Liverpool, England
Overview
Everton Stadium — known as Hill Dickinson Stadium under a naming-rights deal announced in May 2025 — is the new 52,769-capacity home of Everton FC, opened in August 2025 at Bramley-Moore Dock on Liverpool's UNESCO-recognised waterfront. The stadium succeeded Goodison Park after 133 years of unbroken men's football at the old ground, and at the opening became the eighth-largest football stadium in England. Designed by American architect Dan Meis as a steep, single-bowl venue with a 13,000-capacity Yellow Wall-inspired South Stand, it pairs modern hospitality and broadcast facilities with safe-standing rail seating in the home and away ends — a deliberate attempt, in the words of consultants Buro Happold, to "inject the character and camaraderie of Goodison Park into a semi-derelict riverside site."
Located about 1.5 miles north of the Pier Head, the stadium sits in the regenerated Bramley-Moore Dock area between the historic Liverpool waterfront and the city's northern docks. It has already been selected as a UEFA Euro 2028 host venue — during which it will be branded simply "Everton Stadium" due to UEFA's sponsorship blackout rules — and is future-proofed for a possible expansion to around 62,000 if safe-standing legislation widens further. Visiting on a matchday combines the new build with the older Merseyside football pilgrimage to nearby Goodison Park and Anfield; together the three grounds make Liverpool the most complete English football city for a weekend trip.
Key Features
- ✓Opened August 2025 at Bramley-Moore Dock; replaced Goodison Park as Everton FC's home after 133 years
- ✓Capacity 52,769 — the eighth-largest football stadium in England
- ✓Designed by Dan Meis (MEIS Architects) with a Yellow Wall-inspired 13,000-seat single-tier South Stand
- ✓Safe-standing rail seating in the lower South Stand (home) and the north-east corner away section
- ✓Selected as a UEFA Euro 2028 host venue (branded "Everton Stadium" during the tournament)
History
Everton's search for a new ground spans nearly three decades, starting with abandoned proposals at the King's Dock site in the early 2000s and a heavily-defeated plan for a new stadium in Kirkby in 2008. After several stalled efforts, the club identified the derelict Bramley-Moore Dock site in 2017, with construction approved by Liverpool City Council in 2021 and ground broken later that year. The project's lead architect was the American Dan Meis (MEIS Architects, also responsible for Roma's planned new stadium); main contractor was the British firm Laing O'Rourke, who delivered the venue in roughly 36 months across 2021–2024, despite two delays that pushed first competitive use into 2025.
The Usmanov Sanctions Saga
From 2017 the stadium had been linked to a naming-rights deal with the Russian-owned USM Holdings, the company controlled by Everton's then-major-shareholder-adjacent Alisher Usmanov. Following Usmanov's inclusion on UK and EU sanctions lists after Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the club suspended the USM agreement in March 2022 and the naming-rights search effectively re-started. The deal that eventually closed — announced on 16 May 2025 with the Liverpool-headquartered international law firm Hill Dickinson — was reported in the trade press at around £10 million per year over a multi-year term, considerably more conservative than the original USM figures but a substantially more durable partnership.
Opening and the First Premier League Match
The stadium hosted its first competitive Everton fixture — a Premier League match against Brighton on 23 August 2025 — and immediately became one of the most photographed grounds in English football, the dockside silhouette and steep single-bowl design framing every TV cutaway. Capacity was officially set at 52,769 after a pre-opening review by safety authorities reduced the planning figure by 119 seats (roughly 0.2%) to accommodate broadcast positions, camera platforms and home/away segregation lines — a small detail that means the often-quoted 52,888 figure was superseded before the first ball was kicked.
The Friedkin Decision on Goodison
The Friedkin Group's takeover of Everton was completed in late 2024, just as the new stadium was being readied for handover. One of the Friedkin family's earliest decisions was to preserve Goodison Park rather than demolish it — the historic ground continues to host Everton Women in the Women's Super League and remains the site of the club's heritage tour, with the surrounding Walton area redeveloped into housing and community space. Goodison's last men's first-team match — a 2-0 home win over Southampton on 18 May 2025 — closed 133 years of an unbroken tenancy at the world's first purpose-built football ground.
Euro 2028
Everton Stadium was selected by UEFA as one of the host venues for Euro 2028, jointly hosted by the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland. For the tournament, the venue will be branded "Everton Stadium" rather than Hill Dickinson Stadium, in line with UEFA's standard blackout of corporate sponsor names on all competition signage. The original master-plan from MEIS Architects also accommodates a possible future expansion to around 62,000, contingent on safe-standing legislation widening and the club electing to invest after the Euros.
