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Stade de France Behind the Scenes Tour

The player tunnel at the Stade de France is narrower than you expect. Two metres wide, maybe. Fifteen metres long. The walls are blank concrete and the ceiling is low enough that the tallest rugby forwards would need to duck. At the end is a rectangle of green — the pitch, seen from the exact angle that Zidane saw it before the 1998 World Cup final.

I stood there for a minute trying to imagine what it feels like to walk out of this tunnel in front of 80,000 people. Then I walked out, and even with the stadium empty, the scale hit like a wall. Eighty thousand empty seats arranged in a perfect oval, the roof partially retracted to let in the sky, and the pitch immaculate enough that you could see the mowing stripes from the top tier.

Players tunnel entrance leading to stadium pitch
The players’ tunnel is the first stop on the tour and immediately the most atmospheric. The guide gives you a minute to stand at the entrance and look out at the pitch. Even without the roar of the crowd, the transition from dark tunnel to open sky triggers something primal. Sports fans will feel it in their stomach.

The Stade de France behind-the-scenes tour is one of those Paris experiences that nobody puts on their itinerary and everybody wishes they had. At $21 for a 90-minute guided tour, it is cheaper than most museums, more hands-on than any of them, and unexpectedly moving even if you do not care about sport.

This guide covers what you see on the tour, how to book, and why it works even for people who have never watched a rugby match.

Quick Picks

Best value: Stade de France Behind the Scenes Tour (GYG) — around $21, 90 minutes. Over 3,800 reviews. Pitch, tunnel, locker rooms, VIP boxes, press room.

Alternative booking: Same Tour via Viator — around $23, identical experience. Check both for availability on your date.

For tennis fans: Roland-Garros Behind the Scenes — around $26, the home of the French Open. Combine both for a $47 Paris stadium double-header.

Green football pitch inside a stadium
The pitch is maintained to competition standard year-round, even when there is no event scheduled. The groundskeeping team is on-site daily. The grass variety is specifically bred for the Parisian climate and the partial shade created by the roof. When you stand pitchside during the tour, the precision of the surface is the first thing you notice.

What You See on the Tour

The behind-the-scenes tour takes you through areas that are completely off-limits to the public during events. A guide leads the group (usually 15-25 people) through the following stops over 90 minutes.

The Players’ Tunnel

You enter the pitch through the same tunnel the players use. The guide explains the pre-match rituals — how the teams line up, where the captains meet for the coin toss, and how the tunnel acoustics amplify the crowd noise from the stands above.

The Pitch

You walk on the actual pitch. Not a viewing platform, not behind a rope — on the grass. The guide takes you to the centre circle and invites you to look around at all 80,000 seats from the position where the kick-off happens. For sports fans, this is the highlight of the entire tour.

Empty stadium panoramic view of seating tiers
Standing on the pitch and looking up at 80,000 empty seats is an experience in scale that no photograph can convey. The upper tier feels impossibly far away. The roof curves overhead like a metal sky. And the silence of an empty stadium is its own kind of drama — you can almost hear the ghosts of past crowds.

The Locker Rooms

Both home and away dressing rooms are included in the tour. The home room is larger and better equipped — a psychological advantage that the guide explains was deliberate. You see the treatment tables, the ice baths, the tactical boards, and the benches where players sat before walking out to face 80,000 people.

Sports stadium locker room
The locker rooms are surprisingly intimate for a stadium this size. Each player’s spot is a simple bench with a locker above. The whiteboard where the coach drew the final tactical instructions is still on the wall. The guide tells stories about specific matches — what happened in this room before famous victories and defeats.

The VIP and Presidential Areas

The tour includes the VIP suites and the Presidential tribune — the section reserved for heads of state during major events. The view from these seats is, unsurprisingly, the best in the house. The guide explains the security arrangements for presidential visits and the protocol for welcoming world leaders to football matches.

The Press Room

The post-match press conference room where coaches and players face the media. You can sit in the hot seat and pretend you just won the Champions League final. Most visitors take this photo opportunity seriously. Some take it very seriously.

Football stadium tour interior view
The press room has the backdrop boards, the microphones, and the camera positions exactly as they appear on television. The guide will let you sit at the podium and take photos. It is cheesy and everyone does it. The resulting photo is always worth more than you expect.

