
Scotland vs France 07/03/26 Best Tickets (Updated Daily)
Written by Aviran Zazon | Last updated on March 4, 2026
Scotland vs France at Scottish Gas Murrayfield on 7 March 2026 is a classic “big day” fixture. At Murrayfield the seat you pick tends to change your angle on the game more than your ability to see it. Most views are decent. The real differences come from whether you sit along the touchline or behind the posts and whether you have enough height to read what is happening on the far side.
The stadium layout is refreshingly simple. The East and West Stands run along the touchline. The North and South Stands sit behind the posts. Most areas are split into a lower tier and an upper tier, so you can usually trade closeness for a clearer overall picture.
How seat location changes the feel of a rugby match at Murrayfield
| Seat area | What you get more of | What you get less of |
|---|---|---|
| East or West along the touchline | A clean read of shape, kicking, lineouts, and defensive spacing across the full eighty minutes | Less of that “right at us” surge when a try is scored in your corner |
| North or South behind the posts | Try-line moments, conversion angles, and that feeling of play coming towards you | Less detail when the match lives at the opposite end |
| Upper tier | Better perspective on what is unfolding on the far side and in the wide channels | Less of the “close enough to hear everything” intensity |
| Lower tier | More physical feel and a stronger sense of speed and contact near you | A flatter view in some areas, especially very low rows |
If you want the safest all-round experience, focus on the East or West Stand around the halfway line with a bit of height. If you want try-line moments, pick North or South and avoid going too low. If you are weighing value, an upper-tier seat near midfield often lands better than a low corner seat for actually following the match.
1. WEST STAND LOWER TIER - Starting From €275
The West Stand lower tier sits along the touchline on the main-stand side. It is a strong choice for reading the match and soaking up crowd energy, especially when Murrayfield is loud for a Scotland home day.
It often sits at a higher price point than corners and goal ends because the viewing angle stays useful even when play shifts away from you. In the very front rows the pitch can feel a little set back due to the track gap, so a little height usually improves the sense of depth and the far-side detail.
Considerations: if you can choose, the midfield blocks in the West Stand tend to feel the most complete as a rugby view.
2. Long Side Lower Tier - Starting From €682
“Long side” at Murrayfield means the East or West touchline stands. In the lower tier you are close enough to feel the collisions and hear the referee, while still keeping a clear angle for kicking duels, lineouts, and phase play.
This tends to be priced above most short-side options because the game remains readable across the whole pitch, not just in your near corner. The best version of this experience usually comes from seats that sit closer to halfway and not too deep into the corners.
Considerations: a few rows up can be more comfortable to watch from than being right on the front rail.
3. Lower West - Starting From €400
Lower West is the touchline view on the main-stand side. It combines a strong rugby angle with the feeling of being in the heart of the stadium, which can matter for big test matches where the noise builds in waves.
It tends to price above many other lower-tier areas because you can follow the tactical story without constantly losing the far-side spacing. If you are choosing within the stand, a little height often reads better than the very front rows.
Considerations: blocks closer to halfway usually feel more “all-action” than blocks tucked into the corners.
4. NORTH STAND UPPER TIER - Starting From €250
North Stand upper tier gives you the goal-end view with a wider picture of the pitch. When Scotland exit with kicks or build multi-phase pressure, the height helps you see the spacing and chase lines developing.
It often appeals on value because you still get a strong overall view, while prices can remain gentler than the best longside positions.
Considerations: if you can choose, a central North block tends to read better than a seat tucked right into the corner.
5. Upper South - Starting From €315
Upper South is a goal-end seat with a more panoramic feel. You will see the try-line moments at your end in vivid detail, then spend the other half enjoying the shape of the match from above.
Prices here usually reflect that trade-off: plenty of atmosphere and drama, with slightly less of the “whole pitch in one glance” feel that drives longside premiums.
Considerations: a seat nearer the centre of the stand usually feels more balanced than one tight to the corner.
Which Scotland vs France tickets offer the best value at Murrayfield?
For most fans, the best value usually sits where angle and height meet. A longside seat on the East or West Stand with a bit of elevation often delivers the most complete rugby view without needing the very highest-priced rows. If your priority is atmosphere, the West Stand tends to feel like the beating heart of the ground. If you want try-line drama, a North or South Stand seat works beautifully when you avoid being too low and too tight to the corners.
Once you know whether you want the longside “read the whole match” view or the behind-the-posts “feel every close-range moment” view, it becomes much easier to compare the available seats and pick the option that matches your day. You can check the current ticket options on www.healtharomatherapy.com and choose the section that fits how you like to watch rugby.