REVIEW · LISBON
FOOTBALL LOVERS FULL DAY TOUR AT LISBON
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Triple V Tours - Veni Vidi Vacations · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Two stadiums in Lisbon, both with real football weight. You’ll get guided visits at Estádio da Luz (Benfica) and Estádio José Alvalade (Sporting), plus museum stops where trophies and club identity are front and center. The day also includes lunch in a classic Portuguese cervejaria setting right by the action, but one heads-up: if games are on, parts of the stadium experience can be limited, and lunch is not a guaranteed player-meet moment.
What makes this format work is the pacing. You start with hotel pickup anywhere in Lisbon, ride by private car between the two grounds, and rely on a certified guide to keep the day smooth while local experts handle the in-stadium guiding. Bring comfortable shoes, because this is a full 8-hour day that includes museum touring and walking.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Pencil Into Your Day
- A Football Day Built Around Estádio da Luz and Alvalade
- How the Lisbon Pickup and Private Car Makes It Easy
- Entering Estádio da Luz: Benfica’s Stadium and Museum Stops
- Lunch at the Stadium Cervejaria: A Real Portuguese Break
- Estádio José Alvalade and Sporting’s Museum: The Ronaldo Connection
- Marquês de Pombal Square: A Short Lisbon Glance Between Clubs
- Price and Value: Is $353 Worth It?
- Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Want Another Plan)
- Should You Book Football Lovers Full Day in Lisbon?
- FAQ
- How long is the Football Lovers full day tour in Lisbon?
- Where are pickup and drop-off?
- What stadiums are included in the tour?
- Is lunch included, and what is it like?
- Are stadium and museum tickets included?
- What languages are the guides available in?
- Is this tour wheelchair accessible?
- Do you skip the ticket line?
Key Things I’d Pencil Into Your Day

- Estádio da Luz (Benfica) guided museum and stadium visit focused on trophies and club milestones.
- Stadium lunch at a Portuguese cervejaria with typical steak-and-beer style options and other choices.
- Estádio José Alvalade (Sporting) visit with museum time tied to Sporting’s big legacy, including the Ronaldo connection.
- A certified day guide plus local stadium experts so you get both logistics and football context.
- Skip-the-ticket-line entry to paid areas, saving you the usual queue time.
- Private group with pickup and drop-off at any Lisbon address in a private car.
A Football Day Built Around Estádio da Luz and Alvalade

This tour is built for one clear goal: you want two historic Lisbon football environments in a single day, without the hassle of figuring out timing, entrances, and who can explain what you’re seeing. You’ll move from Benfica’s home turf to Sporting’s home ground, with museum time in both places so it’s not just standing in a bowl-shaped arena.
I like the way it balances stadium spectacle with details. Museums matter here, because you’re looking at the trophies, the eras, and the story of how each club became what it is today. You’ll also get a quick look at Lisbon through a short pass by Marquess of Pombal Square, which is a nice breather between the two football-heavy stops.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Lisbon
How the Lisbon Pickup and Private Car Makes It Easy

The day starts with pickup from your lodging in Lisbon, and you get drop-off back at your address afterward. That matters because it turns the day into a simple, match-day-style logistics loop: get in the car, get out at the stadium, repeat, then go home.
The tour runs 8 hours total, so time management is real. You’ll be at Estádio da Luz for about 2 hours, then you’ll have 1.5 hours for lunch, then 2 hours at Estádio José Alvalade, plus about 30 minutes of driving/passing time in between and back in Lisbon.
The experience is designed as a private group, but there’s an important nuance. The overall day feels private, yet the in-stadium tour parts are not private. Plan for that by keeping your expectations realistic: you’ll still get guidance, just not with a fully secluded stadium tour.
Also, keep a few rules in mind for the car ride. Smoking, vaping, food, and drinks in the vehicle are not allowed, so store anything you need before you step in.
Entering Estádio da Luz: Benfica’s Stadium and Museum Stops

