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Buy tickets for Werder Bremen vs FC Augsburg - Bundesliga (DE) Buy tickets for Werder Bremen vs FC Augsburg - Bundesliga (DE)

Bundesliga (DE) (32. round)
02. May 2026. 15:30h
Werder Bremen vs FC Augsburg
Wohninvest Weserstadion, Bremen, DE
2026
02
May
Werder Bremen - FC Augsburg tickets for the Bundesliga match at Wohninvest Weserstadion in Bremen
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Werder Bremen - FC Augsburg tickets for the Bundesliga match at Wohninvest Weserstadion in Bremen

Looking for tickets for Werder Bremen - FC Augsburg? Here you can plan your ticket purchase for this Bundesliga match in Bremen and quickly check the key details that matter before you go, including team form, league context, Wohninvest Weserstadion, and travel tips for matchday

Werder Bremen and FC Augsburg enter the match under different pressures

After 30 rounds played in the Bundesliga table, FC Augsburg holds 9th place with 36 points and a goal difference of 38:54, while Werder Bremen is in 15th position with 31 points and a record of 35:53. Ahead of Augsburg's arrival at Osterdeich, this clearly sets the stakes: the home side is looking toward the fight for survival without additional stress, while the visitors want to keep a calmer finish to the season and remain in the upper part of the lower half of the table. For Werder, every home point at this stage is worth as much as three ordinary spring points, especially because the lower part of the table had been tightening from round to round.

That is exactly why Werder received a huge boost from the 3:1 victory against Hamburger SV in the Nordderby. That result was not only emotional but also competitively important, because it came after a 1:3 defeat away to 1. FC Köln and a home 1:2 loss against RB Leipzig. Augsburg enters this clash with a different tone: a 1:1 draw away to Hamburger SV, then 2:2 against Hoffenheim, followed by a major 2:1 victory away to Bayer Leverkusen show a team that knows how to stay alive in a match even when it is not dominant in possession for longer periods.

Tickets for this match are in demand among the fans.

What is at stake at the start of May

For Werder Bremen, home matches like this carry double value. It is not only about points, but also about the schedule, nerves, and pressure that rises as the end of the season approaches. Daniel Thioune's team is currently above the relegation playoff zone, but without a larger safety margin. That is why the clash against Augsburg looks like a match in which they are not only chasing victory, but also a little breathing room before the final rounds.

On paper, Augsburg looks calmer, but that position is deceptive as well. Ninth place sounds stable, but the negative goal difference and inconsistent performances throughout the season show that Manuel Baum and his team cannot come to Bremen with the idea of a casual job done. The victory in Leverkusen gave them confidence and showed that they can take big points on a difficult away ground. That is precisely why Werder is not hosting an opponent who is merely "awkward", but a team that can open up, yet also wait a long time for its chance.The first meeting of these clubs this season ended 0:0 at the WWK ARENA on 20 December 2025. That result suggests a tough match with little space, and that is not a bad starting point for the return leg in Bremen either. Werder did not find a way to the net then, Augsburg failed to make use of most of its chances, so the second meeting is also easy to imagine as a contest in which the first goal strongly changes the rhythm and psychology.

Who carries Werder Bremen

Jens Stage is currently the leading figure of Werder's end of the season. According to the official Bundesliga profile, he has 7 goals and 2 assists in the league, and his return and two goals in the victory against Hamburger SV gave him additional momentum. Stage is important because he is not a classic scorer who lives only in the penalty area. He arrives from deep, attacks aerial balls, joins the finish, and very often scores at a moment when the match seems closed.

Alongside him, Romano Schmid is the player who gives Werder rhythm between the lines. When the home side is having a good day, the ball often goes through his feet in the zone between the opponent's back line and midfield line. In matches against opponents such as Augsburg, that is especially important, because the visitors know how to drop their block and wait for a mistake. If Schmid finds enough space to turn and play the final pass, Werder looks far more dangerous than the table suggests.

An important figure in the whole story is also Cameron Puertas, who scored his first Bundesliga goal for the final 3:1 precisely in the derby against HSV. Moments like that often change a player's status at the end of the season. It is not necessarily a headline role, but it is a profile that opens an additional option for the coach for the final half-hour, especially if the match turns into a nervous finish.

