Everton supporters are being given information about the different stands at the Blues’ new stadium to shape their decisions for season ticket choices
Everton season ticket holders are being given information this week on each of the stands at the new stadium to help make their seating choices when they move to the Blues’ future home. Everton are currently playing their final season at Goodison Park, the first purpose-built football ground in England, where they have been based since 1892.
After 135 years in Walton – an area where the club are determined to maintain community links with a series of buildings and schemes remaining after the team relocate, including the Goodison Park Legacy Project – the Blues are making the two-mile journey to Vauxhall on the Mersey waterfront with a switch to the 52,888 capacity stadium at Bramley-Moore Dock for the start of the 2025/26 campaign.
Throughout this week, Everton are releasing information on each of the stands at the new stadium, helping and informing season ticket members make their choices.
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On Monday, the club began a journey that will help supporters learn more about the different stands at Everton Stadium and what they have to offer. The information and online tools the club will provide between now and the Season Ticket sales period opening in January 2025 will aid Season Ticket Members in making an informed decision about where they would like to sit at their new home.
This includes details about how fans will access each stand, the facilities available, and the unobstructed pitch views on offer right across the stadium. Information about accessibility, which is a key feature at Everton Stadium, has also been released.
Everton Stadium will be the most accessible club stadium in the country, with supporters catered for in all stands on multiple levels. Lifts will give supporters designated platforms at varying elevations of the bowl, providing a far greater matchday offering for wheelchair users and their companions.
There is also a 320% increase in the number of easy access (366) and amenity seats (310) compared to Goodison Park, while a sensory box, sensory room, two quiet rooms, eight faith rooms and three changing places facilities are among the features that will revolutionise the matchday experience for thousands of supporters. Public lifts will give full access at all levels and all accessible platforms are step-free.
Inclusivity is a key factor in the design, with more wheelchair bays (279) than any other English club stadium, representing a 30% uplift from Goodison Park. Everton Stadium will be fully accessible from the moment that spectators enter through the Regent Road gates.
The plaza provides a spacious and level area to meet, eat and drink with friends and family pre-match. The plaza leads the way to all stands with 19 accessible lifts across the stadium, offering access to all levels plus all bars, restaurants and experiences.
Throughout the stadium there are 58 accessible toilets, 20 gender neutral toilets, and, in the family stand, a family toilet. All 137 male and female toilet blocks also have an enlarged cubicle for ambulant disabled supporters while there are 95 baby changing facilities across the stadium.
After this week’s announcements, as part of the next stage of content to help supporters inform their decision-making, the club will be launching Virtual Venue, an online tool that will allow Evertonians to check out and compare the pitch views from different areas of the stadium.
- To stay informed, fans can go to evertonfc.com/Season2526. Supporters can also find answers to Frequently Asked Questions by visiting the club’s dedicated Everton Stadium FAQs here.