logo
How do you get your hands on All Ireland final tickets?

How do you get your hands on All Ireland final tickets?

RTÉ News​11-07-2025
Analysis: All you need to know about where those 82,006 tickets for Croke Park go on All Ireland final day
As we approach the two biggest and busiest days in the GAA calendar, the hunt is on for All Ireland final tickets. With Cork meeting Tipperary in the hurling final and the football finalists to be decided this weekend, more than 160,000 spectators are expected to descend on Croke Park across the two finals later this month. 'The All Ireland final is the most coveted ticket of the year,' says Dr Siobhán Doyle, historian, author of A History of the GAA in 100 Objects and a curator at the National Museum of Ireland.
But unlike the rest of the season, tickets for the two finals don't go on general sale to the public. So how can you secure your spot at game day? This is how it works.
Every year the GAA allocates more than 82,000 tickets to various bodies across the country. Figures from 2024 show over 10,000 of them were earmarked for corporate and premium, while around 12,000 were distributed across smaller entities, like Croke Park Residents, staff, referees, press, overseas groups, camogie, ladies football, and so on. The remaining, and largest, chunk are allocated to supporters through the county boards, with the competing counties receiving the most significant allocations. These are then filtered down to their clubs and subsequently the club members, with clubs offering tickets to members through a draw.
It follows that the best chance you can give yourself to nab a golden ticket is by being a GAA member or buying a season ticket at the start of the season. Some might be tempted to argue that tickets to the finals should be put on general sale, but there's a good reason the GAA has stuck to its guns on that front.
The GAA will always maintain a grassroots stance of wanting to give back to the people in the clubs and counties, says Doyle. 'We've seen what happens when tickets go on general sale for events that are in huge demand. We've seen the controversy over things like Oasis and the price of tickets, the mayhem and stress that involves.
"You can see both sides for do's and don'ts of general sale, but the GAA would always err on the side of: the All Ireland final day is not just for the two competing counties, it's the whole of Ireland. That's why each club has designated tickets. It's supposed to be a day that's a celebration, a coming to an end of a successful season that is to be celebrated by everyone across the island,' she says. 'But obviously there's going to be more demand from the competing counties."
The process of trying to get a ticket can be hard and stressful. As a club member, you're at the mercy of the draw and demand typically outstrips the club's allocation. After that, the scramble to ask around to anyone you know begins. On a very rare occasion, like in 2016 and 2019, a small amount might end up on general sale.
'From someone that in a previous job has had to deal with a lot of GAA-related queries from the public, there is a lack of understanding of the process of obtaining an All Ireland ticket,' notes Doyle. This is especially true, she says, of counties that are relatively new to All Ireland finals, "counties that are beyond the traditional strongholds that don't qualify as often as, say, Dublin or Kerry in football, or Kilkenny or Tipperary in hurling."
Doyle's advice to anyone desperately looking for a ticket is just let everyone know that you're looking for one. "In some instances, say for example if Tipperary are in a hurling final, you might actually be better off going beyond Tipperary to try get tickets. Contact your cousins in Antrim or contact your work colleagues in Louth, or in Kerry, because there'll be less of a demand for those tickets in clubs than there would be in competing counties.
