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San Siro (Giuseppe Meazza)Seating Guide: Where to Sit & Best Seats

San Siro (officially Stadio Giuseppe Meazza) is the shared home of Inter and AC Milan and holds about 75,800 — Italy's biggest stadium and one of football's great theatres. Seating is three stacked rings (primo, secondo, terzo anello), colour-coded by side: Rosso and Arancio are the two covered sideline stands, Verde is the north end and Blu the south. Inter's ultras fill the Curva Nord (second ring green), Milan's the Curva Sud (second ring blue) — the same concrete hosts opposite souls depending on who is 'home'. Best views: central primo or secondo anello Rosso/Arancio. It is also Italy's flagship concert stadium in summer.

Location: Milan, ItalyCapacity: 75,817Updated: 2026

San Siro (Giuseppe Meazza) in photos

6 exterior · 3 inside the venue

Seating map

This is the map used for ticket sales at San Siro (Giuseppe Meazza). Exact configuration varies by event.

Configurations

Football — Inter home matches

Inter’s ultras occupy the Curva Nord (green end). Milan fans’ Curva Sud areas are simply regular home seating for Inter fixtures. Derby della Madonnina splits the bowl between both sets of ultras.

Football — AC Milan home matches

Milan’s ultras occupy the Curva Sud (blue end); otherwise identical bowl. Ticket categories and colours are the same for both clubs.

Concerts — end stage

Summer concerts put the stage toward one curva with the pitch (prato) as GA standing; the terzo anello and seats behind the stage may be closed. San Siro concerts are legendary for atmosphere.

Seating levels explained

Primo Anello (First Ring)Lowest ring

The original lower bowl, shallow and close to the pitch.

Pros: Closest to the action; central Rosso/Arancio primo anello is the premium view; the shallow rake feels intimate.

Cons: The shallow rake means heads can intrude in back lower rows; ends are end-on views.

Secondo Anello (Second Ring)Middle ring

The classic San Siro view — elevated, steep enough, and where the curve live (Nord in green, Sud in blue).

Pros: Excellent balanced sightline from central sideline blocks; the curve deliver the famous choreography and noise.

Cons: Curva blocks are standing-singing territory, not for quiet viewing; central secondo Rosso/Arancio prices near primo levels.

Terzo Anello (Third Ring)Top ring under the roof girders

The distinctive top ring added for Italia ’90, hung beneath the eleven cylindrical towers and roof.

Pros: Cheapest seats; a dramatic aerial panorama of the pitch and the Milan skyline.

Cons: Very high and behind protective glass/netting in parts; the furthest view in Italian football; often closed for lower-demand fixtures and many concerts.

Best seats at San Siro (Giuseppe Meazza)

ForSectionsWhy
Best overallPrimo or secondo anello Rosso/Arancio, central blocks between the penalty areasHalfway-line sideline views with the bowl’s full noise around you.
Best valueSecondo anello Rosso/Arancio lateral (toward the corners)Keeps the elevated sideline geometry at a clear discount to central blocks.
Atmosphere — InterSecondo anello Verde (Curva Nord) and adjacent blocksThe heart of Inter support: choreographies, drums and 90 minutes of singing.
Atmosphere — AC MilanSecondo anello Blu (Curva Sud) and adjacent blocksMilan’s famous curva — same intensity, opposite end.
ConcertsPrato (pitch GA) front half, or primo anello facing the stageThe pitch delivers the classic San Siro concert experience; the lower sideline rings give a seated view close to the stage.

Seats to avoid & obstructed views

  • Terzo anello ends (Verde/Blu upper corners): The highest, furthest seats with glass/netting in the sightline — a last resort for sold-out games.
  • Primo anello back rows under the second-ring overhang: The overhang can clip the view of high balls and the far videoboard.
  • Behind-stage seats at concerts: Closed or heavily restricted depending on production.

Premium & hospitality

Tribuna d’Onore / Poltroncine Rosse

The central padded sideline seats and honour tribune — the premium heart of the stadium.

Sky Lounge / hospitality

Both clubs sell lounge-plus-seat hospitality centred on the Rosso/Arancio sidelines.

Accessibility & companion seating

Wheelchair platforms at pitch level (primo anello) with companion seats, accessible entrances and adapted toilets; both clubs run dedicated disabled-supporter ticket processes — book ahead, allocation is limited.

Where: Pitch-level accessible platforms around the primo anello.

Upcoming events at San Siro (Giuseppe Meazza)

Getting there

San Siro (Giuseppe Meazza) · Milan, Italy

Frequently asked questions

Do Inter and AC Milan really share the stadium?

Yes — both clubs play home matches at San Siro, alternating fixtures. The bowl is identical; what changes is which curva the home ultras occupy: Nord (green) for Inter, Sud (blue) for Milan.

What do the colours mean?

Sections are colour-coded by side: Rosso (west sideline), Arancio (east sideline), Verde (north end), Blu (south end), each across three rings (anelli). Central Rosso/Arancio is premium; the ends are the curve.

Is San Siro being replaced?

The clubs have long-running plans for a new stadium on the San Siro site, but the current stadium remains in full use for both clubs and concerts — nothing changes for ticket holders today; follow official club channels for timelines.

Which seats are covered from rain?

The Italia ’90 roof covers virtually all seats; wind-blown rain can reach the lowest front rows.

Where do away fans sit?

The away sector is in the terzo anello Verde corner (upper north), segregated with its own entrance.

How do I get there?

Metro M5 (lilac line) “San Siro Stadio” ends right at the stadium; matchday trams also run from the city centre. Allow extra time post-match — the area empties slowly.

Sources