2015-10-15

14 October 2015
Last updated at
23:12

The cost of watching football in the UK has dropped or remained the same for the majority of fans, a study by the BBC has found.

The Price of Football, the largest study of its type in Europe, looked at costs at 227 clubs in 13 UK leagues.

More than 700 tickets were analysed, with 70% seeing a price freeze or reduction for the 2015-16 season.

Some 51.91% were held, 18.09% of tickets were reduced and 30% of tickets more expensive this season.

The average cost of a replica football shirt is now £42.18 for adults and £33.78 for children. In the Premier League this rises to £49.68 and £38.42 thanks to a 4.82% increase in the average price this season.

Click
here
to play with the Price of Football calculator and see what your support is costing you.

More on the Price of Football:

Dan Roan on why protests will persist despite price freezes

Average cheapest Premier League match-day ticket above £30

True or false? The Price of Football quiz

Inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, was -0.1% in September and has been almost flat since hitting a then-record low of 0.3% in January.

The Price of Football surveys the cost of the cheapest and most expensive match-day and season tickets, as well as the cost of a pie, programme, cup of tea and replica shirt.

Now in its fifth year, the study found:

Two-thirds of Premier League tickets were frozen or reduced in price.

The cheapest match-day ticket in England’s top flight now costs more than £30 on average for the first time after 11 clubs put up prices in this category.

The Scottish Premiership’s cheapest ticket now costs £20.17 on average after a 1.2% fall in price. This is less than England’s Championship and League One.

In the Welsh Premier League and Irish Premiership, fans pay less than £10 per match.

Tickets in the Women’s Super League in England, which saw attendances increase by 48% after the World Cup in June and July, cost less than £5.



What are clubs charging?

Arsenal again have the most expensive match-day ticket in the Premier League at £97.

The cheapest match-day ticket in the Premier League is offered by Leicester City at £22.

At £52, Chelsea’s cheapest match-day ticket is the highest priced of the Premier League’s least expensive.

Derby County, Reading and Huddersfield’s £10 match-day ticket is the cheapest in the top five leagues in England.

Arsenal have the most expensive season ticket in the Premier League at £2,013. Their cheapest season ticket remains £1,014, and is still the most costly in the Premier League – £249 more than the next highest. However, both Arsenal season tickets include seven matches in cup competitions.

Stoke City have the cheapest season ticket in the Premier League at £294.

Reading’s £135 season ticket is the cheapest in the top four divisions in England, with only Conference side Eastleigh (£120) cheaper.

The most expensive season ticket in Scotland is sold by Celtic, at £559, but that fell in price by £41 this season.

In the Women’s Super League One and Two, Manchester City have the most expensive season ticket at £48, while London Bees Ladies have the cheapest at £18.

The picture around the UK

Three-quarters of tickets in Scotland are held or cut in price

Ticket costs hold steady in Welsh football

Irish Premiership second cheapest league in UK

20 Premier League clubs, 50 new shirts

Manchester United’s £60 adult shirt is the most expensive in the study, while the cost of their junior shirt, at £45, is also the highest priced. It costs £118 for a full adult strip, including shorts, socks and a name and number at the Old Trafford club. A full junior strip is £103.

Bournemouth’s £40 adult shirt and Norwich’s £28 junior shirt are the cheapest in the Premier League. Aberdeen’s £55 shirt is the most expensive in Scotland and the joint second highest in the UK, while their £43 junior shirt was the costliest in Scotland and third highest in the study.

The cheapest adult shirt in the UK is at London Bees Ladies, who charge £20.90.

What about food and drink?

National League side Braintree’s £1 pie is the lowest priced in the study, while the cheapest tea can be bought at Scottish League Two side Elgin City for 60p.





What about the European teams in the study?

You can buy a season ticket at Bayern Munich for £104.48, less than the cheapest available in the top four leagues in both England and Scotland.

Barcelona’s shirt is £89.55 – the most expensive in the study, while Paris St-Germain’s season ticket of £2,113.46 is the costliest.

The reaction of the leagues

The Premier League: “Clubs are working hard to keep grounds as full as possible, with the past two seasons showing they are doing a good job with record occupancy at 96%. This is borne out by the BBC’s research that shows 70% of tickets available are either the same price or cheaper than last season.

“However the BBC’s focus on single match tickets is misleading as the vast majority – two-thirds – of Premier League match attenders are season ticket holders. The raft of away supporter offers has seen travelling attendance go up by 6%.”

Shaun Harvey, Football League chief executive: “Football League clubs continue to offer compelling football at a price that is affordable.

“The significant numbers of season ticket holders at matches, along with ever greater numbers of young fans, has resulted in the average price paid per paying spectator being as low as £14 across the League’s 72 clubs.

“Clearly others, such as adults and those paying on the day, will usually pay more. Clubs therefore need to ensure that their ticketing policies provide the right balance between fair value for supporters and generating the income that sustains on-field performance, which overwhelmingly they do.”

Neil Doncaster, Scottish Professional Football League chief executive: “This year’s BBC Price of Football survey backs the SPFL’s view that our 42 member clubs continue to invest significant time, money and effort in making the game as affordable and attractive as possible to fans.

“With around 75% of tickets either frozen or falling year-on-year, this has helped the current season get off to a strong start with attendances showing a 4.3% increase so far when measured against the whole of last season.”

Expensive or value for money?

Kevin Miles, Football Supporters’ Federation chief executive: “It says a lot about modern football when it’s hailed as unusually good news that ticket prices aren’t rising even further. Last season, football was incredibly expensive, it remains expensive this season – particularly on match-day tickets, for away fans and young adults.

