Manchester City are hoping the top tier of the North Stand will be at 100 per cent capacity for the final home game of the season against Aston Villa
Nobody will be happier than the Manchester City boardroom if the North Stand top tier is fully open for the final game of the Premier League season against Aston Villa. More than 7,000 extra fans will be housed in the expanded North Stand if it passes the necessary test events.
The major one will come on Wednesday, May 20 when more than 3,500 fans will be granted access to the new section for the first time. City have pulled out all the stops to attract supporters to the stadium on a non-matchday. There will be live entertainment, a photo opportunity with the Carabao Cup and appearances from former players.
It is vital for City that this goes well so that their multi-million pound investment begins paying for itself. For City’s hierarchy, the opening of the North Stand will be seen as a success so long as it is full and, for the Villa game, it undoubtedly will be.
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However, that is not the final hurdle it must overcome. It must also gain fan approval. There has been a lot of scepticism around the North Stand expansion, particularly considering attendance issues for midweek fixtures at the Etihad Stadium.
Many matchgoing supporters see this new tier as another opportunity for the club to bring in ‘fans’ who care more about the half-time food offering, rather than the result. Of course, City cannot be naive in this modern football landscape where every penny counts towards Financial Fair Play (FFP).
Expanding the Etihad Stadium to a capacity of more than 60,000 means City’s home will be on a par with the likes of the Emirates Stadium and Anfield. It also opens the door to further revenue streams like concerts and the new 401-room hotel, that will open at the end of 2026, gifts City an all-year round income.
But to the average supporter who feels left behind by the increasingly money-driven nature of the sport, this does little to warm their hearts. The fear is that City will eventually go the way of some of their Premier League rivals.
Fulham’s Riverside Stand is exclusively for hospitality with the club’s owners happy to rake in the money while losing long-standing supporters. Even across the city, Manchester United have come under fire for moving season ticket holders out of their seats to make room for a brand new hospitality area.
Against Villa, the hospitality sections of the stand will not be open and the fans housed in that tier will be there on a general admission ticket. The only thing current matchgoing supporters want is for the expansion to enhance the matchday experience.
They want those extra fans to create a cauldron of noise and make the Etihad Stadium a more imposing fortress than it already is. If it becomes just another money making scheme, it will be panned and add to the narrative that the club is no longer interested in the regular supporter.
Last week, Pep Guardiola rightly praised the ownership group for freezing season ticket prices for another season. City now have one of the most affordable season tickets in the Premier League and they are also working on ways to boost midweek attendances.
There is a lot of goodwill from that announcement that will go to waste by overlooking existing fans’ wishes for the North Stand. There is a way both the club and fans get what they want but it relies on City resisting temptation and looking for the big bucks.
If they avoid that, the new tier will be welcomed by all and boost City’s coffers in the process.





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