Since the price hike last year, a ticket will set you back €100 for the stands and €55 for the terrace, which is a €10 and €5 increase respectively on 2023 prices. The price increase was the first since 2019 and the second in 14 years. The cost of attending a final has steadily risen over the last three decades.
CSO figures based on the consumer price index highlight how prices have changed through the years, adjusted for inflation: the All Ireland hurling final between Offaly and Limerick in 1994 cost £9 (€21.60), while the final between Cork and Clare in 2013 cost €80 (€98.64). Meanwhile, the All Ireland football final between Down and Dublin in 1994 also cost £9 (€21.60), but the 2004 final between Kerry and Mayo cost €60 (€83.95). In 2024, tickets to both finals cost €100.
From RTÉ Archives, Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald and cabinet members not issued VIP invitations by GAA to the All Ireland Hurling Final as a protest in 1986
But when you're left sitting at home watching the game on TV, the 10,000 tickets that go to premium and corporate sponsors might be galling to some people. ''There's always going to be the inevitable frustration of the people in corporate boxes on All Ireland final day that haven't been to a match every year, and that's unfortunately the reality of any mega event", says Doyle.
"It's a fair chunk, but at the same time that can be a lot of the bread and butter for the GAA, it's the commercial side of things. I know GAA is all about grassroots and volunteers but it doesn't pay for itself either. If the GAA has to progress and develop and be a commercially attractive association for these companies and sponsors to invest in, you have to schmooze them on All Ireland day.
"Many would argue it's against the ethos of the GAA, but in a modern sporting landscape like this you have to keep up with the commercial side of things as well so you can continue to provide this product at a high level - and by product I mean the stadium, the facilities, the media coverage, the clothing, how it looks and feels, the spectator experience as well. It all feeds into that."
From RTÉ Archives, Demand far greater than supply for the 1984 All Ireland Football Final between Dublin and Kerry
How much are ticket sales worth to the GAA?
Helpfully, the GAA publishes their revenue figures annually, giving us an insight into how valuable ticket sales are to the organisation and local GAA communities. The latest report shows the GAA reported a consolidated revenue of €132.9 million in 2024 with a consolidated surplus of €6.3 million. That figure of €132 million represented an increase of €20.9M in consolidated revenues compared to 2023.
Gate receipts were worth €39.1 million, an increase of €600,000 from 2023, even though League and championship attendances dropped by 10%. The revenue from ticket sales, however, pales in comparison to income from events held at Croke Park. In 2024, the venue generated revenues of €46 million, which was an increase of €15 million on 2023's figures, thanks in part to the six concerts held there last year (Bruce Springsteen, AC/DC, and Coldplay). Meanwhile, commercial income was €24.9 million, an increase of €3 million on 2023.
The GAA also received €13.3 million in state funding, a decease of €1.2 million on 2023. All other income stood at €9.5 million for the year, up €2.8 million from 2023. The report also highlighted that for every euro generated by the GAA, 82 cents was reinvested directly into the development of the Association across clubs, schools, counties, and provinces.
€18.3 million was distributed to county boards, €15.2 million was invested in Coaching and Games Development, €15 million went on match day and competition costs, €10.5 million was invested in capital grants for county and club developments, €9.3 million was invested in Player Welfare, and €6 million went to club supports and sister associations.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tyrone go one better to beat Laois to intermediate title
Tyrone go one better to beat Laois to intermediate title

