Tottenham invite supporters to N17 for WSL clash with Manchester United | OneFootball

Tottenham invite supporters to N17 for WSL clash with Manchester United | OneFootball

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She Kicks Magazine

·20 de abril de 2026

Tottenham invite supporters to N17 for WSL clash with Manchester United

Imagem do artigo:Tottenham invite supporters to N17 for WSL clash with Manchester United

Tottenham Hotspur Women are inviting supporters to N17 for their WSL meeting with Manchester United at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on Sunday 26 April, with kick-off at 12pm. According to the club’s official website, this is Spurs’ penultimate home game of the season.

Tickets are priced at £15 for adults, £10 for 18-21s and £5 for under-18s. That is a straightforward price point for a fixture that could still shape how Spurs’ campaign is remembered.


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Tottenham Hotspur Stadium: ticket details and how to attend

Supporters can buy seats for the Manchester United game through the club’s eTicketing platform, with Spurs pushing the return of league action to the main stadium after earlier home WSL dates against Chelsea and Everton. Tottenham Hotspur Stadium is named in full for a reason here: these occasions still matter in a league where main-bowl access remains uneven from club to club.

The practical details are simple. The match is set for Sunday 26 April at 12 noon UK time, with ticket prices set at £15 for adults, £10 for fans aged 18 to 21 and £5 for under-18s. No additional accessibility or hospitality information was highlighted in the club announcement.

Spurs vs Manchester United: what is at stake

Spurs go into the game fifth in the table, and the club said a win would take them level with their best-ever points return in the top flight: 32, set in 2021/22. That matters because it would also lock in a top-five finish with two matches still to play.

There is recent edge in this fixture too. United came back from 3-0 down to draw 3-3 with Spurs in December, as reported by BBC Sport, and have generally had a habit of finding late goals in this matchup. For Tottenham, then, this is not just another home date. It is a chance to put a hard number on progress under Martin Ho, whose longer-term commitment was outlined in earlier She Kicks coverage of his Spurs contract.

It also lands against a wider backdrop at the club. Supporter buy-in is always easier to sustain when ambition feels visible, and that discussion has hardly gone away after our recent reporting on Tottenham Women’s wages and investment.

Supporter turnout and the WSL attendance picture

A fixture like this always sits inside a bigger conversation about who gets the main stadium, how often, and what kind of crowd-building work clubs are prepared to do. That is not unique to Spurs, as seen in earlier She Kicks coverage of derby weekend attendance trends across the WSL.

Tottenham have shown willingness to stage selected women’s matches at N17, but the challenge is turning those days into something habitual rather than exceptional. A strong turnout against Manchester United would not solve the wider structural questions, but it would underline the appetite that is already there when the access and the occasion line up properly.

With two league games left after this one, Spurs have a clear target in front of them. Sunday’s noon kick-off is a chance to push toward that 32-point mark and give the season’s final stretch a proper home-stage feel.

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