Glasgow: Celtic Park Stadium Tour and Dining Experience

REVIEW · GLASGOW

Glasgow: Celtic Park Stadium Tour and Dining Experience

  • 4.91,221 reviews
  • 3.5 hours
  • From $58
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Operated by Celtic Football Club · Bookable on GetYourGuide

The magic of Celtic Park is best when you’re down where the players go. You get a guided stadium tour and then a proper 3-course meal in Number 7, with big views over the pitch.

I especially like two things: the access to the home dressing room and tunnel and the fact that the meal isn’t an afterthought.

The main thing to watch is this: drinks are not included, so extras can add up fast, and you’ll be asked to settle those charges before you leave.

Quick Takes From the Celtic Park Tour and Dine

Glasgow: Celtic Park Stadium Tour and Dining Experience - Quick Takes From the Celtic Park Tour and Dine

  • A full hour of guided “walk-in-the-footsteps” access to Celtic Park areas fans don’t normally see
  • Home dressing room, boardroom, tunnel, and dugouts are the big-ticket stops
  • Number 7 Restaurant sits over the pitch, so your meal comes with views, not just food
  • You’ll likely spot excellent guide energy, with names like Joe, Manus, Tony, Ken, and Martin showing up in recent experiences
  • There’s walking and steps, so sturdy shoes matter more than you’d expect

Inside Celtic Park: The 60-Minute Guided Tour That Actually Feels Like a Match Day

Glasgow: Celtic Park Stadium Tour and Dining Experience - Inside Celtic Park: The 60-Minute Guided Tour That Actually Feels Like a Match Day
Your experience starts with a meet-up in the Celtic Park Sports Bar. You’ll enter via the Kerrydale Suite entrance at the west stand, and it’s worth arriving at least 10 minutes early so you can get your bearings and settle in.

Then the tour guide takes over for about 60 minutes. This isn’t a quick lap around the seating bowl. You’re led into the areas that make the stadium feel like a workplace, not a monument. The stops that matter most include:

  • Home dressing room: This is where the team energy lives. Even if you’re not a die-hard, it’s a strong sense-memory moment—your brain automatically starts imagining pre-match talk and nerves.
  • Celtic FC boardroom: It adds the “club business” side of things, which helps connect the legends on the pitch to the people behind them.
  • Tunnel and pitchside: Walking the route toward the field changes the vibe instantly. You’re no longer looking at Celtic Park from outside; you’re moving through the same path players use.
  • Dugouts: Sitting down in the place managers and coaches direct a match is one of those spots that makes photos feel extra real.

What helps here is the guide style. Many recent experiences highlight guides who are not just informative but also story-focused and friendly. People mention being entertained as well as educated, and some guides are specifically called out for their passion for Celtic history and their ability to answer questions without rushing you.

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A small timing reality check

One detail to keep in mind: the pace between parts of the meal can feel uneven for some people. The tour itself is consistently described as smooth and fun, but meal pacing may vary by day and staffing. If you’re very schedule-driven, build in a little buffer.

The Number 7 Restaurant Meal: Pitch Views + a Real 3-Course Finish

Glasgow: Celtic Park Stadium Tour and Dining Experience - The Number 7 Restaurant Meal: Pitch Views + a Real 3-Course Finish
After the tour, you move into the dining portion at Number 7 Restaurant. The best part is the view: you’re eating while looking out toward the pitch. That’s a simple upgrade that makes the meal feel like part of the stadium experience, not just something tacked on.

The experience is set up as a 3-course meal. Adults are on the adult 3-course menu, while children eat from the children’s menu.

What you can expect from the meal

Your courses are seasonal and designed to be filling but not heavy in a way that ruins dessert. The restaurant also has a selection of fine wines, beers, and soft drinks, which you can order as add-ons.

For a few specific Sunday dates, the menu is described as a 3-course carvery:

  • starters (seasonal options)
  • a selection of roast main options
  • dessert table

If you’re aiming for a classic “Sunday lunch” vibe, those carvery dates are the ones to look for.

Drinks: the part that surprises people

Here’s the catch that affects value. Drinks are not included in the tour-and-dine price. That means wine, beer, coffee, and any extras you order will need to be paid before you depart. If you tend to order alcohol with meals, do the math ahead of time so the final bill matches your budget.

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How the 3.5 Hours Usually Works (So You Don’t Feel Rushed)

Glasgow: Celtic Park Stadium Tour and Dining Experience - How the 3.5 Hours Usually Works (So You Don’t Feel Rushed)
The package is scheduled for about 3.5 hours. In practice, here’s the rhythm you can plan around:

  1. Arrival and check-in in the Sports Bar (with a little free time)
  2. Guided tour lasting about 60 minutes
  3. 3-course meal in Number 7 (about 2 hours is planned for dining time)

The tour and meal are long enough that it doesn’t feel like a “token” experience. You also get time to settle in after the tour before you start the courses.

