San Siro anchor
San Siro is west of the centre on the metro and tram. Both clubs share it, so check which is at home before you plan the day.
City weekend planner
Milan is unusual: one iconic ground, two giant clubs. A weekend here is built around San Siro plus the wider Lombardy rail network for a second match.
Start with the match that would justify the trip on its own. Everything else should be close enough, cheap enough, or flexible enough that the weekend still works if kick-off times move.
San Siro is west of the centre on the metro and tram. Both clubs share it, so check which is at home before you plan the day.
When the derby lands, it is the anchor on its own. Treat tickets as high-demand and official-only, and plan the crowd exit.
Lombardy's rail network opens up a second match in the region when the Milan calendar leaves a gap.
Use this as a concrete map pin, then check AC Milan for context before picking a fixture.
Use this as a concrete map pin, then check Inter for context before picking a fixture.
San Siro fixtures, and the derby especially, sell through official club channels and can be high-demand, so verify category and availability officially rather than trusting resale claims. Footbeen does not sell tickets; it helps you plan the trip and keep the match, stadium and city in your football record after you go.
Open the San Siro matchday guide before you book anything tight.
Open guide →Open the Serie A stadium guide before you book anything tight.
Open guide →Open the best European football atmospheres before you book anything tight.
Open guide →Open the weekend football trip planner before you book anything tight.
Open guide →Open the football ticket scam checker before you book anything tight.
Open guide →Yes. Both share San Siro, officially the Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, so check which club is at home for the weekend you want.
No. The Derby della Madonnina is one of the highest-demand fixtures in Italy. Use official club routes and be wary of any guaranteed-ticket resale claim.