Tickets & Tours
How to Get Everton Tickets
There are three main ways to attend an Everton match at Everton Stadium / Hill Dickinson Stadium:
1. Official Club Tickets (Best Value)
Purchase directly from evertonfc.com. The season-ticket waiting list is currently long after the move; for general sale, tickets are typically released 2-3 weeks before matches following priority windows for season-ticket holders and Official Members. Prices range from £35 (upper tier corners) to £85 (East Stand central). Official Everton Membership (from £35/year) significantly improves general-sale access.
⚠️ Important: The Merseyside derby, Manchester United / Liverpool home fixtures, and Champions League / European games (when applicable) sell out before reaching general sale. Membership is virtually essential for these matches; hospitality is the reliable fallback.
2. Official Hospitality (Guaranteed Access)
Everton offers extensive hospitality at Everton Stadium:
- Seat Unique Lounge — cinema-style seats with private TV monitors, pre/post-match dining, from £250
- Premium Hospitality bars and restaurants along the East Stand — packages from £200
- Executive Boxes — private suite experience for groups of 6–12, from £400+ per person
Book through evertonfc.com/hospitality for guaranteed access. Volumes are higher than at Goodison given the new stadium's commercial focus.
3. Third-Party Platforms (Sold-Out Matches)
When official tickets sell out, established platforms offer alternatives:
- LiveFootballTickets — Premier League specialists
- SeatPick — price-comparison platform
⚠️ Note: Premier League ticket-transfer rules require resold tickets to be re-issued in the buyer's name on Everton's system. Always verify the seller can legally transfer the ticket before paying premium prices.
Stadium Tours
Everton Stadium offers behind-the-scenes tours of the new ground, with the heritage Goodison Park tour still operating in parallel — together they form one of English football's richest two-tour offerings.
What You'll See
- Home dressing room in the new stadium
- Players' tunnel walking out toward the Yellow Wall–inspired South Stand
- Pitch-side and dugouts with the dockside skyline behind
- Press conference room where Everton managers face the media
- Trophy and heritage displays carrying across from Goodison — Dixie Dean records, Howard Kendall's 1980s silverware, and a dedicated section on the 2024–25 farewell season
- Architecture of the new build with displays on the MEIS design and the Bramley-Moore Dock regeneration
Practical Details
- Duration: Approximately 75-90 minutes
- Schedule: Tours run on non-matchday dates throughout the season
- Price: Adults from £25, concessions and family packages available
- Combined Goodison + Everton Stadium ticket: from £45, recommended for visiting fans
- Accessibility: Fully wheelchair accessible
Booking
- Book directly through Everton official site
- GetYourGuide — stadium tours
- Viator — tour experiences and Liverpool-football combinations
Quick Tips
- Book early: Season-ticket waiting list is long; Official Membership is the practical entry route
- Two-tour pilgrimage: Combine Everton Stadium and Goodison Park tours in one Liverpool visit
- Sandhills not Lime Street: Merseyrail Sandhills is the matchday station, not Lime Street
- Euro 2028 fixtures: Will be on sale via UEFA, not Everton, when announced
- Bag policy: A4 size or smaller — travel light
Best Seats at Everton Stadium
Everton Stadium is a steep, single-bowl ground with four stands wrapping a continuous lower tier. The lower South Stand delivers the loudest atmosphere; the East Stand central sections offer the best tactical view. Pricing is broadly in line with mid-table Premier League grounds — modest by Anfield/Old Trafford standards, premium for Liverpool.
South Stand (Home End)
The 13,000-seat single-tier home end is the architectural signature of the ground. Modelled on Borussia Dortmund's Yellow Wall, it pitches steeply behind the goal and includes a lower section equipped with safe-standing rail seating — Everton's first home end where standing is permitted under the lifted English ban. A central "super-riser" wall divides the singing section visually; capo-led displays from the 1878s supporters' group anchor pre-match tifos. Prices typically £40-55 for Premier League games. Tickets are heavily oversubscribed and effectively reserved for long-tenure season-ticket holders for most fixtures.
North Stand (Away End and Family Sections)
Opposite the South Stand, the North Stand houses the visiting supporters in the north-east corner, which is also fitted with safe-standing rail seating — a rarity for an English away section. Home family sections occupy the remainder of the stand. Atmospheric for away fans and a good place to see how the modern stand design carries sound. Prices £35-50 for home sections.
