REVIEW · MADRID
Atletico de Madrid Stadium Guided Tour
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Football fans, this one feels close-up. Riyadh Air Metropolitano is modern and built for speed, and this guided visit brings you into the stadium’s key spaces with an expert Atlético guide plus a radio guide system. I also like the bilingual guidance (English and Spanish), and one standout I’ve heard named is Jorge, who explains the details in a way that makes the whole place click.
One possible drawback to plan for: access can shift on match weeks and event days, and the tour can run in multiple languages, which may mean waiting while the guide repeats key explanations.
In This Review
- Key highlights at a glance
- Riyadh Air Metropolitano: the modern stadium tour that feels like matchday
- Getting started at the stadium: what you’ll do in the first few minutes
- Presidential Box and the press spaces: where the power sits
- Dressing room access: understanding what players actually feel
- Territorio Atleti Museum: trophies, milestones, and why the club identity sticks
- What the radio system changes (and why it’s worth it)
- Price and value: is $52.81 worth your time?
- Best for who: the right match for your travel style
- A realistic heads-up: changes, multilingual groups, and how to handle them
- Should you book the Atlético stadium guided tour?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How long is the Atlético de Madrid stadium guided tour?
- Where does the tour start?
- What time does the tour start?
- Is admission included?
- What’s included besides admission?
- Do I need to print a ticket?
- What areas of the stadium will you visit?
- Is food or drink included?
- Is hotel pickup or drop-off included?
- Can I cancel for free?
Key highlights at a glance

- Presidential Box + press and player spaces: You don’t just look from the stands.
- Territorio Atleti museum entry: Club trophies and milestones are part of the route.
- Radio guide system: You’ll hear the commentary clearly in big echoey areas.
- Bilingual guide experience (English and Spanish): Built for mixed groups.
- Small group size (max 30): Easier to follow the guide and ask questions.
Riyadh Air Metropolitano: the modern stadium tour that feels like matchday

Riyadh Air Metropolitano is the kind of stadium where you can tell it was designed for modern football—clear lines, big sightlines, and spaces that feel practical, not just flashy. This tour is timed for a tight visit (about 1 hour 30 minutes), so instead of wasting time on long transfers or vague “walk and look” moments, you get guided access to the areas most people never see up close.
The vibe here isn’t only about architecture. The guide keeps connecting what you’re seeing to how a match actually runs: where media sits, how teams move behind the scenes, and how the club frames its identity. You’ll get a mobile ticket, and that matters because it reduces hassle at the start. And with a radio system included, you can focus on the tour rather than craning your neck to hear.
One smart practical point: this is a guided loop that starts at Riyadh Air Metropolitano, Av. de Luis Aragonés 4, and ends back at the meeting point. If you’re planning lunch or another stop afterward, you can treat it like a compact slot in your Madrid day.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Madrid
Getting started at the stadium: what you’ll do in the first few minutes
When you arrive near the meeting point, you’ll link up with the group and get oriented for the route. The start time is 11:45 am, so give yourself a little cushion. Stadium areas can have foot traffic, and the group size is capped at 30, which is large enough to keep it lively but small enough to stay organized.
This is also one of those tours where you’ll feel the benefit of structure: you’re not wandering freely. You follow the guide from room to room, and you’ll get explanations right as you’re looking at the relevant space. That’s how you make the tour land, especially if your Spanish is limited and the commentary is coming in both English and Spanish.
If you’re traveling with kids, keep one thing in mind. Admission staff may ask for official documentation to confirm a child’s age. If you don’t have it, you may need to pay the difference toward an adult rate.
Presidential Box and the press spaces: where the power sits

The tour is designed to show you high-impact rooms first, and two of the most interesting stops are the Presidential Box and the press areas. These spaces tell you a lot about how a club thinks about image and communication.
In the Presidential Box, you get the sense of ceremony—this is where you’d expect VIP guests and senior figures to watch the game with clear sightlines and a more formal view of the pitch. Even if you’re not a celebrity watcher, it helps you understand why stadium design isn’t only about fans. It’s also about hierarchy and optics.
Then the press room brings you into the information side of matchday. This is where the club and media intersect, and the guide’s soccer-focused background matters here. You’ll hear how these spaces connect to the broader rhythm of the competition: pre-match media, post-match reactions, and the way coverage gets shaped from inside the stadium.
Tip for your photos: lighting can change fast as you move from public corridors into more controlled rooms. If you want clean shots, take a minute to steady your framing before the group moves on.
Dressing room access: understanding what players actually feel

Next comes one of the parts that most people come for: the team dressing room area. This is the section that tends to make the stadium feel real, because it brings you from viewing a match to imagining what leads up to it.
You’re not there to rehearse a Hollywood scene. You’re there to see how the stadium organizes preparation space and movement. The guide typically points out details that help you visualize a player’s path: the way you’d enter, the cues you’d follow, and the practical layout that supports routine on game days.
I like that the tour doesn’t treat this as a shock-and-awe stop. It’s explained like soccer mechanics. That approach helps even if you’re not a die-hard fan who already knows every club fact. You’ll come away with a clearer picture of how a modern club runs.
Keep your expectations grounded: you’re touring controlled areas as part of a schedule, not walking freely where players lounge whenever they want. That’s a good thing, because it makes the access meaningful rather than gimmicky.
Territorio Atleti Museum: trophies, milestones, and why the club identity sticks

