What the Camp Nou Experience Looks Like Right Now
FC Barcelona's home ground has been under a major renovation since 2023, and the traditional Camp Nou tour (pitch-side access, the dressing rooms, the player tunnel) is off the table until the work finishes in 2027. What you can visit today is the Barça Immersive Tour: the FC Barcelona museum, an audio guide in 13 languages, the Spotify Camp Nou Live 360° immersive room, and a construction viewpoint overlooking the Espai Barça works in progress. No pitch. No changing rooms. No tunnel walk.
The entry ticket starts from €33.10 on Tiqets. Whether that buys you a good afternoon depends entirely on who you are.
Worth It If You Are a Football Fan
If you follow Barça, the museum alone justifies the ticket. The collection spans the club's history from 1899 to the present: trophies, Catalan football heritage, and artefacts covering the Champions League era through to the current squad. The Spotify Camp Nou Live room is a proper 360° audiovisual show that puts you inside the noise and colour of a match day at the football stadium; Barcelona FC supporters rate it as one of the best parts of the visit. Book the Total Experience tier and you also get the Robokeeper challenge (three shots against a robotic goalkeeper that dives on sensors and hydraulics), plus a full players experience with VR and digital memory photos. The Robokeeper is harder than it looks, and genuinely fun.
Budget about 90 minutes, book tickets online to skip the queue, and go on a weekday morning when tour groups are thinner. The museum is well designed, and the audio guide lets you move at your own pace.
Local tip
The construction viewpoint is worth a few minutes even if you are not a football fan. You are watching one of Europe’s great stadiums being rebuilt from the ground up. This particular construction viewpoint closes permanently the day the renovation ends. No other attraction in Barcelona right now offers this.
Tuesday or Wednesday mornings are quietest. Weekend visiting can feel rushed, with crowds making it hard to stop and read the display panels properly.
Not Worth It? Who Should Skip Visiting Camp Nou
If football is not part of your Barcelona trip, skip it. At €33.10 per adult for a 90-minute visit with no pitch access, you will not get enough for the money compared to what else Barcelona offers. The Picasso Museum costs around €12 and delivers far more depth for the money. The Articket Barcelona pass gets you into six major museums for €38.
Families with young children should also weigh it carefully. The immersive room is impressive, but much of the museum is text-heavy display panels that hold attention better for adults and older teens who already care about the club's history. A trip to Park Güell or the Barcelona Aquarium will land better with under-10s.
Already visited Camp Nou before the renovation? The current experience is a reduced version. The full stadium tour, with the tunnel, the bench-side walk, and the panoramic view from the stands, returns when construction completes in 2027. If you can come back then, that version will be worth a lot more.
| Ticket | Includes | Price from (Tiqets) |
|---|---|---|
| Entry Ticket | Museum, audio guide, immersive room, viewpoint | €33.10 |
| Flexible Entry Ticket | Same, valid until 30 Sept 2026 | €40.10 |
| Total Experience | All above + Robokeeper + VR + digital photos | €57.10 |
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you still visit Camp Nou during the renovation?
Yes. The FC Barcelona museum, the Spotify Camp Nou Live 360° immersive room, and a construction viewpoint are all open daily. The pitch, dressing rooms, and stadium tour areas are closed until the full renovation finishes, currently expected in 2027.
How long do you need at the Camp Nou museum?
Plan for about 90 minutes. The museum takes 45–60 minutes at a comfortable pace; the immersive show and construction viewpoint add another 30 minutes.
When does the full Camp Nou stadium tour return?
The full Camp Nou experience, including pitch-side access, changing rooms, and the tunnel walk, is expected to return when the Espai Barça renovation completes. The current completion target is 2027.
Is it worth booking Camp Nou tickets in advance?
Yes. Booking online through Tiqets or the official FC Barcelona site lets you skip the queue at the entrance. The museum gets busy on weekends and during peak summer months, so advance booking online saves time and guarantees your slot.
What metro station is closest to Camp Nou?
The nearest stations are Palau Reial and Maria Cristina, both on Line 3 (green line). Either is about a 10–15 minute walk from the museum entrance at C/ Arístides Mallol s/n.