If you’re planning this around other Glasgow stops, you’ll want to treat it like a half-day anchor. You’re not just popping in for a quick attraction. You’re building a story—tour first, then food, then it all ends back at Celtic Park.

Price and Value: Is $58 Fair for Celtic Park Tour + Meal?

At about $58 per person, the value is strong when you compare what’s included.

You’re getting:

  • a full guided stadium tour with behind-the-scenes stops (dressing room, boardroom, tunnel, dugouts)
  • a 3-course meal with pitch views

That’s the kind of combo that usually costs more when you purchase parts separately. And the meal isn’t just a sandwich and a drink. It’s positioned as a restaurant experience with a structured menu.

Where value can slide is when you add drinks and extras. Since drinks aren’t included, your final spend depends on what you order at the table. If you’re someone who orders a lot of add-ons, plan for a higher total.

Who gets the best deal

This package tends to be a great fit for:

  • Celtic fans who want access beyond the stands
  • families who want one organized activity instead of chasing multiple sights
  • people who want a stadium tour plus a proper meal without “figuring out dinner” afterward

Practical Details That Matter on the Day

A few logistics can make the experience smoother.

Where you meet

Meet in the Celtic Park Sports Bar, accessible via the Kerrydale Suite entrance at the west stand. Aim to arrive 10 minutes early.

Bags and left luggage

There’s no left luggage facility at the stadium. Bring only what you can carry. Also, all bags entering the stadium (including purses) are subject to inspection by staff. If you’re arriving with a big backpack, you might find it annoying if you can’t store it.

Footwear and movement

The tour includes walking and climbing steps, so wear suitable footwear. This matters more than you’d think because the places you visit are not flat, and the route is part of what makes it feel like an access tour instead of a photo tour.

Dressing room access near match day

One important heads-up: access to the dressing room on the day before a match may be restricted, depending on first-team activity. These timings can’t be confirmed in advance, so if dressing room access is your top reason for booking, keep that in mind.

Who This Tour Is Best For (And When to Rethink It)

Glasgow: Celtic Park Stadium Tour and Dining Experience - Who This Tour Is Best For (And When to Rethink It)
This experience is built for people who like football culture and hands-on access.

You’ll probably enjoy it if you:

  • like stadium history and want the player-side story
  • want a structured guide so you don’t miss key spots
  • want a meal with atmosphere—especially views over the pitch

Consider skipping or adjusting expectations if you:

  • want a tour without any walking (the route involves steps)
  • hate extra charges from drinks, since drinks aren’t included
  • are traveling with kids who need unaccompanied care (unaccompanied minors aren’t allowed)

Family note (kids and pricing)

Children must be accompanied by an adult, and children under 5 go free on the stadium tour. If a child also wants to dine in the restaurant afterward, you’ll let the server know—then it gets added to your bill to settle directly in the restaurant before you depart.

Guide Energy: Why the Stories Make the Stadium Feel Alive

A stadium tour is partly architecture and partly narration. Celtic Park gets its personality from the people leading you through it.

In recent experiences, guides like Joe, Manus, Tony, Martin, Ken, Alan, Robert, John, Michael, Fiona, and Steven are named for strong knowledge, humor, and genuine enthusiasm. What stands out across many notes is how guides handle questions and how they pace the group so people can take photos.

If your group includes kids or mixed ages, you’ll also like that the tours are described as family-friendly, with guides taking time for photo moments.

Should You Book Celtic Park Stadium Tour and Dining?

Yes, if your idea of a great day in Glasgow is a real behind-the-scenes stadium experience followed by a sit-down meal with pitch views.

Book it if:

  • you want the tunnel + dugouts + dressing room areas
  • you’d rather have a planned meal than “find food later”
  • you’ll enjoy talking football culture with a guide who actually cares

Think twice if:

  • you’re counting every penny and you’re likely to order drinks
  • you’re not comfortable with stairs and walking
  • you’re booking right around match-day uncertainty, when dressing room access could change

If you match those “yes” boxes, this is the kind of ticket that turns Celtic Park from somewhere you’ve heard about into somewhere you can picture clearly when you leave.

FAQ

What’s included in the Celtic Park Stadium Tour and Dining package?

It includes a full stadium tour plus a 3-course meal in Number 7 Restaurant.

How long is the experience?

The package is listed as 3.5 hours total, with the stadium tour taking about 60 minutes and the meal taking about 2 hours.

Which days does the Tour & Dine package run?

It’s available on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays.

Are drinks included with the meal?

No. Tour and Dine does not include drinks, and any drinks or extras must be paid before you depart.

What parts of the stadium will I see during the tour?

You can expect to visit areas including the home dressing room, Celtic FC Boardroom, tunnel, and dugouts.

Is there a place to store luggage at Celtic Park?

No. There is no left luggage facility, so avoid bringing large bags you can’t carry.

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