
SV VIKTORIA ASCHAFFENBURG

FEBRUARY 2026
Founded: Aug 6, 1901
Club Members: 480
Coach: Felix Luz
Captain: Benjamin Baier
Bayernliga Nord: 1
Hessenliga: 4
Landesliga Hessen-Süd: 1
Landespokal Hessen Winner: 1
Website: www.sva01.de
The club was founded on 24th June 1904 after a merger between two long forgotten local clubs - FC Aschaffenburg (formed 6th August 1901) and FC Viktoria Aschaffenburg (formed 12 April 1902) - and in accordance with German tradition, Sportverein Viktoria 01 Aschaffenburg; or SV Viktoria Aschaffenburg as they're more commonly known, took the older merging club's year of foundation (1901) as its own. After a name change on 3rd June 1906, the club spent their early years as a largely uncompetitive side in regional championships including the Kreisliga Odenwald, Kreisliga Nordmain, Kreisliga Südmain, and Bezirksliga Main-Hessen (Gruppe Main). The Nazi rise to power during the 1930s led to a merger in 1937 with Reichsbahn TuSpo Aschaffenburg to become Reichsbahn-Viktoria Aschaffenburg, but the union was short-lived and after regaining autonomy by 1939, the club made a single-season cameo in the top-flight Gauliga Bayern (Nord) in 1942 - one of sixteen regional divisions created in the reorganisation of German football under the Third Reich.
The Allies brought Hitler's 'Thousand Year Reich' to an end in 1945 and introduced a policy of de-Nazification in occupied Germany which forced all sports clubs to disband in an attempt to stamp out fascism. Aschaffenburg duly reformed and spent the next couple of decades in the regional Oberliga Süd - achieving a highly creditable fifth place finish in 1956 - but by the time the 50s gave way to the 60s, the club had been relegated to the third-tier Amateurliga Hessen/Amateur Oberliga-Hessen. Having missed the cut when the German FA were deciding which sixteen clubs should form the new Bundesliga in 1963, Aschaffenburg spent the next decade or so mired in the mud of mid-table obscurity before fortunes began to turn with a couple of Oberliga Hessen title wins seeing them spend a few seasons in Bundesliga.2 during the late 1980s.
They also showed some cup pedigree around this time and the club’s high-water mark was achieved in 1987 when Uwe Höfer's late strike sent Bundesliga heavyweights 1.FC Köln featuring the likes of Bodo Illgner, Jürgen Kohler. Pierre Littbarski and Tony Woodcock tumbling out of the DFB Pokal at the second round stage in front of 12,000 fans at the Stadion am Schönbusch. Giants slain, Aschaffenburg progressed to the quarter-finals before a SV Werder Bremen team (who would go on to lift the Bundesliga Meisterschale at the end of the season) were thrown in their path and beat the underdogs 3-1.
For Aschaffenburg, the cup run was the final flourish of a golden period in their history and after a snake-bitten season in 1993-94, the club went into a tailspin that saw them end up in the sixth tier Verbandsliga Hessen Süd and near bankruptcy by 2010. A financial restructuring plan put in place by local lawyer Nikolaus Ackermann saw insolvency proceedings cancelled and having secured the club's financial future (for now at least ...) a Bayernliga Nord title in 2018 means that the Stadion am Schönbusch now hosts Regionalliga Bayern football again.


GROUND DETAILS
Ground Name: Stadion am Schönbusch
Year Opened: 1909
Renovations: 1946, 1993, 2008, 2021
Capacity: 6,620
Undersoil Heating: No
Running Track: No
LED Video Screen: 1
Floodlights: 800 lux
Playing Surface: Natural Grass
Pitch Size: 109m x 70m
Grounds:
Stadion am Schönbusch (1909 - )