East Stand (Hospitality Side)
The long east side houses the bulk of the stadium's hospitality offering, including the Club View Level 3 seats — premium hospitality with directors' box adjacency and elevated central views. Standard general-admission seats run £55-80 in the lower tier central sections, £45-65 in the upper. Excellent sightlines along the halfway line.
West Stand (Riverside)
The river-facing west side carries the press and broadcast facilities, the dugouts and the players' tunnel. Standard seating prices £50-75 for Premier League fixtures. Upper-tier sections on this side offer the only view of the Mersey beyond the stadium roofline, which the broadcast cutaways have made one of the most distinctive backdrops in English football.
VIP & Hospitality
Everton's flagship hospitality product is the Seat Unique Lounge, with private TV monitors, cinema-style seats and pre/post-match dining; packages from £250 for general matches and significantly higher for derbies and Euro 2028 fixtures. Executive Boxes are available for 6–12-person groups. Book directly via Everton's official hospitality desk.
Accessibility
Wheelchair platforms are distributed across all four stands with companion seats alongside, plus accessible toilets, audio-descriptive commentary, and dedicated step-free access from the Sandhills shuttle pickup. The stadium is fully accessible to current Premier League accessibility standards; contact the club's Disability Access Officer when booking to reserve specific positions.
Pro Tips
- Best atmosphere: lower South Stand for the Yellow Wall-inspired safe-standing experience — but tickets are scarce
- Best views: East Stand lower-tier central sections
- Family area: designated North Stand sections away from the away allocation
- Away fans: north-east corner with safe-standing rail seating
- Photo opportunities: upper West Stand for the Mersey backdrop, or anywhere on the South Stand for the Yellow Wall sweep
Match Day Experience
A matchday at Everton Stadium is unusual among English Premier League grounds in that the supporter ritual map is still being drawn. After 133 years at Goodison Park, fans have spent the 2025-26 season working out which dock-side pubs become the new pre-match institutions, which approach roads suit a walk and which suit a tram, and how the singing carries in a brand-new bowl. The early returns have been broadly positive — the Telegraph and Guardian opening-day reviews characterised the atmosphere as surprisingly intimate for a 52,000-capacity venue, with the steep South Stand delivering more sound than the architects' computer modelling had predicted.
What to Bring
Everton operates standard Premier League security. Bags larger than A4 size (21cm × 30cm) are not permitted — bring only small handbags or clear pouches, subject to search. Prohibited items include large backpacks, umbrellas, professional cameras with detachable lenses, selfie sticks, flag poles, and outside food or drink. Recommended items: mobile ticket via the Everton FC app, photo ID, phone, contactless card (the stadium is cashless on most kiosks), and Liverpool-weather layers — the dock-side location is noticeably windier than the inner city. Arrive 60-75 minutes early for security and to absorb the new pre-match scene.
Pre-Match (2-3 hours before)
The immediate dockside is still light on pre-match pubs, so the established matchday geography revolves around three areas:
- The Vauxhall / Northern Docks fringe — pubs like The Bramley-Moore Pub (the closest, on Regent Road) and The Caledonia in the streets behind the dock have become the new go-to pre-match locals, though both fill quickly.
- City centre to the south — The Philharmonic Dining Rooms, The Lion Tavern and The Crown are reachable by a 15-20 minute walk along the dock road or a quick Sandhills-bound train before doubling back.
- Stanley Park / Walton heritage corridor — older Evertonians still meet at The Winslow and The Thomas Frost opposite Goodison, then taxi/bus across, treating the move ritually as a continuation of the Goodison matchday.
The Tottenham Pub in Bootle (Evertonians' nickname; no connection to the London club) and the Sandon Hotel (which has historic associations with both Liverpool and Everton, since both clubs were effectively founded in its rooms in the 1880s) are unofficial pilgrimage stops worth knowing about. Liverpool Echo coverage suggests the pre-match map will keep settling for a couple more seasons.
Inside the Stadium
Gates typically open 90 minutes before kickoff. As at Goodison, the run-out song is the Z-Cars theme — preserved deliberately during the move as a continuity gesture. The 1878s supporters' group lead displays from the lower South Stand, with 'Spirit of the Blues' and the traditional 'Grand Old Team' terrace anthem now sung in a venue where the acoustics are dramatically louder than expected. 'It's a Grand Old Team to Play For' has reportedly become the loudest sing-along moment in the early matches.