The Tour

Stade de France Behind the Scenes Tour — $21

Stade de France behind the scenes tour
The tour starts from the museum area on the north side of the stadium. The guide meets the group, gives a brief history of the Stade de France, and then leads you through the restricted areas for 90 minutes. The pace is comfortable — there is time to take photos at every stop and ask questions.

A 90-minute guided tour of France’s national stadium. You see the pitch, walk through the players’ tunnel, visit the locker rooms, sit in the VIP boxes, and experience the press conference room. The guide covers the history of the stadium (built for the 1998 World Cup in just 31 months) and the major events it has hosted — World Cup finals, Champions League finals, Rugby World Cups, and concerts by everyone from the Rolling Stones to Beyonce.

One reviewer described it as a good experience, educational, but noted the lack of free souvenirs and wished for photo opportunities with trophy replicas. That is a fair expectation for a sports tour — the experience itself is excellent, but the merchandising is minimal. The stadium shop near the entrance sells official memorabilia if you want tangible souvenirs.

At $21, this is one of the cheapest guided experiences in Paris. The value is exceptional — 90 minutes of exclusive access to areas that cost hundreds of euros on match days. For families with sports-mad children, this is a guaranteed hit.

Stade de France Tour via Viator — $23

Stade de France behind the scenes guided tour
The Viator version of the same tour runs at different time slots and occasionally has availability when the GYG listing is sold out. The content is identical — same guides, same route, same 90-minute format. The price difference of a couple of dollars either way varies by date.

This is the same behind-the-scenes tour booked through Viator instead of GetYourGuide. The experience is identical — same stadium, same guides, same stops. The reason to check both platforms is availability: if your preferred date is sold out on one, it may still have slots on the other.

At $23 per person (prices fluctuate slightly between platforms), it is the same exceptional value. Some visitors prefer Viator for its loyalty points or because they already have an account. Either platform works — what matters is getting the booking confirmed for a non-event day.

Roland-Garros Stadium Behind the Scenes — $26

Roland-Garros tennis stadium behind the scenes tour
If you are a tennis fan or want to see a second iconic French stadium, Roland-Garros is 20 minutes south of the Stade de France by metro. The clay courts, the players’ facilities, and the museum covering the history of the French Open make this a natural companion to the Stade de France tour.

For sports fans who want to do more than one stadium, the Roland-Garros behind-the-scenes tour covers the home of the French Open. At $26 for 90 minutes, the format mirrors the Stade de France tour — you see the courts (including Philippe-Chatrier), the locker rooms, the press area, and the museum.

Combining both stadiums in one day is entirely possible: Stade de France in the morning (Saint-Denis, north Paris), metro to Roland-Garros in the afternoon (Auteuil, west Paris). Two of France’s most iconic sporting venues, two behind-the-scenes tours, for under $50 total. For sports fans, that is a perfect Paris day.

Stadium crowd during a match in Paris
On match days the Stade de France transforms from a silent monument into the loudest place in Paris. 80,000 voices singing La Marseillaise before a France international is one of the great sporting experiences in Europe. The behind-the-scenes tour gives you an appreciation for the architecture that makes that noise possible — the acoustics were specifically engineered to amplify crowd sound.

A Brief History of the Stade de France

The Stade de France was built in Saint-Denis, just north of Paris, specifically for the 1998 FIFA World Cup. Construction began in 1995 and was completed in January 1998 — an astonishing 31 months from groundbreaking to the first event. The project cost around $450 million.

The stadium holds 80,698 spectators, making it the largest in France and the fifth-largest in Europe. The design features a distinctive elliptical roof that covers all seats but leaves the pitch open to the sky. The roof can be partially retracted to increase natural light for grass growth.

On July 12, 1998, France beat Brazil 3-0 in the World Cup final here. Zinedine Zidane scored twice with headers. The stadium erupted. Two million people celebrated on the Champs-Elysees. It remains the most significant sporting event in French history and the moment that defined the Stade de France in the national consciousness.

Since then, the stadium has hosted six Champions League finals, the 2007 Rugby World Cup, the 2024 Olympic athletics events, and hundreds of concerts. It is the default venue for France’s home internationals in football and rugby.

