taxi rides and reduce the time you spend figuring out last-mile routes.
Practical tip: I’d plan your arrival so you can still have time to orient yourself. One of the small frustrations mentioned is that construction/building works around the stadium can make allowable areas feel like they need clearer marking. Give yourself a little buffer so the entrance and walkway layout doesn’t steal time from your visit.
Meeting point: Go to the visitor centre first

Your meeting point is the visitor centre. Even if you’re not taking a guided tour, going there first is the fastest way to:
- Get your bearings
- Understand the basic visitor flow
- Confirm what parts of the stadium are open for the time you’re visiting
If you’re the type who likes to build a game plan, treat the visitor centre like your pre-game. You can then walk out with fewer questions.
Walking the stadium grounds: the experience is about views and scale
This ticket gives you room to move. You’re not trapped in a single line. The best part is that the stadium lets you experience its scale from multiple positions.
Here’s how I’d approach it once you’re inside:
Start with the big-picture view
Before you chase photos, take a moment to understand the bowl. The capacity figure (74,475) can sound abstract until you see how the seating tiers wrap around the field. Looking from different blocks helps you understand how the stadium holds space, not just what one angle looks like.
Use the seats like a tool, not a break
Since you can sit in seats, try sitting at least once during your visit. It changes how you judge distance and sight lines. You’ll also notice which viewing angles feel best for both photos and simple people-watching.
Aim for the pitch-side perspective when available
Some visitors describe that the inside view can feel limited to what you can see near the pitch area. That’s not necessarily bad—it can still be impressive—but it’s a clue. If your goal is a full interior tour experience, you may need to pay attention to what you can access on your visit date.
Watch your route if there’s construction nearby
There can be building works around the stadium. That can affect where you can walk and where visitor-only pathways lead. If you get turned around, don’t force it. Re-check where the visitor areas are and redirect rather than zig-zagging into restricted zones.
The stadium story: boards and displays do the heavy lifting
One of the most practical strengths here is that the site provides information where you need it. There are boards and displays on the stadium grounds that explain the venue’s history and special features.
That matters because stadium interpretation is usually either:
1) hidden behind expensive tours, or
2) scattered in a way you can’t connect without a guide.
Here, the information is present while you’re walking. So you can stop, read, and move at your pace. One booking also highlights that the history isn’t avoided and isn’t sugarcoated. It’s presented in a direct way, which is exactly what I want when a place has a complicated past.
Getting the most out of optional guided access (including English)
Even though the activity says a guided tour isn’t included, many people still end up with extra guidance in some form. The key is to treat it as an optional layer, not guaranteed core access.
Language can matter more than you expect
One booking experience described arriving with the wrong language expectation, then getting help with an English approach. The guide named Nino reportedly worked to make the experience work in English, and another German couple helped by agreeing to the arrangement. That’s a great example of why you should communicate your language needs clearly when you’re there.
At the same time, not every visit will meet the language preference you hope for. Another booking comment notes disappointment about no English guided tours being available. So the practical move is to double-check what language options you’re selecting before you finalize your plan.
If you want dressing-room access, plan for upgrades
There’s a clear hint that a basic entrance visit may not include behind-the-scenes areas. One comment says it felt like you could only see the inside from the pitch, with no dressing-room-style spaces. Another suggests paying extra if you want to view inside dressing rooms.
So, here’s the decision rule I’d use:
- If you want views, seating, and on-site context, the entrance ticket is likely enough.
- If you want inside areas beyond the pitch zone, you’ll probably need an added guided option.
How long to plan: a 1-day ticket that can still feel like a mini trip

The ticket is valid for 1 day, which gives you flexibility. In practice, you can make this work as:
- A focused stadium stop with plenty of photo time
- A slower walk-through if you like reading boards and taking breaks
- A complement to another Berlin attraction nearby on the same day
One practical tip: go early if you want space. There’s at least one experience describing arriving very early and having the place largely to yourself. If your schedule allows, morning hours tend to be kinder for wandering and photos.
Practical tips: shoes, weather, and what to do if signage feels unclear
Bring comfortable shoes and comfortable clothes. You’re walking around a large venue, and even when the route is simple, stadium surfaces and stairs can add up.
Also, don’t assume signage will feel perfectly clear. One booking notes there were no clear signs about where to go for the tour. That doesn’t mean you won’t be able to find your way, but it does mean you should:
- Start at the visitor centre
- Ask staff on arrival if anything looks unclear
- Expect to follow visitor pathways rather than free-roaming into every possible corner
If you like having a coffee or snack nearby, there is a shop and there can be a café. One comment notes the café could have more food options, so don’t build your plan around a big meal there.
Who should book this Olympiastadion entrance ticket?
This is a good fit if you want:
- Stadium scale more than stadium backstage access
- Flexible walking with time to sit in seats and take photos
- Historical context delivered via on-site boards while you explore
- An easy Berlin stop reached by public transport (U-Bahn or S-Bahn)
It’s less ideal if your top priority is:
- A guaranteed, in-depth guided tour with full interior access (dressing rooms, corridors, and so on)
- A specific language guided tour every time you show up
- A full Olympic museum-style program in one package
One more note: if you care about the 1936 Olympic legacy specifically, you should know that at least one booking experience was disappointed that there wasn’t an attached Olympic museum covering the 1936 Games as part of what they expected. So treat this as the stadium visit first, not a museum bundle.
Should you book? My honest take
Yes, I’d book this Olympiastadion Berlin entrance ticket if you want a high-value, low-cost way to experience Germany’s largest stadium structure up close—seats, tiers, and the feeling of standing inside a venue built for huge football occasions. The on-site boards make it feel more than just sightseeing, and the ability to wander at your own pace is a real quality-of-life win.
Skip or upgrade your expectations if you’re looking for a full, guaranteed guided-tour program that includes interior spaces like dressing rooms. In that case, spend a little time confirming what’s included for your date and whether your preferred language and deeper access are available.
If you want a stadium day that works even when you don’t want to follow a script, this ticket fits the bill.
FAQ
How long is the Olympia Stadium entrance ticket valid?
The ticket is valid for 1 day. That means you have entry access on the day shown/available in your booking window.
Where do I go when I arrive?
Please come to the visitor centre.
Is a guided tour included with the ticket?
The activity information lists only an entry ticket as included, and it states guided tour is not included. Some visitors describe guided elements happening, but you should be prepared to explore on your own unless you have an added guided option.
What should I bring for the visit?
Wear comfortable shoes and comfortable clothes, since you’ll be walking around the stadium area.
How do I get to the stadium?
The stadium is described as easy to reach by U-Bahn or S-Bahn due to its location.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. The experience offers free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Are English guided tours available?
English guidance seems to depend on the specific session. One guide named Nino reportedly helped make an English experience work, but another booking notes disappointment about no English guided tours being available, so it’s best to confirm based on your date and options.



























