
Football Trips to Leicester
Leicester is where the 5,000-1 miracle became real: a Premier League title in 2015/16, followed by FA Cup, League Cup and Community Shield glory. Now, after relegation to League One in April 2026 after a 2-2 draw, the story has a raw new chapter. For a football trip to Leicester, we bring you flight, hotel and seat in one package, with our ticket guarantee and the confidence of over 50,000 travelers since 2008.
King Power’s modern folklore
Leicester have played at King Power Stadium since 2002, on Filbert Way, close to the old Filbert Street home that still lives in local memory. It is not an old brick relic, but that hardly matters. The enclosed bowl keeps the sound tight, and when the South Stand, known as the Kop, rises, the place feels compact, blue and loud.
The King Power Stadium capacity is 32,261, with formal plans to grow to around 40,000. That expansion includes about 8,000 more seats in the East Stand, plus a fan zone, hotel, arena, residential building and new club shop. Before going in, pause at the Khun Vichai statue; it is one of the most moving stops on Filbert Way. If you love English football beyond the elite sheen, top-flight weekends in England and second-tier football in England both help explain the scale of the club’s journey.
- The most vocal home backing is usually tied to the South Stand, where songs roll across the bowl.
- The away section sits in the corner between the North and East parts of the ground, adding a sharp edge to bigger fixtures.
- A King Power Stadium trip is really a walk through recent folklore: Filbert Street memories, title-year ghosts and the next rebuild all in one place.
Sounds you only hear here
The Post-Horn Gallop Leicester tradition is older than the current ground. It has been part of the club’s matchday since 1941, beginning at Filbert Street, and is now performed by Paul Hing on a brass or copper post-horn. Its roots are in mail-coach customs, not fox hunting, and the first recorded football use came in September 1913 when Leicester Fosse were the visitors in north London.
Be in your place early. The brass call cuts through the chatter, then “When You’re Smiling” carries the crowd through glory, grief, relegations and fresh starts. These are Leicester songs with local fingerprints, not imported stadium noise. For travelers who enjoy distinctive English football traditions, the city offers something different from the famous Merseyside anthem culture often associated with bigger European nights.
- Arrive before the teams appear, because the post-horn moment is brief and easy to miss.
- Join in respectfully when the tune starts; locals notice enthusiasm more than perfect lyrics.
- Listen for the change in rhythm after a corner, a crunching tackle or a late push toward the box.
From Vardyquake to rebuild
During Leicester’s 2015/16 title run, University of Leicester geology students placed a seismometer at Hazel Community School near the ground. Celebrations created measurable tremors known as Vardyquakes. Goals by Jamie Vardy and Andy King in the Everton game produced 0.4 magnitude readings, while Leonardo Ulloa’s late winner against Norwich had earlier made the largest signal. Yes, Leicester fans shook the ground.
That season was not a neat fairy tale in isolation. The club was founded as Leicester Fosse in 1884 by members of a Bible class at Emanuel Chapel on New Park Street, and the road has always bent sharply. The FA Cup win in 2021 ended a 137-year wait, while the 2026 drop to League One now adds a tougher page. It is why English cup weekends and league Saturdays here feel charged with memory rather than polish.
A proper Leicester day out
A good Leicester day has a natural flow: Aylestone Road, Raw Dykes Road, the River Soar, then Filbert Way. The Fox & Soar sits between the water and the ground, making it a strong pre-game gathering point. Local Hero at 84 Aylestone Road brings pub grub, live sport, pool and darts, while The Cricketers at 1 Grace Road adds a broader city sports feel near cricket and football.
Local flavour matters here. Think Melton Mowbray pork pies, Red Leicester cheese, local ales and sausage rolls before the walk in. After the final whistle, the Golden Mile Leicester stretch around Belgrave Road and Melton Road glows with curries, vegetarian restaurants, sweets and bright shopfronts. The city also hosts the largest Diwali celebrations outside Asia, so a football trip can easily spill into color, spice and late-evening noise.
Rivalry days bring extra bite, especially the M69 derby, named after the motorway linking Leicester and Coventry. We take care of the flight, hotel and admission, so you can focus on the human side: the river walk, the memorial pause, the horn, the first roar. For broader planning around a football trip in the United Kingdom, Leicester is a compact, emotional alternative to the obvious giants, and the season-opening showpiece in the club’s honours list only adds another layer.
- Start near Aylestone Road if you want the build-up to feel local rather than staged.
- Cross toward the River Soar and let Filbert Way pull you in with the crowd.
- Make time for the Khun Vichai statue before the turnstiles; it gives the afternoon its emotional centre.
- Stay in the city after the game, because the Golden Mile gives the evening a completely different rhythm.
Football trips to Leicester are not about superclub glamour. They are about loyal voices, recent folklore and a club still being written in real time. From the 5,000-1 miracle to the rebuild ahead, King Power Stadium remains one of England’s most compelling places to feel what football can do to a city.