The stadium's roof covers all four stands but is left open above the pitch — a Meis design choice that protects supporters from the worst of Mersey weather while keeping the grass exposed to the sky and the building's silhouette open above. Practically, this means rain hits the pitch but rarely the stands, and floodlights pour straight down through an open ceiling.
Food & Drink
The concourse food offering is more ambitious than the typical Premier League ground, reflecting the new build: local Scouse stew (the city's namesake lamb-and-root-vegetable hotpot), Wright's Pies (a long-standing Wigan supplier carried across from Goodison), Marsh Pies locally-baked savouries, plus craft beers from Liverpool brewers like Black Lodge and Love Lane. Prices are typical Premier League (£5-7 food, £5-6 drinks). The Seat Unique lounge upgrades the offering to a sit-down dining experience with cinema-style seats and personal monitors.
After the Match
The dock road can take time to clear; pre-booked accessible shuttles run directly to Sandhills and Bank Hall. For dinner, head south to the Albert Dock (10-15 minutes' walk or a single Merseyrail stop), where the Royal Albert Dock restaurants, the Pier Head, and the Cavern Quarter offer the deepest concentration of late-opening venues. The Baltic Triangle is the alternative for craft beer and independent restaurants. The Winslow at Goodison stays busy for older Evertonians making the legacy pilgrimage post-match.
International Visitor Tips: Liverpool Lime Street is 2 hours 15 minutes from London Euston by direct Avanti West Coast train; from Lime Street, a 4-minute Merseyrail to Sandhills plus a 20-minute walk reaches the stadium. John Lennon Airport (Speke) is 25 minutes by taxi from the centre; Manchester Airport is reachable by direct train in 80 minutes and is often cheaper for European routes. The compact city makes a Liverpool football-and-culture weekend (Everton Stadium + Goodison Park + Anfield + the Beatles trail + the Albert Dock + the two cathedrals) genuinely doable in three days.
Getting There
🚇 Metro
Sandhills (Merseyrail Northern Line) is the dedicated matchday station — 4 minutes by direct train from Liverpool Lime Street and a 20-minute signposted walk to the stadium along Regent Road, with pre-booked accessible shuttles running directly to the turnstiles. Bank Hall (also Northern Line) is one stop further and a slightly shorter walk if it's open on the day. Moorfields is the nearest city-centre station for those staying around the business district. Trains run every 5-10 minutes on matchdays.
🚌 Bus
Liverpool has no permanent metro service other than Merseyrail; multiple Arriva and Stagecoach bus routes serve Vauxhall Road and the dock-road corridor from Liverpool ONE and Queen Square. Routes 53, 54 and 55 are the most useful; matchday shuttles are added from the city centre. Buses can be slower than Merseyrail given dock-road traffic.
🅿️ Parking
Very limited dedicated parking at the stadium itself; Liverpool City Council enforces residents-only parking in surrounding streets on matchdays. Best paid options are around Liverpool ONE and Mann Island car parks in the city centre (£12-18, then 25-minute walk or single train stop). Park and Ride schemes operate from outer Merseyside on bigger fixtures. Driving is genuinely not recommended given the dock-road traffic flow on matchdays — Merseyrail is faster.
🚶 From City Center
The stadium is roughly 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north of Liverpool Pier Head — a scenic 25-35 minute walk along the dock road, taking in the Three Graces, Princes Dock and Stanley Dock en route. The route is part of the matchday pleasure and is the preferred approach for fans staying in the city centre. From Sandhills station the marked walking route is about 20 minutes, signposted and well-stewarded on matchdays.
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Where to Stay for Everton Stadium
Near the Stadium (Liverpool Waterfront)
Search hotels on the Liverpool Waterfront
The waterfront strip between the stadium and the Pier Head is the natural matchday neighbourhood, with the new ground walkable from most of it and the city's cultural attractions immediately to hand.
Titanic Hotel Liverpool (Stanley Dock, 1 km)
The single closest characterful hotel — a stunning warehouse conversion in the historic Stanley Dock complex, walkable to Everton Stadium in 10-12 minutes along the dock road. Atmospheric Victorian industrial architecture, the Rum Warehouse event space and a riverside setting. Easily the best base for a Liverpool football pilgrimage that takes in Everton Stadium plus Goodison and Anfield.
INNSiDE Liverpool by Meliá (Albert Dock, 2.5 km)
Modern design hotel directly on the Royal Albert Dock with views over the river — close to all the waterfront attractions, the Beatles Story and Tate Liverpool, with a 25-minute walk along the dock road to Everton Stadium or a single Merseyrail stop from James Street.