“Premier League clubs knew before they had even set their prices for this season that they would be due a substantial windfall from the new TV deal.”

Robert Elston, Everton chief executive: ” I think there is a great danger when you look at price lists and what is the highest and lowest price. The reality is that doesn’t affect pricing across the board in the stadium.

“When you work out what average fans are paying for an average home game, I think season tickets holders get value for money. People will have different expectations of what is fair or value for money. Here, adults with a season ticket pay between £23 and £31 per game and you have to feel that is value for money.

Tim Farron, leader of the Liberal Democrats: “For fans for whom it can cost up to £200 to take a family to the average match in many of the leagues in British football, it is welcome that more clubs have frozen prices.

“More clubs have put ticket prices up than have reduced them though and it is worth bearing in mind that as you get lower down the league the percentage of clubs who put prices up has actually risen.”

Clive Efford, shadow sports minister: “Two or three clubs have reduced their prices, more have frozen. I commend them for that. But the basic price for fans has gone up by over 6% so the minimum price will be over £30 for the first time.

“Fans are being ripped off. How is that fair on football fans? The only thing they put on free on replica jerseys is the name of the sponsor who is paying for advertising.

“You have to pay extra for the Premier League logo, the name of players, numbers, and kids are being ripped off.”

You can download the full results for 2015
here
(pdf 536 KB) .

Comments

All posts are reactively-moderated and must obey the house rules.

Sign in with your BBC iD, or Register to comment and rate comments

View all (259)

Latest first

Latest first

Oldest first

Highest rated

Lowest rated

Comment number 259. Posted by roksteadyeddy

on Just now

The price and decadence rise will squeeze out real supporters from our stadiums leaving those seats free for the prawn sandwich gang

Report Comment number 259

Link to Comment number 259

Loading…

Comment number 258. Posted by groovingstill

on Just now

As an expat from Manchester living in Pinoso Spain and supporting Pinoso CF it cost me 10euro for a season ticket and 1eruo for a beer. Fortunately or unfortunately no pies. Saying all that we are in the nether regions of the Spanish league, but the sun shines.

Report Comment number 258

Link to Comment number 258

Loading…

Comment number 257. Posted by EjukayshunWurks

on Just now

When you see teams, like Manchester City, spending tens of millions on players just because they’ll sell shirts & to prevent them playing for other clubs then you know the game is no longer there for the fans. That isn’t about what happens on the pitch. That is about greed & revenue and fans have no say on club decisions.

Fans are paying shareholder rates but not getting shareholder rights.

Report Comment number 257

Link to Comment number 257

Loading…

Comment number 256. Posted by Rob

on Just now

@251 – yes it is a fact, compare the prices paid in England with Spain/Germany/Italy – they wouldn’t put up with it. Go further afield, North America has to much competition for it, the vast majority of South Americans don’t earn enough to pay these prices, same for Africa – possibly Asia or the Middle East but would clubs rip everything up and strop over there? Everyone boycott for a week and see

Report Comment number 256

Link to Comment number 256

Loading…

Comment number 255. Posted by FjB

on 2 minutes ago

Every single year, the same comments about Germany being cheaper and Arsenal being expensive but not winning things, and the poorer fans being priced out. Every year.

Yes, it’s not great the way it’s going. But it is a product and people are more than willing to pay the now sky-high prices… So that’s that.

People will not stop going in significant numbers, even if the prices double again.

Report Comment number 255

Link to Comment number 255

Loading…

Comment number 254. Posted by Vamos Ye Azules

on 2 minutes ago

Some of the most enjoyable games I have seen have been down the local park. You get to hear all the bad language or banter as they call it and you get to empathise with the referees that receive most of it. And it’s free!

Report Comment number 254

Link to Comment number 254

Loading…

Comment number 253. Posted by D Jones

on 3 minutes ago

It`s sheer greed and true supporters of football should unite to end this obscenity by refusing to buy season tickets, merchandise and pay per view football on TV. The real owners of football are the fans and they need to take control back from the greedy businessmen.

Report Comment number 253

Link to Comment number 253

Loading…

Comment number 252. Posted by bluenosebob

on 3 minutes ago

Lot’s of nonsense about rugby on here (which I like) – how much are the Rugby World Cup tickets going on sale for! I suppose their fans can afford it though…

I would love to take my kids to the match but can’t afford it and refuse to pay for Sky as they have ruined football in so many ways so they are not really that interested in football now – at least it saves them the heartache I suppose!

Report Comment number 252

Link to Comment number 252

Loading…

Comment number 251. Posted by Walt78

on 4 minutes ago

238. Posted by Rob

If no one went, prices would drop fast…..fact!

No it isn’t a fact. If people stopped supporting the EPL in England then the Premier League would most likely take their franchise and thus the clubs abroad to their beloved global audience.

Report Comment number 251

Link to Comment number 251

Loading…

Comment number 250. Posted by Nafemeister

on 5 minutes ago

Prices have rocketed since foreign billionaire owners have eliminated the need for a club to remain solvent.

Report Comment number 250

Link to Comment number 250

Loading…

We’re having some problems displaying the comments at the moment. Sorry. We’re doing our best to fix it.

More comments Loading…

Previous

1

2

3

4

5



14

Next

Sign in with your BBC iD, or Register to comment and rate comments

You must sign in to rate comments

Sign in with your BBC iD, or Register

Close

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.

BBC Sport – Sport

Show more