Tickets on sale for St. John’s 2025 National Championships

#NatChamps

Tickets to Canada Soccer’s 2025 National Championships in St. John’s are now on sale locally as fans of the beautiful game can purchase single-day and week-long tournament passes for the six-day, 32-match schedule. Matches will be played from Wednesday 8 October through Monday 13 October at King George V Park and the Fortis Canada Games Complex.

Ticket passes are $10 per day or $40 for the whole tournament, with access granted on a first-come, first-seated basis at either stadium (all four Newfoundland & Labrador teams will play their group matches at King George V Park).

In person, local fans can purchase ticket passes at King George V Park from 22-25 September (17h30 to 21h30 at the canteen) and then 27 September through 4 October (10h00 to 13h00 at the office). By email, fans are asked to contact info@sjsoccer.ca with your name, phone number, and the number of passes requested (an office representative will follow up by phone to process payment and provide pick-up instructions).

Canada Soccer’s National Championships serve as the pinnacle event to the 2025 amateur season, bringing together the best clubs from across the country. This year marks the biggest year ever for Canada Soccer’s national amateur competitions with a record 128 qualified amateur teams set to take part in 14 divisions from the Futsal Canadian Championship in April to the Player-Development Program Championship in August and then the National Championships in October. Those 128 teams have qualified from a group of more than 1,100 teams taking part in competitive leagues and cup competitions from across the country.

Complete match schedules with kickoff times are published at canadasoccer.com/competitions within each division’s respective landing page alongside the list of qualified teams. As Canada Soccer’s largest national event featuring clubs from coast to coast, the National Championships have served as the nation’s primary amateur soccer competition for more than 100 years, with the men’s competition inaugurated in 1913, the youth competition inaugurated in 1966, and the women’s competition inaugurated in 1982. At all age levels, the National Championships provide a meaningful week-long soccer experience for host cities and participating teams, as well as the players, coaches, support staff, officials, and volunteers.