Liverpool’s Answer to Terrible Season Is Raising Ticket Prices
The football on display through 2025-26 has been trash to watch so obviously the club want fans to pay more next year.
LIVERPOOL, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 20: Liverpool fans show support with flags and scarves prior to the Premier League match between Liverpool and Everton at Anfield on September 20, 2025 in Liverpool, England. (Photo by Carl Recine/Getty Images) | Getty Images We live in a world where more is never enough for those who already have more than they will ever need, and that obsession to always be acquiring that motivates the greedy and sociopathic who tend to make it to the top of corporate and political power structures in our late-stage capitalist hellscape inevitably trickles down to the prices we pay at the gas pump in the grocery aisle and when we want to watch football. As such, in the midst of a cost of living crisis with everyone paying more and feeling like they’re getting less for it, endlessly squeezed on both sides in a society that reminds all of us every day that our only true value to those in charge is how much capital can be squeezed out of our pockets and put into theirs, naturally Liverpool Football Club would have decided they need more money from the pockets of supporters.
“We know and understand LFC has increasing costs,” read a statement from the club’s fan supporters board. “So do loyal supporters. LFC has increasing revenues built on the backs of supporters.
Supporters do not, and see no share in those rewards. LFC have chosen a path that leads in the wrong direction. We’re extremely disappointing by today’s announcement of price increases each season [and] for the next three seasons.
“We’ve engaged with the club in direct discussions since early February. This followed a meeting with the club’s board and ownership last October. We felt this was an opportunity for the club to do what we might expect from those who pride themselves on it meaning ‘more’: [to] be different from others, support fan loyalty, and work collectively on a solution that does not come at the expense of supporters.