Stadium floodlights illuminated at night
The floodlighting system at the Stade de France uses 456 projectors that together produce enough light to illuminate a small town. On match nights, the glow is visible from across northern Paris. The tour guide will point out the control room where the lighting, sound, and video boards are managed — it looks like a NASA mission control for sport.
Athletics running track in stadium
During the 2024 Paris Olympics, the Stade de France hosted the athletics events. A temporary track was installed over the football pitch. The Olympic legacy is referenced on the tour — the guide shows you where the finish line was positioned and tells stories from the Games. For visitors who watched the Olympics on television, standing on the actual track adds a tangible dimension to those memories.

Who Is This Tour For?

The obvious answer is sports fans. If you have ever watched a France football or rugby match on television, standing on the pitch where it happened is a genuine thrill. The tour is designed for fans first — the stops are the places that matter in the narrative of a match, and the guide tells stories that connect the empty spaces to their loudest moments.

But the less obvious answer is families. Children aged 6-15 love this tour. They get to walk on a real pitch, sit in the locker rooms, stand at the press conference podium, and run through the tunnel. It is physical, interactive, and short enough (90 minutes) that nobody gets bored. Unlike museums where children are told to be quiet and not touch anything, the stadium tour invites you to touch, sit, stand, and imagine.

Architecture enthusiasts will also find value here. The Stade de France was a significant engineering project — the roof structure, the acoustic design, the sightline calculations, and the flexible configuration that allows the same space to host football, rugby, athletics, and concerts. The guide covers the technical aspects for those who ask.

The one group this tour is NOT ideal for: people with no interest in sport, architecture, or modern history, and no children to entertain. If you are in Paris for art and food, the $21 and 90 minutes are better spent elsewhere. For everyone else, this is one of the best-value experiences in the city.

Events at the Stade de France

If you want to see the stadium full rather than empty, check the event calendar before your trip. France’s home football matches (usually 2-3 per window), Six Nations rugby (January-March), and Top 14 rugby finals are the regular sporting fixtures. Concert tours by major artists (Coldplay, Taylor Swift, The Weeknd) typically include Stade de France dates.

Tickets for France internationals start around 30-40 euros for the upper tiers. Six Nations rugby tickets are harder to get but the atmosphere is arguably better — rugby crowds at the Stade de France are famously passionate. Concert tickets vary wildly by artist.

If an event falls during your visit, consider going to both — the behind-the-scenes tour in the morning and the event in the evening. Seeing the stadium empty and then full on the same day is the complete experience.

Paris stadium match day crowd
Match day at the Stade de France is a different world from the behind-the-scenes tour. 80,000 voices, flares in the fan sections, the roar when the teams emerge from the tunnel you walked through that morning. The contrast between the empty stadium silence and the full stadium chaos is what makes doing both so rewarding.
Athletics stadium running track
The Stade de France is versatile enough to host track and field events by laying a temporary surface over the football pitch. The 2024 Olympic athletics events were held here, and the legacy of that fortnight is still fresh — the tour guide references specific moments from the Games and shows you where they happened.
Rugby match at stadium in France
The Six Nations matches at the Stade de France are some of the best sporting occasions in Europe. French rugby fans bring a warmth and passion that even rival fans admire. The pre-match singing of La Marseillaise by 80,000 voices is one of those experiences that makes the hairs on your neck stand up — and the behind-the-scenes tour shows you the stage where it happens.
Sports trophy display museum
The trophy area in the museum section includes replicas and memorabilia from the stadium’s greatest moments. The 1998 World Cup features prominently, as does the 2024 Olympics. One reviewer wished for more interactive elements and photo opportunities with trophies — a reasonable suggestion that the stadium may add in future. For now, the real trophy is the stadium itself.

Practical Information

Location: Saint-Denis, about 9km north of central Paris. Not in the city centre, but easily accessible by metro. The journey from most central Paris hotels takes 25-35 minutes door to door.

Getting there: Metro Line 13 to Saint-Denis — Porte de Paris, then a 10-minute walk. RER B and D also serve Saint-Denis. On match days, follow the crowd — the route from the station is obvious.

Tour schedule: Tours run daily except on event days (when the stadium is being prepared). Check the schedule before booking — if a concert or match is happening that day, the tour will be cancelled. The GYG booking allows free cancellation for this reason.

Duration: 90 minutes, including a brief museum area at the start.

Language: Tours are offered in French and English. The English tours typically run at specific times — check when booking.

Children: Excellent for children aged 6 and up. Younger children may lose interest during the history sections. The pitch access and locker rooms are universally popular.

Accessibility: The tour is wheelchair accessible throughout, including pitch access via ramp.

