The German U23 women’s national team will play Denmark in Leipzig on June 4, 2026, marking Chemie Leipzig’s Alfred-Kunze-Sportpark as a host venue for a DFB youth international.
The match kicks off at 18:00, with gates opening at 17:00, and tickets now available through the DFB ticket shop and at the stadium box office from 16:30 on matchday.
Category 1 seats in the Dieter-Scherbarth-Tribüne cost 14 euros (reduced 10 euros), while Category 2 dammsitz tickets are 12 euros (reduced 9 euros). Groups of ten or more pay 4 euros per person, and wheelchair users with a companion pay 6 euros total.
Tickets double as MDV public transport passes, valid for five hours before kickoff and five hours after the final whistle.
Chemie Leipzig managing director Steve Bathelt called the assignment recognition of years of work, both infrastructural and in player development, saying the club welcomes the DFB squad and Danish team „wholeheartedly.“
DFB U23 coach Michael Urbansky said anticipation for the game is „enormous,“ citing the venue’s special tradition and expectation of a football-enthusiastic crowd in a unique stadium.
A second match against Denmark will take place four days later on June 8 in Halle at the Leuna-Chemie-Stadion, with kickoff at 20:15 and gates opening at 19:15.
In Halle, Category 1 tickets are 12 euros (reduced 8 euros) and Category 2 are 10 euros (reduced 7 euros), with the same group and disability rates applying.
The U23 team enters both fixtures on the back of two wins — 1-0 over Italy and 2-1 against Belgium — finishing their recent international window in fifth place.
Why is Chemie Leipzig hosting a DFB U23 women’s international?
The club cites its recent work in infrastructure and player development as the basis for being selected to host the match.
What makes the Alfred-Kunze-Sportpark notable for this fixture?
The DFB U23 coach noted the venue’s special tradition and expressed confidence in drawing a passionate crowd to a distinctive stadium setting.