AS WE ENTER THE NEW SEASON
Last season saw unprecedented off-pitch unrest among City fans in the post-Maine Road era. Despite recent success on the field, two major in-stadium protests took place, with an estimated 16,000+ fans delaying their entry at the Leicester and Wolves games, and thousands more joining silent protests.
The triggers were rising ticket prices, season ticket availability, poor supporter engagement (including the Club refusing to meet City Matters on ticket prices for months), and away fans in home sections - often linked to third-party resellers like Viagogo, whose new partnership with the Club proved the breaking point.
The announcements of a season ticket price freeze and reduced matchday prices for 2025/26 were welcomed as a sign of renewed fan engagement.
Unfortunately, the Club has instead introduced sweeping changes to season ticket terms and conditions, hitting some of our most loyal supporters and damaging long-standing fan culture.
New season ticket changes:
- 10-game minimum personal attendance policy (first of its kind in English football)
- Minimum ticket usage policy up to 16 of 19 games (up from 14 last year, 10 the year before, and none at all in past seasons).
- A limit of three nominated unpaid members to receive transferred tickets, and no notice given for a 1 week window to complete this.
- Nominations for the above restricted to 3 short windows (at first it was just one, with additional windows were only brought in after criticism)
- A ban on transferring tickets to other season ticket holders.
- Ticket exchange now only available 24+ hours before a game (was 3 hours for some games).
- Season ticket download limit: twice per season.
Changes for all supporters:
- Random ticket collection + ID checks for away games.
- NFC-only stadium entry (ending barcode use), disadvantaging older or less tech-savvy fans.
- New turnstile scanners installed with facial recognition capability.
Fans have raised serious concerns about the fairness of the 10-game attendance rule and the restrictions on transferring tickets - especially as the latter directly undermines the stated aim of "keeping the stadium full." There are also fears some of these rules won't apply equally to hospitality season ticket holders, introducing worries of inequality between fans.
These changes create unnecessary workload for ticket office staff, introduce barriers for digitally excluded fans, force some into paid memberships, and erode supporter culture. All while City Matters, our elected Fan Advisory Board, has repeatedly faced delays and broken deadlines for meeting minutes, with the most recent minutes now 59 days overdue from the June meeting
No one wants constant conflict with the Club, but when official channels fail, protest becomes the only option. Last season proved that fan action can drive change.
We call on all Blues to:
- Track and record if and how these changes affect you.
- Make your voice heard - online, via City Matters, and through fan groups.
- Join fan groups such as 1894, the Disabled Supporters Association, Canal Street Blues, Trade Union Blues, and your local OSC branch to discuss issues with fellow Blues.
Find your City Matters reps here:
www.mancity.com/club/city-matters
We ask of the club:
- Rethink the current policies around personal attendance and ticket transferral with supporters in mind.
- Take a "fans first" approach when it comes to all future policies affecting supporters, engaging in meaningful consultation with fan representatives.
- Honour your own commitments to publishing City Matters meeting minutes on time, within 10 days of the meetings.
City 'Til We Die!
CFCFAM
1894, Canal Street Blues,
MCFC Fans Foodbank Support, Solid Citizens, Trade Union Blues.