Anfield stadium
December 15, 2025||Irish Tours|

The Irish Love Affair with Liverpool FC: Why Anfield Feels Like a Home Game

Irish fans do not “adopt” Liverpool as a club. They inherit it. Families in Dublin, Cork, Limerick and Galway have passed down their allegiance for decades, and the club’s history is stitched closely to the Irish migrant communities who shaped the city from the 1800s onwards. Many fans describe their first visit to Anfield as oddly familiar. It is not just the accents or the humour, but the sense of community and solidarity that feels very similar to home. 

This emotional connection matters. It is the reason Irish supporters travel in huge numbers every season. It also explains why matchday routines, traditions and behaviour are taken seriously by locals, and why visitors who understand the culture fit in instantly.  

What Irish Fans Should Expect on a Modern Matchday at Anfield 

A Premier League match in Liverpool is not simply ninety minutes of football. The day is a sequence of rituals: pub gatherings, scarf stalls, street food, turnstile queues and that unmistakable swell of noise when “You’ll Never Walk Alone” begins. Irish fans blend into this effortlessly, but first-timers are often surprised at how organised and structured the experience is. 

Expect busy public transport, early pub openings, queues that build quickly, stewards who enforce rules, and a stadium atmosphere that rewards respect. If you arrive prepared, the day flows exactly as it should.  

Where Irish Fans Gather Before the Match 

If you are travelling to your first Liverpool fixture, knowing where to go makes your day far smoother. These pubs are historically friendly to travelling Irish fans: 

The Sandon 

A landmark pub only minutes from the Kop end. Crowded but electric on matchday. 

The Arkles 

Popular with neutral fans and families, known for a lively but respectful atmosphere. 

Taggy’s Bar 

More relaxed, great for early arrivals and fans who prefer space before the rush. 

People sitting in a pub

Most pubs near Anfield expect supporters to act responsibly. If you are wearing neutral colours or home colours, you will blend in easily. Avoid away colours entirely unless you want unwanted attention.  

Understanding Seating Sections, Ticket Rules and Safety 

Irish fans sometimes underestimate how strict Premier League stadium rules are. Anfield is welcoming, but it is well-policed and extremely organised. Knowing the basics prevents awkward moments. 

Home Sections Only 

Celtic Horizon Tours provides official home-section tickets only. This keeps the experience safe and ensures there are no issues with wearing neutral or home colours. 

Digital Tickets 

Liverpool uses mobile-only ticketing. Your phone battery must be charged. Screenshots do not work. 

Queue Early 

Turnstiles open long before kick-off. Queues can stretch quickly, particularly on European nights. 

No Seat Switching 

Stewards enforce seating strictly. Move only within your designated row and block. 

Respect the Atmosphere 

Standing for long periods, blocking views, filming constantly or shouting over chants will not be welcomed by regulars. 

Irish fans who follow these simple guidelines always describe their Anfield experience as warm and inclusive.  

How to Travel from Ireland Without the Hassle 

Fans who travel independently often run into predictable problems: inflated last-minute flight prices, hotels with minimum-night stays, fake tickets on secondary sites and transfers that take longer than expected. This is where official match packages make a tangible difference. 

Travelling

Celtic Horizon Tours handles the logistics you would otherwise manage alone: 

  • Official LFC match tickets 
  • Hotel accommodation in Liverpool or nearby 
  • Travel by air, ferry or coach, depending on the package 
  • Clear schedules that avoid missed connections or late arrivals 

You still spend the day exactly as you want: pubs, cafes, stadium shops, sightseeing or food markets. The organisation simply removes the stress that catches out first-time visitors.  

Practical Matchday Tips Irish Fans Always Appreciate 

Over years of bringing supporters to Anfield, a few consistent truths have always made trips smoother: 

Arrive in Liverpool early 

Whether by ferry or flight, getting in hours before kick-off gives you time to settle, eat, explore and adjust. 

Use stadium-approved walking routes 

Liverpool often changes pedestrian flow on matchdays. Follow stewards and signage. 

Carry minimal belongings 

Bag policies are strict, and queues are slower for those carrying larger items. 

Plan your exit 

The walk back to transport hubs is crowded. Staying back five to ten minutes can make the journey calmer. 

Expect the emotional moment 

Even seasoned supporters find their first “You’ll Never Walk Alone” overwhelming. Let it happen.  

Why Anfield Often Feels Like a Home Game for Irish Fans 

The sense of belonging is real. Stand in the Kop or Main Stand, and you will hear familiar accents. Walk the roads leading to the stadium, and you will see Irish flags on balconies, shop windows and scarves. Visit the pubs, and half the conversations sound like any Saturday in Dublin or Cork. 

Irish fans are not visitors at Anfield. They are part of its fabric. With that comes responsibility: understanding the culture, respecting the rituals and participating with pride.  

Finally,

Liverpool FC’s bond with Ireland is more than a story. It is lived every weekend as thousands make the trip across the Irish Sea. When the practical details are handled by Celtic Horizon Tours, you can focus entirely on the experience: the walk up Anfield Road, the anthem, the atmosphere and the moment the match opens up in front of you. 

If you want the safest, simplest and most reliable way to join the crowd, an official Celtic Horizon Tours package keeps every part of the trip seamless. The game is yours to enjoy. 

 

Highclere Castle during the day

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Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, Irish supporters are a major part of the matchday crowd and are welcomed, provided they follow home-section etiquette. 

Neutral colours are fine. Away colours for the opposition are not allowed in home sections. 

No, just charge your phone and use the official instructions. Screenshots will not scan. 

Aim to reach the stadium 60 to 90 minutes before kick-off to avoid queues. 

No. All packages include home-section seats only. 

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