Malmaison Liverpool (Princes Dock, 2 km)
Stylish chain hotel on the waterfront close to the Three Graces and Cunard buildings. Excellent for combining football with the broader waterfront experience; 20-minute walk to the stadium.
Pullman Liverpool (King's Dock, 3 km)
Luxury chain hotel between the Albert Dock and the M&S Bank Arena. Strong city-break choice with proximity to the waterfront, restaurants, and football grounds.
Liverpool City Centre
Search hotels in Liverpool City Centre
Hope Street Hotel (Georgian Quarter, 3 km)
Boutique hotel in Liverpool's Georgian Quarter between the city's two cathedrals. Excellent The Art School restaurant nearby and one of Liverpool's finest independent hotels. A 30-minute walk to the stadium or quick Merseyrail via Moorfields/Sandhills.
The Shankly Hotel (city centre, 3 km)
Themed around Liverpool FC legend Bill Shankly but reasonably central and convenient for all three Liverpool football grounds. Popular with travelling supporters; the inevitable choice for fans visiting both Merseyside clubs in the same trip.
Liverpool ONE area hotels (Premier Inn, Hilton, etc., 2.5 km)
The Liverpool ONE shopping district has a strong cluster of chain hotels including Premier Inn, Hilton Liverpool City Centre and Marriott Liverpool City Centre. All within 25-30 minutes' walk of the stadium and immediately next to the main shopping and restaurant district.
Our Recommendation
Stay on the Liverpool Waterfront — the new stadium sits at the northern end of the dock strip and the city's cultural attractions are immediately to the south, so a waterfront base puts you between everything. Titanic Hotel at Stanley Dock is the standout for atmosphere, character and walkability to all three Liverpool grounds. Hope Street Hotel is the boutique pick if you'd prefer Georgian Quarter culture over dockside industrial. For matchday-focused short trips, Liverpool ONE chains offer the best value-to-convenience trade-off.
Frequently Asked Questions
Everton Stadium has a capacity of 52,769, making it the eighth-largest football stadium in England. The original planning figure of 52,888 was reduced by 119 seats (roughly 0.2%) in a pre-opening safety review that accommodated broadcast positions, camera platforms and home/away segregation lines. The masterplan also allows for a possible future expansion to around 62,000.
Hill Dickinson is the Liverpool-headquartered international law firm that acquired the stadium's naming rights in May 2025, replacing an earlier deal with the Russian-owned USM Holdings that was suspended in 2022 after UK and EU sanctions against Alisher Usmanov. Most fans and most search traffic still refer to the venue as 'Everton Stadium' or 'Bramley-Moore Dock', and UEFA will use 'Everton Stadium' generically during Euro 2028 because of its standard sponsor-name blackout for tournaments.
The stadium opened in August 2025, with the first competitive Premier League match against Brighton on 23 August 2025. It replaced Goodison Park as Everton FC's home after 133 years (1892-2025).
Bags larger than A4 size (21cm x 30cm) are not permitted. Small handbags and clear pouches are allowed but subject to search at the turnstiles. Prohibited items include large backpacks, umbrellas, professional cameras with detachable lenses, selfie sticks and flag poles. Travel light for the smoothest entry.
Take Merseyrail Northern Line to Sandhills station — 4 minutes from Liverpool Lime Street, then a 20-minute signposted walk to the stadium along Regent Road. Bank Hall and Moorfields are alternative nearby stations. Pre-booked accessible shuttles run from Sandhills directly to the turnstiles. Driving is not recommended given strict residents-only parking enforcement around the dock road.
Yes. The lower section of the 13,000-capacity South Stand (the home end) is fitted with safe-standing rail seating, as is the north-east corner of the North Stand allocated to away supporters. Both areas operate under the lifted English ban on standing introduced by the Sports Grounds Safety Authority.
The roof covers all four stands — protecting supporters from the worst of the Mersey weather — but is left open above the pitch itself. This is a deliberate Dan Meis design choice that lets natural light reach the grass and keeps the dockside silhouette visible above the building.
Goodison Park was preserved rather than demolished by The Friedkin Group, who took over Everton ownership in late 2024. The old ground continues to host Everton Women in the Women's Super League and runs a heritage stadium tour, with the surrounding Walton area redeveloped into housing and community space. The men's first team's final Goodison match was a 2-0 home win over Southampton on 18 May 2025.
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