Sports museum trophy display
The museum area at the start of the tour covers the stadium’s construction and the major events it has hosted. The display includes memorabilia from the 1998 World Cup, rugby internationals, and Olympic events. It is compact but well-curated — 15 minutes gives you the context you need before entering the stadium proper.
Football fans celebrating in crowd
The atmosphere at the Stade de France during a France match is something the behind-the-scenes tour can only hint at. But standing in the empty stadium and knowing that 80,000 people were here last week, singing and screaming, gives the silence a weight that is its own kind of experience.
Panoramic view of empty stadium seating
The upper tier at the Stade de France is 45 metres above the pitch. From the top row, the players look like figurines. From the bottom row of the upper tier, you can see every blade of grass. The tour takes you to various levels so you can experience the perspective shift. The premium seats at pitch level are where the money sits. The atmosphere sits everywhere else.
Green football pitch in stadium
The pitch at the Stade de France has been the stage for some of the most significant moments in European sport. Zidane’s headers in ’98. Hines Ward catching a touchdown in a rare NFL game. Usain Bolt’s heirs running the 100m at the Olympics. The grass does not know any of this. It just grows, perfectly, day after day, waiting for the next moment.
Saint-Denis architecture near Paris
Saint-Denis itself is worth a brief exploration before or after the stadium tour. The Basilica of Saint-Denis — a 10-minute walk from the stadium — is where French kings are buried and is considered the first Gothic building in the world. The contrast between the 12th-century basilica and the 1998 stadium, both in the same suburb, spans the entire history of French public architecture.
Stadium players tunnel view to pitch
The last view before you leave: looking back down the tunnel toward the pitch. The rectangle of green, the arc of seats, the slice of sky above the open roof. You came in as a tourist. You leave understanding why athletes describe walking out of tunnels as the moment their careers become real.

Combine the Stade de France With These Experiences

The Stade de France is in Saint-Denis, north of Paris, which makes it easy to combine with a morning in the city. Take the tour in the morning, then metro back to central Paris for an afternoon at the Louvre or a Seine river cruise.

For sports fans making a pilgrimage, pair the stadium tour with the Pantheon — where France buries its national heroes — for a day that covers both sporting and cultural greatness. Or end the day with dinner at the Eiffel Tower for a view that is the only thing in Paris more impressive than the inside of the Stade de France.

Rugby stadium in France
The Stade de France hosts both football and rugby internationals, plus concerts, athletics, and one-off events. The versatility of the venue is part of what the tour explains — how the pitch is reconfigured, how the seating is adjusted, and how a football stadium becomes a concert hall and back again within 48 hours. The logistics are fascinating even if you have no interest in sport.
Sports stadium locker room with benches
The away team’s locker room is deliberately smaller and less comfortable than the home room. The guide explains this with a smile — home advantage in international sport starts in the architecture. The door between the two rooms is locked on match days. On tour days, you walk through both and understand why visiting teams sometimes complain about the facilities.
Crowd celebrating at football match
Whether you love football, rugby, athletics, or simply big buildings with interesting stories, the Stade de France tour delivers. It is $21 for 90 minutes of exclusive access to one of the great modern sports venues in Europe. That is less than a museum ticket, more fun than most of them, and a story you will tell long after you have forgotten which paintings you saw at the Louvre.
Stadium floodlights at night
The Stade de France at night, lit up and waiting. On your way back to the metro after the tour, look back at the stadium from across the canal. The roof glows under the floodlights and the scale of the building is even more apparent from the outside. It was built in 31 months. It has stood for 28 years. It will be here long after the last person who watched the 1998 final is gone.
Saint-Denis area architecture
The walk from Saint-Denis metro to the stadium takes you through a neighbourhood that is unpolished and real — a sharp contrast to the manicured tourist districts of central Paris. This is working-class France, multicultural and energetic, and it adds an authenticity to the stadium visit that a central-Paris location could never match. The Stade de France was built here deliberately, to bring investment and pride to a community that needed both.
Inside a football stadium tour
The interior of the Stade de France was designed to maximise both noise and intimacy. Despite holding 80,000 people, the steep seating angle means every seat feels closer to the action than the numbers suggest. The architect Michel Macary wanted a “wall of people” effect — where the crowd feels like it is pressing in on the pitch. Standing in the bowl during the tour, you understand he succeeded.