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Tyrone go one better to beat Laois to intermediate title

All-Ireland women's intermediate football final: Tyrone 2-16 Laois 1-13 Goals in either half from Aoife Horisk and Katie Rose Muldoon proved pivotal as Tyrone edged out Laois by six points to capture the TG4 All-Ireland intermediate title at Croke Park. Having succumbed narrowly to Leitrim in last year's decider, it was Tyrone's turn to celebrate as they finished strongly to secure the Mary Quinn Memorial Cup for the first time since their sole success in 2018. Tyrone enjoyed a 1-7 to 1-5 interval lead, with Horisk's 27th-minute goal cancelling out an equally superb finish from Laois' Shifra Havill four minutes earlier. There was little to separate the teams throughout a nervy second half, but the decisive moment arrived in the 54th minute as Muldoon left Laois goalkeeper Eimear Barry helpless with a shot from close range. READ MORE It was Tyrone who seized the early initiative through points from Sorcha Gormley and Cara McCrossan before Laois struck back to level parity by the fourth minute, courtesy of scores from Jane Moore and Emma Lawlor. Lawlor edged Laois in front in the seventh minute, immediately after Faye McEvoy produced a superb goal line clearance at the opposite end, with parity restored soon after through a Niamh O'Neill free. The sides remained level as Emily Lacey and Aoife Horisk traded points by the end of the first quarter before the Ulster side re-established their two-point advantage thanks to Sláine McCarroll and the lively Gormley. Aoife Horisk scores a goal Tyrone. Photograph: Shauna Clinton/Sportsfile However, their inaccuracy up front undermined their general control as O'Neill placed her shot too close to Eimear Barry in the 22nd minute and that profligacy was punished in an instant as Lawlor worked well in releasing Havill for an emphatic finish to the roof of Amelia Coyle's net. Frustration continued for Tyrone in the 26th minute as Gormley was denied from the penalty spot following a foul on Horisk, but the latter made no mistake a minute later as she drilled home from 10 yards to edge her side two points clear by half-time. Laois wasted little time in getting back on level terms as Mo Nerney and Fiona Dooley both scored within three minutes of the restart. Crucially, Laois were unable to get in front as O'Neill and Horisk responded for Tyrone, with the latter becoming increasingly influential as the contest evolved. The same could be said for Nerney, who added two points in quick succession to bring Laois to within a point by the 43rd minute. However, their momentum stalled 10 minutes from full-time as Ciara Crowley was yellow-carded and O'Neill's subsequent free helped double Tyrone's advantage. The contest was effectively settled as Muldoon followed up well to net after fellow substitute Emer McCanny had been denied and they pulled away by the final whistle thanks to insurance points from O'Neill, Gormley and captain Aoibhinn McHugh. TYRONE: A Coyle; J Lyons, G McKenna, E Quinn; C Campbell, M Mallon, C Canavan; A McHugh (capt, 0-1), S McCarroll (0-1); E McNamee, S Gormley (0-3), A Horisk (1-3, 0-1f); N O'Neill (0-7, 3f), C McCrossan (0-1), M Corrigan. Subs: E McCanny for McCrossan (36 mins), K Muldoon (1-0) for McNamee (45), A McGahan for Campbell (53), C McCaffrey for O'Neill (58), J Barrett for Horisk (59). LAOIS: E Barry; S Farrelly, C Dunne, F McEvoy; A Gorman, A Moore, A Moran (capt); F Dooley (0-1), J Moore (0-1); S Havill (1-0), E Galvin, C Crowley; E Lacey (0-1), E Lawlor (0-5, 3f), M Nerney (0-5, 3f). Subs: L Kearney for Gorman (39 mins), M Cotter for McEvoy (45), K Donoghue for Lacey (47), A Fitzpatrick for Havill (56). Referee: S Curley (Galway).

Louth defeat Antrim to claim Wee County's record fourth junior title
Louth defeat Antrim to claim Wee County's record fourth junior title

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Louth defeat Antrim to claim Wee County's record fourth junior title