Estádio da Luz is where the day turns serious in the best way. You’ll do a guided visit for about 2 hours, covering the stadium and Benfica’s museum, including time spent checking trophies and both domestic and foreign club wins.
This is the kind of place where your eyes start to connect dots fast. A stadium isn’t just seats and lights. In a guided museum tour, you start seeing how Benfica’s identity is built year after year—then you step into the stadium space and it all clicks with the scale of the venue.
Two practical tips make the difference here:
- Wear shoes you don’t mind walking in for a couple of hours.
- Listen to the guide’s context about what you’re looking at before you start snapping photos. It turns random displays into a timeline.
One more thing: access can depend on what’s happening at the stadium that day. On days when matches are involved, you might find that not every part of the stadium experience is available. If you care about specific areas, ask your operator ahead of time whether there are any game-day restrictions planned for your exact date.
Lunch at the Stadium Cervejaria: A Real Portuguese Break
After the Benfica portion, you’ll head to lunch at the stadium area in a typical Portuguese cervejaria. The schedule gives you about 1.5 hours, which is enough time to eat without feeling rushed and still keep the day on track.
This meal is described as a classic setting for steaks and beer, but you’ll have other options too. What I like about this stop is that it’s part of the football day, not an awkward detour into a random restaurant near a transit stop. You’re still in the “this is how football days feel locally” rhythm.
Ordering-wise, don’t overthink it. If you want the classic experience, go for the steak-and-beer vibe. If you don’t, pick something simpler and focus on refueling for Sporting later in the day.
Here’s the one expectation-check that’s worth sharing clearly. Lunch is a meal for the tour group, not a structured plan to meet players. If your goal is player sightings, know that it’s not something the tour can promise.
Estádio José Alvalade and Sporting’s Museum: The Ronaldo Connection
Next up is Sporting Clube de Portugal and Estádio José Alvalade. You’ll have about 2 hours here, again with a guided stadium and museum experience. This is where the tour gets personal for many fans, because Sporting is closely tied to the early football path of Cristiano Ronaldo.
The museum time is the real payoff. You’re not just seeing a pretty venue. You’re checking trophies, understanding eras, and seeing how Sporting’s achievements are framed in the club storytelling. The goal is to give you enough context that Sporting’s stadium doesn’t feel like a stop on a checklist. It feels like a chapter of football history.
The day’s flow is also built with energy in mind. By the time you arrive at Alvalade, you’ve already had a major dose of Benfica culture, so you can compare. That’s where your understanding sharpens: two clubs, two identities, one Lisbon.
As with Benfica, match-day operations can affect what’s accessible inside the stadium. Build in flexibility. If you’re going specifically for the most famous photo spots, treat them as targets, not guarantees.
If you’re traveling with a family, I’d also pay attention to how the guide keeps the group moving at a good pace. One guide name that came up in experiences is Paulo, praised for being thoughtful about pacing and tailoring the day so everyone stays included, including teens who start getting tired of long tours.
Marquês de Pombal Square: A Short Lisbon Glance Between Clubs
You’ll also pass by Marquess of Pombal Square, with about 30 minutes of driving/passing time included. This isn’t a big city-walking detour, and it’s not meant to replace sightseeing.
Instead, it’s a helpful reset. When you’re spending most of the day in football environments, a short pass by a major landmark gives you a different angle on Lisbon—so the day doesn’t feel like you only visited two buildings and a meal stop.
If you want more city time, treat this tour like the football backbone of your Lisbon trip, then plan separate time for neighborhoods, viewpoints, and classic streets afterward.
Price and Value: Is $353 Worth It?
At $353 per person for an 8-hour experience, you’re paying for the full package: pickup and drop-off across Lisbon, private car transportation, tickets for paid entrances, lunch, and certified guiding. You’re also paying for convenience, which is often the invisible cost when you try to DIY a day like this.
Here’s how the value adds up in real terms:
- Two stadium visits and two museum experiences, each with guided context.
- Museum entry and guided access handled as part of the day plan.
- Ticket time saved with skip-the-ticket-line entry.
- A single operator coordinating timing so you don’t spend your afternoon rushing between logistics.
The only part that can reduce value is if you expected a fully private, empty-stadium style tour. The in-stadium guiding is not private, even though the overall day is set up for a private group. If you’re the type who wants quiet, one-on-one attention throughout every moment, you should weigh that before booking.
Even with that, for most football fans, the price is easier to justify because you’re combining two major venues in one go, with transportation and lunch built in.
Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Might Want Another Plan)
This is a great match if you:
- Want two of Lisbon’s biggest club environments in one day.
- Love stadium museums and trophies, not just casual sightseeing.
- Prefer a guided day where someone else handles timing and entrances.
It’s also ideal if you’re the kind of fan who likes context. The tour is structured to help you read what you’re seeing, not just look at it.
On the other hand, it’s not suitable for wheelchair users, so if mobility is a factor, you’ll want to look for other options. Also, expect a lot of walking and museum-style viewing across multiple hours.
If you’re traveling during a period when matches are common, go in with flexibility. Some stadium areas might not be available depending on operations, so keep your plan adaptable rather than demanding a specific set of photo stops.
Should You Book Football Lovers Full Day in Lisbon?
I’d book it if your priorities are simple: guided Benfica and Sporting stadium + museum time, a proper Portuguese lunch in a local-style setting, and stress-free transport in Lisbon. The day is long enough to feel substantial, but not so long that it becomes a marathon.
Skip it if you need full private access inside stadiums all the way through, or if you’re booking only for a specific match-day player-focused goal. Lunch isn’t a player-watching plan, and stadium access can shift with real event schedules.
If you do book, you’ll get the best experience by packing smart and aiming to be present for the guide’s context. Bring comfortable shoes, keep expectations flexible for match-day logistics, and treat the trophies and museum displays as the main event.
FAQ
How long is the Football Lovers full day tour in Lisbon?
The tour lasts 8 hours.
Where are pickup and drop-off?
Pickup and drop-off are included from your address in Lisbon.
What stadiums are included in the tour?
You’ll visit Estádio da Luz (Benfica) and Estádio José Alvalade (Sporting Clube de Portugal).
Is lunch included, and what is it like?
Lunch is included, with a typical Portuguese cervejaria-style meal available during the stadium break.
Are stadium and museum tickets included?
Yes. All tickets for paid entrances are included.
What languages are the guides available in?
Live guides are available in English, French, Portuguese, and Spanish.
Is this tour wheelchair accessible?
No, it is not suitable for wheelchair users.
Do you skip the ticket line?
Yes, skip-the-ticket-line entry is included.
































