Events this weekend in Warsaw
Warsaw has no events this weekend.
Warsaw Tickets 2026
Warsaw combines a rebuilt historic core, riverside boulevards, and green parks with national‑team football nights, club matches, and concert‑scale arenas. With big events and headline sights often busy, booking Warsaw tickets in advance lets you anchor your stay around key games or shows and then fit Old Town walks and palace visits around them.
Why buy tickets in Warsaw via SeatPick?
SeatPick acts as your central hub for Warsaw’s biggest games and shows, bringing top stadium and concert tickets together under one roof so you can compare them quickly instead of hunting across multiple sites. You can see at a glance which dates work for a Poland home match, a Legia fixture, or a major tour stop and then lock in seats that match your budget, view, and preferred stand before demand spikes.
- Use detailed filters to narrow results by competition, venue, section, and price band, whether you are targeting PGE Narodowy, the Polish Army Stadium, COS Torwar, or a club‑sized hall like Progresja.
- Every listing spells out your seat category and location in plain language, making it easy to see the trade‑off between price and proximity to the pitch or stage.
- All sellers on the platform are screened and tickets are backed by at least a 100% guarantee, so you can plan a short city break around one key event with extra confidence.
Top Warsaw sports teams and venues
Warsaw’s sports calendar is led by the national football team and Legia Warszawa, with PGE Narodowy doubling as a major multi‑event hub.
Poland national team at PGE Narodowy
PGE Narodowy (Stadion Narodowy) on the east bank of the Vistula is Poland’s national stadium and home venue for the national football team. It seats around 58,500 for football and can rise to over 70,000 for concerts, with a retractable roof, heated pitch, and a façade styled in Poland’s red‑and‑white colours.
Legia Warszawa at Polish Army Stadium
Legia Warszawa play at the Polish Army Stadium – Józef Piłsudski Stadium on Łazienkowska Street. The ground’s current capacity is about 31,100, and home games for Poland’s most successful club side are a natural target if you want to experience domestic football during your visit.
Other Warsaw events
Beyond football, PGE Narodowy and COS Torwar host additional sporting events such as speedway, indoor sports, and occasional international fixtures. Checking what is on for your dates makes it easier to add a one‑off live event alongside more traditional sightseeing.
Top Warsaw music venues
Warsaw’s live‑music offer ranges from stadium‑scale shows to classic halls and club venues that anchor the city’s gig calendar.
PGE Narodowy
Alongside football, PGE Narodowy acts as Warsaw’s largest concert venue, able to hold up to roughly 58,000 people for big shows and festivals under its retractable roof. Major international tours and large domestic events often choose the stadium for full‑production nights.
COS Torwar and Progresja
Hala COS Torwar, near the city centre, is a popular arena for mid‑size concerts and events with capacities up to around 10,000. Progresja Music Zone, in Wola, hosts rock, metal, and alternative acts and is a key stop for touring bands that prefer a hall‑sized crowd over a full arena.
Stodoła, Palladium, and clubs
Smaller venues including Stodoła, Palladium, Proxima, and Hydrozagadka serve club‑scale gigs, student nights, and independent artists. These spaces give you plenty of options if you want an intimate show that you can easily pair with dinner or drinks in nearby neighbourhoods.
Top Warsaw attractions
Warsaw’s main attractions blend rebuilt historic districts, royal residences, and riverside walks.
Highlights include:
- Warsaw Old Town and the Royal Castle, rebuilt after the Second World War, with a market square, mermaid statue, and cobbled streets lined with cafés and museums.
- Łazienki Park (Łazienki Królewskie), a large green complex with the Palace on the Isle, lakes, monuments, and summer Chopin concerts.
- Wilanów Palace, a baroque royal residence on the city’s southern edge, known for its gardens, art collections, and cultural events.
- POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews and the Warsaw Uprising Museum, both modern museums that explore key chapters of the city’s and country’s past.
- The Vistula river boulevards and the Royal Route, which link central squares, churches, and palaces with modern riverside paths and viewpoints.
Planning your Warsaw visit
A good way to build a Warsaw itinerary is to start with the moments that matter most to you, a national‑team game, a Legia clash, or a favourite artist’s tour date, and then arrange your sightseeing in clusters around those fixtures instead of treating sport and culture as separate days. For example, you might spend an afternoon in Łazienki Park and along the Royal Route before walking or riding over to Łazienkowska for an evening match, or combine a river‑boulevard stroll and Old Town visit with a stadium concert at PGE Narodowy across the bridge.
With tickets secured, trams, Metro lines, and buses make it straightforward to move between venues, parks, and museums, and most central sights sit close enough together that you can still leave gaps for spontaneous café stops or riverside detours.
From a packed Warsaw concert at the PGE Narodowy, COS Torwar, or Stodoła to a day spent between the Old Town, Łazienki, Wilanów, and the Vistula boulevards, Warsaw lends itself to trips that weave live sport and music into the same fabric as its royal landmarks and modern memory sites.