All-Ireland women's junior football final: Louth 0-13 Antrim 1-8 Kate Flood kicked four points at Croke Park as Louth held off a stubborn challenge from Antrim to claim a record fourth All-Ireland junior football championship title. It was the Ulster side who initially hit the ground running, with captain Bronagh Devlin superbly drilling a third-minute penalty into the roof of the Louth net after Theresa Mellon was adjudged to have been fouled inside the square off a Maria O'Neill free that dropped short. Mellon followed up with a fine point for the Saffrons and even though Louth, who lost to Fermanagh in last year's junior decider, eventually opened their account through Aoife Russell, Omolara Dahunsi reinforced Antrim's early authority by splitting the posts at the opposite end. Dahunsi also found the range in response to back-to-back points from Russell and Ceire Nolan, but during the temporary absence of Bronagh Devlin for a yellow card offence, the Wee County cut their deficit to the bare minimum with impressive contributions from Flood and Shannen McLaughlin. READ MORE Bronagh Devlin celebrates scoring a goal for Antrim from a penalty. Photograph: Piaras Ó Mídheach/Sportsfile Although Antrim sharpshooter O'Neill was on target not long after Devlin's return, unanswered points by captain Áine Breen and the ever-dependable Flood ensured Louth brought a 0-8 to 1-4 cushion into the interval. Antrim were still very much in the reckoning, however, and were back on level terms with a second point from O'Neill three minutes into the second period, but Eimear Byrne was on hand to restore Louth's slender lead on 38 minutes. An outstanding score from the increasingly-influential Flood left Louth two points to the good moving into the final-quarter and they were a step closer to another junior crown when Breen and substitute Mia Duffy added points. Lucy White subsequently increased Louth's cushion and even though a late surge from Antrim produced three points on the bounce from Ana Mulholland, Mellon and O'Neill's goal-bound effort that was deflected over the bar, the Wee County ultimately prevailed. LOUTH: R Lambe Fagan; R Beirth, E Hand, E Murray; H Lambe Sally, S McLaughlin (0-1), L Byrne; A Breen (capt, 0-2), A Halligan; L White (0-1), E Byrne (0-1), S Matthews; A Russell (0-2), K Flood (0-4), C Nolan (0-1). Subs: M Duffy (0-1) for Matthews (42 mins), L Collins for Russell (56), G McCrave for Lambe Sally, Z Sweeney for White (both 59). ANTRIM: A Devlin; N McIntosh, M Blaney, M Mulholland; S O'Neill, C Brown, C McKenna; A Mulholland (0-1), A Tubridy; T Mellon (0-2), M O'Neill (0-3, 1f), Aoife Kelly; B Devlin (capt, 1-0 pen), O Dahunsi (0-2), L Agnew. Subs: A Turley for Tubridy, A Monaghan for Kelly (both 39 mins), B Nic Cathail for Agnew (47), N Jones for B Devlin, Aine Kelly for McKenna (both 56). Referee: K Corcoran (Mayo).

Dublin v Meath live updates: All-Ireland women's SFC final
Dublin v Meath live updates: All-Ireland women's SFC final

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Dublin v Meath live updates: All-Ireland women's SFC final

2 days ago Hello and welcome to live coverage of the All-Ireland women's senior football final between Meath and Dublin . Throw-in is at 4.15pm. Before that there is the intermediate final between Laois and Tyrone (which is under way) and the junior final saw Louth win the title with a 0-13 to 1-8 win over Antrim. The counties met in this year's Leinster final, when Dublin won by seven points, and the Dubs will go into the game as favourites. Dublin: Abby Shiels; Jess Tobin, Leah Caffrey, Niamh Donlon; Sinéad Goldrick, Martha Byrne, Niamh Crowley; Éilish O'Dowd, Hannah McGinnis; Nicole Owens, Carla Rowe (capt), Orlagh Nolan; Hannah Tyrrell, Niamh Hetherton, Kate Sullivan. Subs: Katie Moran Tighe, Chloe Darby, Sophie McIntyre, Aoife Kane, Aoife Curran, Hannah Leahy, Rebecca McDonnell, Laura Grendon, Annabelle Timothy, Caoimhe O'Connor, Clodagh Fox, Jodi Egan, Ashling Nyhan, Siobhán Birnie, Rachel Hartnett. Additional panel member: Lauren Magee. Meath: Robyn Murray; Áine Sheridan, Mary Kate Lynch, Katie Newe; Aoibhín Cleary (capt), Sarah Wall, Karla Kealy; Orlaith Sheehy, Marion Farrelly; Megan Thynne, Niamh Gallogly, Ciara Smyth; Emma Duggan, Vikki Wall, Kerrie Cole. Subs: Monica McGuirk, Amy Gaffney, Ciara Lawlor, Shauna Ennis, Katie Bermingham, Ella Moyles, Natalie Davitt, Niamh McEntee, Clodagh Millington, Orla Smith, Anna Myles, Tori Foster, Sadhbh O'Muiri, Máire O'Shaughnessy, Aoibheann Corcoran

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store