Man United fans slam 35 per cent price hike for FA Cup final tickets

Supporters will have to pay up to €165 for May showpiece as English FA raise prices

Manchester United fans and players  celebrate Alexis Sanchez’s equaliser at Wembley. Photograph: Adam Davy/PA
Manchester United fans and players celebrate Alexis Sanchez’s equaliser at Wembley. Photograph: Adam Davy/PA

The raising of FA Cup final ticket prices by up to 35 per cent by the English Football Association has been branded "extortionate" by the official Manchester United supporters' trust.

The increase in ticket costs apart from in the lowest category four band for United's meeting with Chelsea has been met by dismay by MUST. Category four had the lowest allocation of 10,057 and 10,144 seats for the 2016 and 2017 finals respectively, so the same can be expected for the game at Wembley on May 19th. Those tickets cost £45 (€51).

Duncan Drasdo, MUST’s CEO, told the Guardian: “Freezing the lowest ticket price category is a token gesture which will benefit only a small minority of our supporters. These price increases further illustrate the longstanding issue we have with the FA as both regulator of the game as well as the worst offender when it comes to extortionate ticket prices for fans.

“Ordinary fans should not be punished for the FA’s previous poor financial decisions over Wembley redevelopment. Football ticket pricing is not an ordinary competitive market. It is a monopoly and the FA, as the game’s regulatory body, should be setting an example by rewarding fans’ loyalty. The decision to raise prices to the highest levels ever defies belief.”

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Andy Ambler, the governing body’s director of professional game relations, told the FA’s website: “It’s always important to remember that the FA is a not-for-profit organisation where every pound and penny of profit is reinvested back into every level of football in England. If you’re buying a ticket for the final you are directly investing in the future of the game in this country.”

Although the allocations for each category are yet to be released, the numbers for the past two finals indicate category two is almost certain to have the most available tickets, and it is this band that has the highest price increase.

In 2016 and 2017 there were 27,578 and 27,289 category two tickets respectively and they cost £85 (€97). The equivalent tickets for this season’s final are priced at £115 (€130), the cost of the most expensive seats in the previous two years, which is a rise of 35%.

Category one tickets, of which there were 13,471 and 13,641 in 2016 and 2017, are now £145 (€165), a £30 or 26% hike. Category three had an allocation of 19,760 and 18,944 and has risen £5 from £65 (74) to £70 (€80).

After meeting with supporters’ groups of United and Chelsea plus the other two semi-finalists, Tottenham Hotspur and Southampton, the FA announced that prices for concession seats for the final would be £25 (€28) cheaper than the full-price equivalents in categories one and two – up from £10 (€11) cheaper – and that those in categories three and four would have a £10 saving, in line with last year.

Each club will get more than 28,000 tickets for the final, which will be refereed by Michael Oliver.

The game’s 5.15pm kick-off should allow fans returning to Manchester to catch the final train from London at 10.10pm even if there is extra-time and penalties.

(Guardian service)