After the stadium spaces, you move into Territorio Atleti, the club museum. This is where the tour gives you context, and it’s also where you’ll get the most “stay curious” moment. Instead of only pointing at objects, the museum route connects those objects to the story of Atlético’s red-and-white identity.
One standout highlight is the trophy display. You’ll see achievements going back through the club’s milestones, including the La Liga trophy for 2020–2021. That detail matters because it anchors your visit in something concrete. It’s not just framed photos and generic timelines. You’re looking at visible proof of success, explained in a way that’s meant for fans and casual visitors alike.
If you’re the kind of traveler who likes sports museums, this section is a strong payoff. The pacing works because you already saw behind-the-scenes stadium rooms. Then the museum helps you understand what those rooms represent: the club culture, the competition journey, and the moments Atlético built into its identity.
If you don’t know Atlético’s full backstory yet, don’t worry. The tour approach is guided and focused, so you’re not thrown into the deep end with details you don’t have time to process.
What the radio system changes (and why it’s worth it)

A simple thing, but it affects your whole experience: the tour includes a radio guide system. Stadium interiors can be loud or echo-heavy, especially when groups are moving.
With radio, you’re more likely to follow the guide’s explanations without constantly asking other people to repeat themselves. And that means you’ll actually enjoy the tour instead of spending it trying to catch snippets through noise. For mixed-language groups, it also helps you understand what’s being said when the commentary shifts between English and Spanish.
If you’re sensitive to sound or you wear hearing aids, this is often a big plus. Even if you don’t, it makes the tour feel smoother and less stressful.
Price and value: is $52.81 worth your time?

At $52.81 per person for about 1 hour 30 minutes, this tour sits in the “reasonable for a guided sports experience” zone—especially because admission is included.
Here’s what you’re paying for in practical terms:
- A bilingual guide specialized in soccer with access to high-interest stadium areas
- Admission to Riyadh Air Metropolitano Stadium and the Atleti Museum
- A radio guide system
- A small group cap that keeps the experience organized
You’re also not paying extra for the big items that matter: stadium access and museum entry. So if you were planning to do both anyway, the cost feels more justified.
Where value can vary for you: if you mainly want the pitch-level experience, note that the tour content can depend on on-site setup and access rules. In rare cases, certain stadium elements may not be available due to events. That’s not something you can fully control as a visitor, but it’s smart to book this with flexible expectations.
Best for who: the right match for your travel style

This tour is a great fit if you:
- Want a guided sports experience that’s focused, not random
- Appreciate museum context alongside stadium access
- Like learning how football clubs operate behind the scenes
- Prefer a compact time slot in your Madrid schedule
It also works well if you’re traveling with teens or family who enjoy sports but don’t want a full match or a long day. The pacing is short and guided, and the museum gives a break from walking while keeping the story going.
If you only care about one specific stadium highlight—like direct pitch access—you should treat this as a tour of key spaces plus museum time, not a guaranteed goal-line experience. The modern stadium is the star, and the tour shows you the rooms that explain it.
A realistic heads-up: changes, multilingual groups, and how to handle them
Two practical considerations can affect how smooth the tour feels.
First, stadium operations can change because of events and setups. If the venue needs space for something else, certain areas may not be available. That’s the risk of touring any major stadium. Your best move is to arrive with patience and assume the guide will adapt the route on the day.
Second, the tour can run in more than one language. Since the guide is bilingual (English and Spanish), mixed groups may lead to repeated explanations at key stops. If you’re planning your day tightly, build in a bit of buffer rather than expecting a perfectly minute-by-minute flow.
To make this easier on yourself, show up ready to listen and don’t treat repetition as wasted time. When the guide explains a space clearly once, you usually get the extra benefit of hearing it in another way.
Should you book the Atlético stadium guided tour?
I’d book it if you want a structured, high-value look at Atlético de Madrid’s home base: modern stadium spaces plus the Territorio Atleti museum, all in about 1.5 hours with a radio system and a bilingual soccer guide.
Skip it or adjust expectations if your top goal is a very specific stadium element that depends on access and on-site setup. Also consider that multilingual pacing can slow the rhythm a bit.
If your ideal Madrid day includes football, museum context, and guided behind-the-scenes rooms, this is an easy yes.
FAQ
FAQ
How long is the Atlético de Madrid stadium guided tour?
It’s approximately 1 hour 30 minutes.
Where does the tour start?
It starts at Riyadh Air Metropolitano, Av. de Luis Aragonés, 4, San Blas-Canillejas, 28022 Madrid, Spain.
What time does the tour start?
The start time is 11:45 am.
Is admission included?
Yes. Admission to Riyadh Air Metropolitano Stadium and the Atleti Museum is included.
What’s included besides admission?
You get a bilingual guide specialized in soccer (English and Spanish) and a radio guide system.
Do I need to print a ticket?
No. You’ll use a mobile ticket.
What areas of the stadium will you visit?
The tour includes privileged areas such as the Presidential Box, the team’s dressing room, and the press room.
Is food or drink included?
No. Food, drinks, and other services are not included unless specified.
Is hotel pickup or drop-off included?
No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.
Can I cancel for free?
Yes. You can cancel for a full refund if you cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience’s start time.




























