The San Siro Stadium tour: what you actually see

What the tour covers, step by step
Almost every San Siro ticket follows the same route, whether you take a guide or wander self-paced. You start in the San Siro Museum — shirts, trophies and the shared history of the two clubs — then move into the stadium. From the stands you get the full scale of the bowl: three steep tiers, the eleven cylindrical towers and the red girders that hold up the roof, all added for the 1990 World Cup. From there you walk the press room where post-match interviews happen, both teams’ dressing rooms, the mixed zone, and finally the tunnel that opens out to the side of the pitch.
Usually included
- The San Siro Museum (shirts, trophies, club history)
- A walk through the stands with views over the pitch
- The press / interview room
- AC Milan and Inter dressing rooms
- The mixed zone and players’ tunnel
- Pitchside at the edge of the field
Not included
- Walking on the grass (you reach the edge only)
- The Skywalk rooftop walk (a separate add-on)
- Entry on home matchdays (the tour is closed)
- Hotel pickup or transport to the stadium
- Food and drink
Guided tour or self-paced ticket?
Both cover the same route. A guided tour adds the stories — the derbies, the famous nights, which legend wore which shirt — and is usually offered in several languages. A self-paced ticket lets you linger in the museum and sit in the stands as long as you like. If you are bringing kids or short on time, the guide keeps things moving; if you want to take photos at your own pace, go self-paced.
| San Siro Stadium & Museum Tour (Skip-the-Line) | Top pickSan Siro Stadium & Museum Guided Tour | San Siro Stadium & Museum Official Guided Tour | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price | $45 | $44 | $44 |
| Style | Self-paced | Guided | Official guided |
| Guide | No | Yes | Yes |
| Museum | Included | Included | Included |
| Time needed | ~60 min | ~75 min | ~75 min |
| Best for | Photographers | Most people | Superfans |
| Rating | 4.3 | 4.3 | 4.0 |
| View → | Book this → | View → |
What works
- One of the most atmospheric stadiums in football, even when empty
- You stand pitchside where AC Milan and Inter players walk out
- Museum and stadium in a single, well-priced ticket
- Easy to reach on Metro Line 5
Worth knowing
- Closed on home matchdays — check fixtures first
- You cannot walk on the pitch itself
- Busy in summer and around big games — book ahead
- The Skywalk costs extra and is not on every ticket
Pick a weekday morning slot if you can — it is quieter than weekend afternoons, and well clear of any evening kick-off. Double-check your date against the AC Milan and Inter fixtures before you book.
Book a San Siro Stadium tour
The simplest way to get inside is a stadium & museum ticket on GetYourGuide — pick a non-match day and time, and turn up. Most have free cancellation if your plans change.
Next: see what is inside the San Siro Museum, add the Skywalk on the roof, or compare every ticket and price.
Frequently asked questions
What do you see on the San Siro Stadium tour?
The museum, the stands, the press room, both AC Milan and Inter dressing rooms, the mixed zone, the players’ tunnel and pitchside. You reach the edge of the field but do not walk on the grass.
How long is the San Siro tour?
About 60 to 75 minutes for the museum and stadium together. Adding the Skywalk, where available, takes roughly 45 minutes more.
Can you walk on the pitch at San Siro?
No. The tour brings you pitchside at the edge of the field through the players’ tunnel, but walking on the playing surface is not permitted.
Is the San Siro tour worth it?
For football fans, yes — standing in the tunnel and pitchside of a stadium shared by AC Milan and Inter is a highlight of Milan, and the combined museum-and-stadium ticket is good value at around $44.