Bolton Wanderers release 36,241 Bwfc Tickets for Wembley final

Bolton Wanderers release 36,241 Bwfc Tickets for Wembley final

Bolton Wanderers have set out bwfc tickets information for the Sky Bet League One Play-Off Final at Wembley Stadium on Sunday 24 May 2026, with supporters facing a short online-only window. The club will play Stockport County for promotion to the Sky Bet Championship after beating Bradford City in the semi-final.

Wembley allocation for Bolton

The club has been given 36,241 tickets for the West End of Wembley Stadium, and Wembley has instructed that they will be sold from the North Stand round to the South Stand. That allocation is fixed for the final, so the practical job for supporters is not finding extra seats but getting into the correct sales phase early enough to secure one.

All tickets must be bought online. They will not be sold in person at the Toughsheet Community Stadium Ticket Office, and they will not be available through the usual Ticket Office telephone number. For this final, Print at Home and Digital tickets are the only ticket formats available.

Bolton ticket sale phases

Phase one starts on Friday 15 May at 12 Noon for season ticket holders, who can secure two tickets per client reference number. The club also included 2025/26 Season Ticket Holders, Official Club Members and Lifeline Members in the phase one on-sale group. If a booker has all other individual client reference numbers in their network, a maximum of 6 tickets can be booked in one transaction.

Phase two opens on Monday 18 May at 10am, when season ticket holders, official club members and Lifeline members can purchase two tickets per client reference number again. A further online on-sale phase follows on Tuesday 19 May at 10am, giving another chance to buy after the initial windows.

Stockport County at Wembley

The final against Stockport County comes after Bolton’s semi-final victory over Bradford City, and it carries the club into one match with promotion to the Sky Bet Championship on the line. The short sales window and the online-only format leave little room for delay, especially for supporters who want seats together or need to use more than one client reference number in a single booking.

For fans, the next step is straightforward: check eligibility, move within the correct phase, and buy online before the allocation tightens. Those who wait for the later on-sale stages may still get access, but the chance to choose where they sit will be reduced once the first waves of tickets are gone.

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