Who carries FC Augsburg

With Augsburg, the first look goes to Alexis Claude-Maurice. The official Bundesliga profile credits him with 5 goals and 3 assists this season, and he is a player who can decide a match both from deeper areas and with a shot from distance or a move between the lines. When Augsburg does not have much of the ball, players like that are crucial, because they do not need five clear situations to do damage.Fabian Rieder and Finn Dahmen also rank among the key names. Rieder was important in the win away to Leverkusen as well, while Dahmen has been so stable this season that he even received a call-up to the German national team in March. For the visiting side in Bremen, that is serious capital: a goalkeeper who performs consistently and attacking players who can punish poor positioning in the home defence.

Michael Gregoritsch should also be watched, a striker who has already known how to be troublesome in high-intensity matches. He is not a forward who needs ten touches in the box. One quality ball is enough for him, especially when Augsburg plays more directly and looks for an early cross or the second ball after a rebound.

Coaching framework and tactical picture

At the beginning of February, Werder appointed Daniel Thioune as its new head coach. His arrival brought an attempt to raise the energy and a clearer emphasis on intensity without the ball, but the table shows that stability did not arrive overnight. The victory against HSV was nevertheless a sign that the team can create a strong atmosphere at home and respond under pressure.

On the other side, Augsburg is coached by Manuel Baum. In recent weeks, his team has looked like a side ready to suffer without the ball and then attack in waves. That was especially visible in a run of matches against stronger or direct rivals, where Augsburg did not always look prettier, but often stayed alive right until the very end. In Bremen, he could therefore focus on how to close the inside channels and force Werder into crosses from poorer zones.

Tactically, this smells like a match in which Werder will want to take the initiative earlier, while Augsburg will look for transition moments and one-on-one situations on the flanks. The home side will try to feed Stage through late midfield runs and Schmid's passes between the lines. The visitors, on the other hand, will probably count on Dahmen's reliability, a patient block, and quicker forward switches after winning second balls.

Absences and the squad that can change the match

Werder had several open squad questions in April. Marco Friedl received a one-match suspension after being sent off against 1. FC Köln, so he missed the Nordderby against HSV. That means he should be available again against Augsburg, which is important news for the home side because he is the captain and a player who organizes the back line. Jens Stage returned after muscle problems precisely for the derby and immediately decided the match, which further increases his importance at this stage.

During the spring, Felix Agu and several defensive options that had struggled with injuries throughout the season were also mentioned at Werder as absentees or doubtful players. Because of that, Thioune also has to think about how aggressively to open the match, because too much risk in the back line against Augsburg can quickly open space for a counterattack.


  • Marco Friedl - served a one-match suspension against Hamburger SV and brings stability back to Werder's back line

  • Jens Stage - returned after a muscle problem and immediately scored two goals in the derby

  • Felix Agu - in April he was still among Werder's more important squad question marks

  • Finn Dahmen - Augsburg's goalkeeper in very good form, confirmed also by a national team call-up in March

  • Alexis Claude-Maurice - the type of player who can open the match for the visitors with a single move



Seats in the stands are disappearing quickly.

Wohninvest Weserstadion is not scenery but a factor

Wohninvest Weserstadion was opened on 17 October 1926, holds 42,100 spectators, and is located by the River Weser, not far from the centre of Bremen. It is a stadium where the arrival of the fans and the surrounding area itself often make up a large part of the experience. It is not an arena cut off from the city, but a place you enter through the neighbourhood, along the river, and across streets that live to a different rhythm on matchday.That is exactly why home fans often speak of Osterdeich and the approach to the stadium as part of the match, and not just logistics. Werder played the recent Nordderby in front of 41,800 spectators in a sold-out stadium, which says enough about how quickly the atmosphere in this place can turn into pressure for visitors. Augsburg will not arrive in a sterile environment, but at a stadium that knows how to accelerate a match as soon as the home side gains momentum.

