London: Wembley Stadium Guided Tour

REVIEW · LONDON

London: Wembley Stadium Guided Tour

  • 4.73,629 reviews
  • 2 hours
  • From $33
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Operated by The Wembley Stadium Tour · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.7 (3,629)Duration2 hoursPrice from$33Operated byThe Wembley Stadium TourBook viaGetYourGuide

Wembley feels huge even empty. This guided tour is a practical way to see a stadium up close, from the dressing rooms and players’ tunnel to the trophy presentation steps. I especially like the photo-worthy history stops, including the 1966 World Cup crossbar, and the way the guide ties big match moments to the building itself.

One thing to keep in mind: the experience follows a set route, so you don’t get a free-form wander. The guided element is about 75 minutes, and you’ll want to plan for the full 2-hour visit so you don’t feel rushed.

Key Points You’ll Care About

London: Wembley Stadium Guided Tour - Key Points You’ll Care About

  • Bobby Moore statue meeting point: meet on level 1 directly behind the statue, with stairs or an external lift nearby.
  • Real access areas: dressing rooms, the press conference room, the players’ tunnel, and pitchside.
  • Trophy steps + iconic artefacts: stand where winners are honored and see memorabilia like the 1966 crossbar.
  • Crossbar Exhibition and Walk of Legends: history from early Wembley roots to today’s 440-meter arch.
  • App-based guide in English: use a QR code for extra fun facts on your own device.
  • Great value for a 90,000-seat venue: it’s one of the most direct ways to experience Wembley without needing match tickets.

Why Wembley’s Empty Bowl Hits Different

London: Wembley Stadium Guided Tour - Why Wembley’s Empty Bowl Hits Different
Wembley’s scale is the first surprise. Even without a match or a concert crowd, the sight lines and the size of the bowl make it feel like a landmark, not just a stadium. When you stand where big performances happen, you start to understand why it’s been such a magnet for sport and music for generations.

I like that the tour doesn’t just show you corridors. You’re led to the places that create match-day reality: where players get ready, where media gathers, and where the noise builds before kickoff. That’s the payoff if you’re a football fan—but it also works if you’re not. A venue this famous has a cultural gravity, and the guide helps you read it like a story.

The empty-stadium view is also a reset. You’ll get a moment to take it in without the usual chaos, then you can focus on the details you’d miss during a live event.

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Meeting Behind Bobby Moore (and Not Getting Stuck)

London: Wembley Stadium Guided Tour - Meeting Behind Bobby Moore (and Not Getting Stuck)
Your tour starts with an easy landmark: meet your guide beside the Bobby Moore statue on level 1. The tour meeting point is directly behind that statue, and you’ll need to walk up two flights of stairs or use the external lift to the left of the Club Wembley entrance.

Before you go in, bring your voucher to the ticket desk at the entrance. You exchange it for tickets there and get your entry sorted. This matters because the tour starts from inside the stadium area, so you don’t want to waste time figuring out what counts as “in” versus “outside.”

If you’re coming by train, Wembley is set up well for a one-station plan. You can use Wembley Park (Jubilee and Metropolitan lines), Wembley Stadium (Chiltern line), or Wembley Central (Bakerloo line and London Overground). For car access, there are over 3,000 spaces across multiple car parks.

Tip: if you’re tight on time, aim to arrive a little early. When you walk in already oriented, the rest of the tour feels smoother.

Behind-the-Scenes Wembley: Dressing Rooms, Press Area, and the Tunnel

London: Wembley Stadium Guided Tour - Behind-the-Scenes Wembley: Dressing Rooms, Press Area, and the Tunnel
This is the part most people come for, and it earns its reputation. You’ll go behind the scenes to see the dressing rooms, the press conference room, and the players’ tunnel. These are the spaces that usually stay off-limits, so the tour feels like you’ve slipped through a curtain.

