
Booking Frankfurt tickets is the trickiest step for fans planning to watch the Bundesliga live.
For high-demand matches like Frankfurt vs. Cologne, scoring seats without a club membership is almost impossible.
Eintracht Frankfurt — the club where legends Cha Bum‑kun and Cha Du‑ri once played — is well known among Korean fans.
In this piece I share my firsthand experience buying Frankfurt tickets and how to work the official resale system (Ticket Exchange).
These are practical tips for anyone preparing to see European soccer in person.
1. Frankfurt ticketing structure (Is membership required?)

Here’s the short version:
For popular matches, a membership is essentially mandatory.
Frankfurt’s ticketing order is:
– Season ticket holders
– Membership pre‑sale
– General sale

The catch is
most tickets sell out during the membership phase.
I signed up for membership, received my member number about two weeks later, and then joined the pre‑sale.
2. Tips for joining the Frankfurt membership
- Allow about two weeks after you apply
- You’ll receive your member number by email
- You need to link your membership to the app (mainaqila)
If this process runs late,
you can miss the pre‑sale window.
3. Realistic option after sellout: resale (Ticket Exchange)

When I checked, the situation looked like this:
- General sale had already ended
- Almost no seats remained
That left only one realistic option.
The official resale system: Ticket Exchange
4. Features of Frankfurt resale tickets⭐
Resale listings aren’t in a separate menu — they show up right in the regular seat selection screen.
Key things to know:
- Seats appear and vanish suddenly
- Mostly one- or two-seat listings
- Occasionally three-seat runs pop up
So it really becomes a timing game.
5. Best times when resale seats pop up
From my experience (Korean Standard Time):
- 6:00 PM (KST)
- 11:00 PM (KST) ⭐
- 3:00–5:00 AM (KST)
Notably,
11:00 PM tended to offer the best chance.
6. My ticket‑getting strategy
Here’s what I did.
- Don’t insist on finding a three‑seat block
- Secure two seats first
- Add additional seats later if they appear
The core tactic: “secure first → upgrade later.”
7. Actual results
– Scored a three‑seat block in section 29G (bought 4 tickets total)
If better seats become available later,
– you can upgrade via the resale market.


8. Tips when attending with children

According to the club:
- 6 and under: free (no seat)
- Age 7 and up: ticket required
I planned to buy three tickets and bring my 4‑year‑old for free.
9. What about external sites like viagogo?
Short answer:
I don’t recommend them.
- Higher prices
- Not official sellers
- Potential risks
The official Ticket Exchange is the safest option.
10. Summary
- Membership → essentially required for popular matches
- General sale → don’t count on it for big games
- Resale → the realistic route after sellout
- Recommend securing two seats first
- More seats often appear as the match day approaches

Booking Frankfurt tickets feels intimidating at first,
but once you understand the patterns, you can definitely get seats.
In particular,
the “secure first → upgrade later” approach
proved the most practical for me.
This post focused on the ticketing process and resale strategy.
I’ll post a match‑day write‑up later with seat views and the stadium atmosphere.











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