#NoFanAlone

No fan should have to go alone.

A Matchday Companion is a fellow fan — usually of your own club — who goes to the match with you. Not a carer, not a service: another supporter who shares the day, helps with the practical parts, and watches the game beside you.

A companion is a fellow fan, not a carer.

A companion attends with awareness, patience and respect. They might help with finding the entrance, the way to your seats, navigating crowds, or simply being there during a busy matchday.

A companion often helps with

  • Meeting at an agreed spot before the match
  • Finding the right entrance and the way to your seats
  • Navigating crowds on the way in and out
  • Staying in touch if plans change

How it works

Pick a match, tell us what would help, and we connect you.

You're in control at every step. Nothing is shared until you both say yes.

  1. 1

    Pick your match

    Find the fixture you want to go to.

  2. 2

    Tell us what would help

    Entrances, seating, navigating crowds, sensory needs — on your terms, sharing only what you choose.

  3. 3

    Review your match proposal

    We suggest a companion going to the same match. You decide, and so do they — nothing is shared until you both accept.

  4. 4

    Enjoy the match together

    Agree a meeting point, stay in touch, and watch the game.

First rule

Ask before helping.

Disabled fans are the experts in their own needs. A good companion doesn't assume, grab, push, decide or speak over someone. A good companion asks, listens and respects the answer.

Built on trust

Safe by design, on your terms.

Trust is the whole point. Every connection is consent-first, and the fan always leads.

You always choose first

We send you a proposal to review. You decide before anything is agreed.

Nothing shared without consent

Contact details are revealed only after you both accept — and only with your consent.

Declining is always okay

The other fan sees the decision, never a reason.

Fans lead, companions follow

Companions follow your lead on how — and whether — to help.

Prefer a group?

Some fans would rather start with a few people than one. Group matchdays let supporters gather at a public place — a pub, a fan zone, the stadium — around the same match.