In the dressing rooms, it’s not the furniture that matters most—it’s the atmosphere. You can picture the routine: kit, pre-match nerves, quick checks, and the calm right before energy takes over. If you like football culture, this stop turns the stadium from a picture into a lived place.

The press conference room adds a different angle. It’s where stories are made public, where the post-match narrative gets set, and where the media machinery moves. Even if you don’t follow interviews, you’ll get the sense that Wembley isn’t only about players and fans. It’s also about the headlines.

Then comes the players’ tunnel and pitchside. Standing near that route helps you understand how the stadium controls sound and emotion. In practical terms, pitchside also gives you the cleanest photo angles—straight lines toward the goal area and the feel of the ground-level space.

Bonus: a few guides build extra energy with humor and group interaction. Names you might see mentioned include Daniel, Richard, Jonathan, Paul, Rob, and Luis. If your guide has that mix of stories plus showmanship, the whole tour clicks faster.

The Trophy Steps and the 1966 Crossbar Moment

London: Wembley Stadium Guided Tour - The Trophy Steps and the 1966 Crossbar Moment
The trophy presentation steps are a strong emotional stop. You’re not just looking at a display—you’re positioned at the part of the stadium connected to winners’ ceremony. It helps you understand why people describe Wembley as a stage. The building is designed for drama, and these steps show it.

From there, you’ll see major artefacts and mementos, including the 1966 World Cup crossbar. That specific detail matters because it’s tangible. It turns a famous line from history into an object you can stand near and frame in a photo.

The tour also leans into recognition. You’ll hear about major football achievements across eras, plus the stadium’s role in events like the annual Emirates FA Cup Final and top UEFA Champions League triumphs. The result is that the memorabilia doesn’t feel random. It becomes a guided path through what Wembley has represented.

If you’re going with kids, this stop is often the easiest “yes” moment. It’s clear. It’s iconic. It gives them a physical way to connect to a name they’ve heard.

One note: if you’re hoping for long, museum-style time in every exhibit, you might find the pacing brisk. The focus is access and storytelling, not lingering.

Crossbar Exhibition and Walk of Legends: Wembley’s Past to Today

London: Wembley Stadium Guided Tour - Crossbar Exhibition and Walk of Legends: Wembley’s Past to Today
The Crossbar Exhibition and Walk of Legends are where you get context. This is the part that answers the question you didn’t know you had: how does Wembley become Wembley?

You’ll trace the stadium’s origins and its rebirth over time, with references that start as far back as the British Empire Exhibition of 1924. You’ll also hear about the Twin Towers from earlier Wembley planning and how the modern stadium’s arch reaches about 440 meters high.

What I like here is the mix of design and culture. You’re not just learning dates. You’re learning why the structure looks the way it does, and how it fits into a bigger London story. The tour helps you see architecture as a driver of experience—how people move, where crowds gather, and why certain sight lines feel special.

If you want the stadium to make sense beyond match day, this is your section. Even if you’re a casual fan, the Walk of Legends turns familiar competition into a broader narrative of sport and entertainment.

If you care about trivia, the tour’s app-based guide (with QR code access) can be handy during this stretch. It gives you extra context as you walk, so you’re not relying on memory alone.

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The App-Based Guide: Fun Facts Without Keeping Pace

London: Wembley Stadium Guided Tour - The App-Based Guide: Fun Facts Without Keeping Pace
The tour includes access to an app in English, accessed via a QR code. This lets you pull up extra facts on your own device during your visit. It’s a good match for tours like this, because it gives you optional detail without forcing you to listen to everything at once.

The app approach is also a comfort for mixed groups. If one person wants every story and another wants quick highlights, the app lets both styles coexist. You’re not stuck asking the guide to repeat everything.

I recommend using it at the moments where you see something specific—like a display tied to a famous match or a design feature. That’s when the extra info actually lands. Use it as a “second read,” not as a distraction.

