
Find your preferred venue
With 2 of 3 ‘Tres Grandes’ Portuguese football clubs based in Lisbon, it is undoubtedly the city’s most watched sport. The teams are Sporting CP who play their home games at the Jose Alvalade Stadium, and S.L. Benfica who play their home games at Estádio Sport Lisboa e Benfica. The city is also home to a third Premiera Liga football team, Belenenses SAD who play their home games at Estadio Nacional.
Adult ticket prices including fees for events in Lisbon start from as low as EUR €49 for basic tickets to EUR €130 for the most premium tickets; with the average starting ticket price at EUR €61. The price depends on a range of factors including the type of event, performers, venue, and ticket category.
Lisbon is a scintillating city on the rugged west coast of Portugal, which the Romans, Visigoths, Moors, and Spanish all called home prior to 1640 when the country gained independence. From the archways and azulejo tiles of the narrow Alfama streets to the delicately carved stonework in Belem, Lisbon is one of the most architecturally diverse cities in Europe. Yet, the city’s antiquity is beautifully juxtaposed by a sense of the contemporary thanks to its refreshing fashion scene, global dining scene, and creative community. As you explore the city on its distinctive old yellow trams, captivated by its unquestionable charm, you’ll undoubtedly be serenaded by a Fado musician plucking his guitar strings somewhere in the distance.
Great event. Gets better and more professional each year. I like the variety of food trucks and the bars and seating areas. Centre court is well maintained and all seats have great views. The calibre of players also gets betters every year. It's just a nice vibe to spend the day or evening there. The merchandise store this year was bit too small and hard to find. I preferred it in previous years.
Very professional setup
Wonderful atmosphere…great matches excellent organisation
This was a third visit to this particular tournament. We always try to get end of court seats on the Millennium stadium, so have no idea how the access and demand on the outside courts are, but seemed to involve plenty of either early starts of queuing.
We tend not to leave the court during the session paid for, which is 2 matches of course. Plenty of others do, beats me, why pay to watch only half a tennis match ??
The catering options are collected in one area and all seems fresh, and not outrageous prices.
The crowd control at 'sit downs'is pretty good, but there are usually a few ignorant morons whom are unaware they're behind the servers arm causing distraction.
We attended the tennis last Tuesday and Wednesday and enjoyed the tennis thoroughly. It is a super event. All the volunteers were excellent too. I can report on some concerns on the Tuesday where we had to leave our seats, exit and have tickets for evening verified for which we were given a bracelet. This was a chaotic arrangement and as a result we missed the first hour of the evening session as there was a huge queue. I also noticed some serious safety seating issues where two attendees fell while moving seats in a very dangerous way. Each of them were very lucky not to be seriously injured! Another issue related to a drain cover unsecured that was a really dangerous hazard. I have a picture and I actually tried to fix it myself! I am not an expert but some more careful public safety checks need to be done. I did not see any signs regarding safety in the venue.



