If you’re from overseas or outside London and want to expand your horizons beyond Arsenal, Spurs or Chelsea, then here are some alternatives for your London football weekend. It’s definitely worth exploring the other London football clubs. Pic: Graffito at Dulwich Hamlet.
Home tickets at London’s big three football clubs – Arsenal, Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur – can be tough to come by and can be costly, even for a match against less attractive opposition.
The best way to access these clubs is mid-week early season for European group matches or League Cup fixtures. For the League Cup, you may well see a B-team.
However, there is plenty more football to be seen in London for less money and often with a much better atmosphere.
Here are the best of the other football clubs that London has to offer:
The Hammers moved out of their Boleyn Ground (Upton Park) home at the end of Season 2015-16 and now play at the former Olympic Stadium, now the London Stadium. Its capacity nudges an impressive 60,000, putting West Ham among Europe’s top ten most-visited clubs.
Stratford is well connected to Central London via the Central Line and overland from Liverpool Street station. Check out our post on how to visit West Ham United.
More info: www.whufc.com
There’s never a dull moment for Crystal Palace fans. The club is currently a mid-table Premier League outfit, but traditionally The Eagles have fluctuated between the top two tiers of English football.
Crystal Palace FC is based in Selhurst, in the seemingly endless, green-and-grey of South London suburbia. The tight 26,000-capacity Selhurst Park stadium fills up when the big teams visit but you should be able to get a ticket to other games. Selhurst Park is a proper old-fashioned English red brick stadium, so you are guaranteed good football, an authentic London experience and – unlike so many all-seater English grounds – a decent atmosphere.
The Holmesdale Stand has its own ‘ultras’, the ‘Holmesdale Fanatics’.
More info: www.cpfc.co.uk
Arguably the most scenic ground in English football, any lover of football tradition should make a pilgrimage to Craven Cottage. The vintage Victorian Johnny Haynes stand contains wooden seating, and there really is a cottage in one corner. Unfortunately, the infamous statue of Michael Jackson – who once attended a match here as a guest of then-owner Mohamed Al-Fayed – has gone.
Craven Cottage is right next to the River Thames. During a lull in the action on the pitch, your attention will be drawn towards the rowboats and wildlife on the water.
Tickets are easy to come by except for West London derbies against Queens Park Rangers or Brentford, or cup matches against bigger teams.
More info: www.fulhamfc.com
Rangers’ big spending is over and the Super Hoops are back at their natural level – an upper/middle second-tier club. However, there is nothing quite like a night match at Loftus Road under the lights. The atmosphere in the Ellerslie Road stand can be pumping, although you compromise with the odd pylon blocking your view of a potentially crucial area of the pitch.
For a clear view, sit in the South Africa Road stand. It’s more expensive and far more sedate, but nowhere near as much fun. For more, read our guide on how to visit Queens Park Rangers.
More info: www.qpr.co.uk
Aside from a relative period of calm in the Alan Curbishley years (1990s-2006), Charlton Athletic always seems to have been something of a crisis club. The turmoil spilled over in March 2016 when fans pelted the pitch with beach balls in a protest over ownership.
Back in its spiritual home, The Valley, near the Thames Barrier, it is easy to get tickets for Charlton Athletic. Even when the club was in the Premier League (a distant memory) tickets were reasonably priced and easy to come by.
Charlton’s usually a polite club and it’s easy to tie in a match here with a visit to leafy, historic Greenwich. Here’s more on how to visit Charlton Athletic.
More info: www.cafc.co.uk
Millwall is a million miles away from the bad old days of the 1970s and ‘80s, when it had a massive hooligan problem. The club moved to the attractive all-seater New Den in 1993 and things have calmed down, although there is still an edge.
Millwall FC is fairly central in South Bermondsey, one stop south of London Bridge station.
More info: www.millwallfc.co.uk
You have to respect any club with a pub on each corner of its ground. Brentford is right out in the wilds of West London, across the river from the Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew. Get the train out here because the roads are horrendous.
The Bees moved to a new ground for 2020-21 season. Here’s a retrospective on the old Griffin Park ground, Brentford.
More info: www.brentfordfc.co.uk
Most English football fans will have a soft spot for AFC Wimbledon. The old ‘Crazy Gang’ of Wimbledon – who beat the mighty Liverpool in the FA Cup final of 1988 – eventually were moved to Milton Keynes to become the ‘MK Dons’.
Fans clubbed together and got the new AFC Wimbledon up and running in South-West London, renting non-league Kingstonian’s now-former Kingsmeadow ground as the club rose through the divisions.
Now a football league club, AFC Wimbledon have moved back to the former incarnation’s spiritual home of Plough London, Wimbledon.
More info: www.afcwimbledon.com
Close to West Ham’s new ground at the Olympic Stadium, Leyton Orient’s Matchroom Stadium is as authentic an East London football experience as you could wish for.
Don’t expect a big crowd in this now non-league club or an electric atmosphere here but you will get a whole lot of heart. Leyton Orient is one of those old-fashioned ‘honest’ clubs and makes a change from its more illustrious neighbours. Check out our post on how to visit Leyton Orient.
More info: www.leytonorient.com
Way up in the seemingly endless north-west suburbs, you can visit National League Barnet at The Hive Stadium in Edgware. The Bees used to play at Underhill, a cosy little ground famed for its slope before moving to its new £11 million stadium in 2013.
More info: www.barnetfc.com/
Guess what? There is a fledgling ultra movement in the English non-league! If you want a really interesting experience, get the train to the leafy suburb of East Dulwich. Here, Dulwich Hamlet of the Ryman Premier (seventh tier of English football) attracts a comparatively large and boisterous crowd, led by its ultra group, The Rabble. For more on Dulwich Hamlet, check out our podcast with the Dulwich Hamlet Supporters’ Trust or read our post on how to visit Dulwich Hamlet.
NB: The club is in dispute with its landlord at the time of writing so might play some matches at Tooting & Mitcham United‘s ground – check the club website for updates. More info: www.dulwichhamletfc.co.uk
Match day at Boca Juniors' famous La Bombonera [Photo: Chris Lee/Outside Write] In November 2024,…
Fulham Lillies, a women-run fan group for supporters of Fulham FC's women's and men's sides…
Pre-match at La Bombonera, home of Boca Juniors [Photo: Vedran Dedic] In this guest post,…
I welcome Alex Ireland back onto the podcast to discuss his new book on Manchester…
My guest is David Proudlove, whose new book Work and Play: The Industrial Roots of…
Pre-match at Brighton & Hove Albion's Amex Stadium [Photo: Outside Write] My guest is Michael…