Timing and What a 2-Hour Visit Really Means

London: Wembley Stadium Guided Tour - Timing and What a 2-Hour Visit Really Means
The full visit is about 2 hours, but the guided element is approximately 75 minutes. That difference matters. It means you’ll get a structured walkthrough with time for photos and exploring certain areas, but you won’t have hours of free roaming.

So plan your day accordingly. If you’re squeezing Wembley into a busy London itinerary, the tour is still doable, but give yourself breathing room before and after. Getting to and from the meeting point (level 1 behind Bobby Moore) and settling in matters more than you’d think.

One practical benefit: people often mention that the tour doesn’t feel like you’re being rushed. That pacing makes it easier to ask questions and take your time at key visual stops like pitchside and the trophy steps.

If you’re traveling with family, this timing can work well. Kids usually burn energy fast, but they also love the clear “wow” moments—tunnel, dressing rooms, and the history displays.

Value at Around $33: Who Should Book This Tour

London: Wembley Stadium Guided Tour - Value at Around $33: Who Should Book This Tour
For about $33 per person, the value comes from access. You’re paying for behind-the-scenes areas you can’t easily replicate on your own without match-day tickets. And it’s a concentrated hit: dressing rooms, press area, players’ tunnel, pitchside, trophy steps, plus exhibition content.

It’s also value-rich because you’re seeing a stadium that seats around 90,000. Wembley isn’t a small venue where a self-guided visit quickly satisfies your curiosity. Guided time helps you navigate the scale and make the stadium feel meaningful.

This tour suits:

  • football fans who want the match-day route in real space
  • music-event lovers who want the stadium’s wider role in UK culture
  • families (especially with kids who can appreciate dressing rooms and big trophies)
  • non-fans who want a famous landmark with structure and context

It’s not for you if you want long periods of independent wandering or if you prefer to follow your own pace with no set stops. The tour is organized for clarity, and you’ll get the best experience by going in ready to follow the guide.

Also remember: food and drink aren’t included. Plan to eat before or after you go in, especially if you’re visiting during a long day in London.

Quick Tips That Make the Tour Easier

London: Wembley Stadium Guided Tour - Quick Tips That Make the Tour Easier

  • Bring a passport or ID card.
  • Wear comfy shoes. You’ll be walking inside the stadium and using stairs or a lift to reach level 1.
  • Use the app selectively. Pick the moments that match what you’re staring at.
  • Ask questions. The best tours are interactive, and the guide can connect details to the big moments you recognize.
  • Don’t over-schedule around the tour. Build in a buffer so you aren’t sprinting between sights.

Should You Book Wembley Stadium Guided Tour?

If you want an efficient, iconic way to experience Wembley beyond a quick photo from the outside, I’d book it. The combination of behind-the-scenes access, pitchside perspective, and standout history stops like the 1966 World Cup crossbar is exactly the kind of value that turns a famous stadium into a real memory.

If your group includes people who aren’t huge football fans, this is still a solid choice because it frames Wembley as a major entertainment venue, not only a sports ground. Just go in expecting a set route and plan for the full 2 hours so you can enjoy it at a relaxed pace.

FAQ

How long is the Wembley Stadium guided tour?

The total visit is about 2 hours, with the guided element taking approximately 75 minutes. You should allow the full 2-hour window for the complete experience.

What’s included in the ticket price?

The tour includes the stadium tour, a live English-speaking guide, behind-the-scenes access, and access to an English app via QR code.

Where do I meet for the tour?

Meet at level 1 of Wembley Stadium directly behind the Bobby Moore statue. You’ll also exchange your voucher for tickets at the ticket desk at the entrance.

What areas of Wembley will I see?

You’ll visit areas such as the dressing rooms, the press conference room, the players’ tunnel, and pitchside. You’ll also climb the steps to where trophies are presented, and you’ll see the Crossbar Exhibition and the Walk of Legends.

Do I need to bring identification?

Yes. You should bring a passport or an ID card.

Is food and drink included?

No. Food and drink are not included, so you’ll want to plan meals separately before or after the tour.

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