Basic information for getting to the stadium


  • Address: Franz-Böhmert-StraĂźe 1c, Bremen

  • Capacity: 42,100 seats

  • Opened: 17.10.1926

  • Tickets are also valid for travel on BSAG and VBN buses and trains on matchday

  • The zone around the stadium is closed to cars around 2.5 hours before kick-off



How to get there and what to expect about parking

For fans arriving by car, one thing matters most: the zone around Weserstadion is closed to traffic around two and a half hours before the start of home matches, and parking areas 1 to 6 next to the stadium are not available on matchday without special permission. That means a direct arrival right in front of the stadium should not be relied on. Werder's official recommendation points toward the Park+Ride model, especially toward Hemelinger Hafen, from where the shuttle ride to the stadium takes about ten minutes.

A big plus for visitors from other parts of Germany is that the ticket is also valid as a public transport pass in the BSAG and VBN networks. In practice, that means public transport is the simplest and calmest option, especially for fans staying in the centre of Bremen. The stadium's official traffic map particularly highlights tram lines 1, 2, and 10 as part of the main access to the stadium area.

An unusual but very Bremen option is also arriving by boat. In cooperation with the carrier "Hal över", on certain home matches boats run from Vegesack, from the Waterfront/Pier2 location, and from Martinianleger to the "Weserstadion/Pauliner Marsch" pier. That transport is not included in the ticket price, but for a fan who wants a different entrance into matchday, it is hard to find a more characteristic arrival.

When to arrive and how to plan entry

At major matches in Bremen, the club opens the stadium as much as 120 minutes before kick-off, as was the case for the April Nordderby. For this match, the exact gate opening time should be expected in the official fan information closer to the match date, but the practical rule remains the same: arrive earlier. Checks can be detailed, approaches slowed down, and anyone arriving late often misses the best part of the pre-match atmosphere in the neighbourhood around the stadium.

It is worth securing tickets in time.

Bremen as a host city for a football weekend

For a fan coming from elsewhere, Bremen is a rewarding city for a football weekend. The centre is not far from the stadium, and along the river, old streets, and neighbourhoods around Osterdeich it is easy to put together a day without long transfers and stress. It is precisely that closeness of city and stadium that gives a special tone to Werder's home matches: there is no feeling of an isolated complex on the outskirts, but rather the sense that the whole city is slowly flowing toward one point.

That also means it is worth allowing enough time for the approach before the match and not planning to arrive "at the last minute". Anyone going to Weserstadion for the first time will benefit most if they leave the final part of the journey to public transport or walking from the city. That avoids traffic bottlenecks, and it also makes it easier to feel why Werder's home ground remains one of the more distinctive German football trips.

What kind of match can a fan in the stands expect

This does not look like a clash that will begin with both sides fully open from the first minute. Werder has reason to attack, but also enough scars from the season that it does not want to be left too exposed early on. Augsburg has confidence after Leverkusen and enough weapons to punish poor positioning by the home side. Because of that, it is realistic to expect a firm start, plenty of duels in midfield, and a match that could turn on the first goal, a set piece, or one mistake in the build-up.For a spectator in the stadium, that often means a very good experience: a lot of tension, sudden mood swings in the stands, and the kind of match in which every entry into the final third gets the whole stadium on its feet. Werder cannot play against opponents like this on emotion alone. It has to win the rhythm, the duel, and the aerial battle. Augsburg, on the other hand, does not have to be prettier to be more dangerous.

Ticket sales for this match are ongoing.

Sources:
- Bundesliga.com - Bundesliga 2025/26 table after 30 rounds; Jens Stage profile; Alexis Claude-Maurice profile
- SV Werder Bremen - official data on the stadium, coach Daniel Thioune, the traffic concept for Weserstadion, fan information, and recent results against RB Leipzig, 1. FC Köln, and Hamburger SV
- FC Augsburg - official website with recent results against Hamburger SV, Hoffenheim, and Bayer Leverkusen; coach Manuel Baum; Finn Dahmen's national team call-up
- Transfermarkt - overview of injuries and suspensions for Werder Bremen and FC Augsburg as support for squad context

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2 hours ago, Author: Sports desk

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