From White Meadow to Red Earth to the Yellow Wall
Dortmund
Teams, tales and tips – a guide to the local game
Dortmund is built on beer and football. Set in Germany’s industrial Ruhrgebiet, around a compact and pedestrianised centre, Dortmund is very much a one-club city – and that one club, Borussia, attract the highest average attendance in the European game. Dortmund’s standing terrace of 24,454 in the Südtribüne of the Signal Iduna Park forms the Gelbe Wand, the famed Yellow Wall, football’s largest Kop. But it’s not just the numbers. This is mass support with equally massive yet sensible beer consumption, this is ticket prices kept at reasonably affordable levels, this is public transport included with your match ticket, this is an entertaining, imaginative and informative stadium tour, this is the main square of a city surrounded by bars yet fun and orderly, this is a scheme to offer hotel packages as part of a Bundesliga weekend, this is one huge, lucrative and successful industry built on the twin pillars of beer and football. And this, pretty much, is why around 1,000 match-day Brits choose Dortmund for their Saturday football fix.









Getting Around
Arriving in town, local transport and timings



Where to Drink
The best pubs and bars for football fans












Where to stay
The best hotels for the stadium and city centre
















what to see
The top football attractions in town









Teams, tales and tips – a guide to the local game
Dortmund is built on beer and football. Set in Germany’s industrial Ruhrgebiet, around a compact and pedestrianised centre, Dortmund is very much a one-club city – and that one club, Borussia, attract the highest average attendance in the European game. Dortmund’s standing terrace of 24,454 in the Südtribüne of the Signal Iduna Park forms the Gelbe Wand, the famed Yellow Wall, football’s largest Kop. But it’s not just the numbers. This is mass support with equally massive yet sensible beer consumption, this is ticket prices kept at reasonably affordable levels, this is public transport included with your match ticket, this is an entertaining, imaginative and informative stadium tour, this is the main square of a city surrounded by bars yet fun and orderly, this is a scheme to offer hotel packages as part of a Bundesliga weekend, this is one huge, lucrative and successful industry built on the twin pillars of beer and football. And this, pretty much, is why around 1,000 match-day Brits choose Dortmund for their Saturday football fix.









Getting Around
Arriving in town, local transport and timings



Where to Drink
The best pubs and bars for football fans












Where to stay
The best hotels for the stadium and city centre
















what to see
The top football attractions in town