Stadion am Schönbusch opened on 23rd May 1909, with its first matches played against the first and second teams of 1st Hanauer FC 1893 before 1,200 spectators, ending in 7–1 and 2–1 victories. On 4th May 1921, a new changing room with hot and cold running water - unique in southern Germany at the time - was inaugurated. By the 1920s, some games were drawing over 4,000 fans, prompting the construction of the first grandstand on 6th May 1923, a wooden structure with 400 seats. World War II destroyed the grandstand and damaged the pitch. After the war, without stands, capacity dropped to about 8,000 and was often maxed out. New stands and a grandstand increased capacity to 12,000, and in 1951 a record crowd of 18,000 attended a match against the 1.FC Nürnberg, forcing ticket sales to stop. The early 1950s saw average crowds of around 13,000, nearly filling the stadium every game, with the 18,000 mark reached again in 1954.
On Friday, August 22, 1958, the main grandstand, which could hold 700 spectators, burned down due to arson, destroying interior furnishings, sports equipment, and damaging the pitch. The grandstand was rebuilt in just three weeks, and the pitch was later repaired by the club with help from volunteers and US soldiers. After relegation from the Oberliga Süd in 1959-60 and dropping to a lower division, the stadium’s capacity went unused for decades, even during regional league matches against big names like TSV 1860 München. In 1984, the building inspectorate recorded a capacity of 10,500 spectators, with 650 seats in the stands. To prepare financially for potential promotion to Bundesliga.2, the seating was expanded to 1,200 covered seats with a new grandstand. This was completed in just five weeks, costing DM 500,000, and inaugurated on May 13, 1985. Another DM 200,000 went into further upgrades to meet Bundesliga standards.
Before the second season in the second tier in 1986, the stands were renovated and fitted with breakwaters, with costs of DM 47,000 covered by the city of Aschaffenburg. In 1986, only three of the 38 stadiums in the First and Second Bundesliga were owned by their respective clubs, including the Stadion am Schönbusch, while the rest were municipally owned. Due to financial pressures from investments exceeding DM 700,000, Viktoria offered to sell the stadium to the city of Aschaffenburg, planning to use the funds to build a new 3,000-seat grandstand. The city declined, despite already owning three-quarters of the property. After earning promotion back to the Second Bundesliga in 1989, an electronic scoreboard—still in use today—was installed, along with a second VIP room under the newer grandstand. A DM 100,000 donation from patron Alois Ammerschläger funded upgrades to the showers and sanitary facilities, the addition of a fatigue pool, and new rooms for referees and offices. To help cover the club’s prior investments, Ammerschläger bought the stadium for DM 700,000 and donated it to the city on the condition that it be fully renovated.
Under pressure from Alois Ammerschläger, plans were made for a complete stadium overhaul, including rearranging the stands, adding a grandstand on the back straight, and installing a floodlight system. The most striking change was rotating the entire pitch by 90° to ensure the floodlight masts didn’t block the view between the castle in Schönbusch Park and Johannisburg Castle, in line with the Bavarian Palaces and Lakes Ordinance. A municipal planning office sketch showed the pitch enclosed on all sides by covered standing and seating areas, framed by floodlights. Just before the promotion round to the Second Bundesliga, construction began in 1992, forcing matches to be played amid a half-finished venue with only about 7,000 spectators. For further reconstruction, the stadium closed for a year, and Viktoria played on a sports field in the Damm district. The first construction phase finished on 13 June 1993, with Viktoria’s first game in the new stadium on 3rd September 1993.
The playing field, now rotated by 90 degrees to ensure that the floodlight masts did not interfere with the visual axis between the castle in Schönbusch Park and Johannisburg Castle, which would have violated the Bavarian Palaces and Lakes Ordinance, cost DM 1.5 million. After Viktoria missed promotion to Bundesliga.2 and spent a year in the Landesliga, plans for a new seating grandstand and floodlight system were postponed indefinitely, pending future sporting success. Without a second renovation phase, the stadium remained unfinished, bringing notable downsides: the rotated pitch turned the former main stands into back stands, causing poorer visibility and a sharp decline in seat ticket sales - an important source of income— by an estimated DM 30,000 per season. One side of the back straight was left deserted, with a forty-meter-wide gravel strip running its length between the fence and the stadium’s outer boundary. Long-time spectators still mourn the loss of the old stadium’s packed atmosphere; the open space behind the back straight swallowed the supporters’ chants. Team captain Thomas Biehrer summed it up, recalling that in the old stadium, "... even 1,500 fans could give you goosebumps—now the atmosphere is gone".
Despite protests, the city of Aschaffenburg, as the owner, couldn’t fully carry out the second phase of construction. The sporting requirements for the upgrade weren’t met, and the city lacked the necessary funds. For the time being, only twelve new ticket booths were built, costing over DM 320,000. When the idea of adding a grandstand to the empty back straight came up again in 1997, plans shifted from a 3,000-seat version to a smaller one with just 1,000 seats, but even that never happened. Feeling unsupported by the city, Viktoria took matters into their own hands in 1999, building a covered tubular steel grandstand in the municipal stadium with help from an advertising partner. This temporary structure, meant to last about 20 years, is 58 meters long and holds nearly 1,100 seats. Along with the main stand and extended standing areas on part of the Gegengerade, it brought back some of the stadium's once-famous atmosphere.
The city of Aschaffenburg lists the stadium’s capacity at 6,620 spectators. One side of the back straight and part of the goal area feature standing terraces with breakwaters, extending slightly along the other back straight. This side also has the covered main stand with 1,040 seats. Opposite the back goal are two covered stands offering 946 seats, bringing the official seating total to 1,986. Beneath the back-goal stands are the VIP and changing rooms, some offices, and the “Stadion Stüberl” pub, currently being renovated to house the future fan shop. The pitch is enclosed by a security fence with about a dozen gates, and a gated tunnel allows players and officials safe passage from the changing rooms to the field. Twelve ticket booths are spread across three of the four outer sides, while two opposite sides of the property hold three buildings with toilets and food stands, plus two smaller kiosks on the Darmstädter Straße side. A simple, monochrome two-line scoreboard shows the score and team line-ups.
After qualifying for the newly structured Regionalliga Süd, the city began renovating the stadium in July 2009. This included adding three fences, dividing what was once a completely open area into several sections. Modernisation has continued despite Viktoria Aschaffenburg missing promotion to the third division. In August 2021, an 800-lux floodlight system was installed, meeting third division requirements.
BUYING TICKETS
Ticket Office:
Website: www.sva01.de
Telephone: +49 (0) 602 1483390
Email: tickets@sva01.de

Average Attendance:
2024-2025: 950 (Regionalliga Bayern)
2023-2024: 1,049 (Regionalliga Bayern)
2022-2023: 1,132 (Regionalliga Bayern)
2021-2022: 1,011 (Regionalliga Bayern) *
2020-2021: N/A *
* Season affected by COVID pandemic
Expected Ticket Availability
There's no need for a mad scramble. With the likes of Eintracht, Mainz and Darmstadt on the doorstep, it takes strong local allegiance to follow Viktoria in the Regionalliga. Added to the fact that average attendances are a fraction of the stadium's total capacity, it's no surprise to find the gap between ticket supply and demand remains a healthy one.
Plenty of tickets will be available therefore through the online shop but for those of you who don't feel the anxious need to get your ticket organised weeks in advance, you can keep it traditional and present yourself at Box Office 4 (in front of the Stehtribüne) which opens about 75 minutes before kick-off.
As is the norm in the Regionalliga, there's no complicated approach to ticket pricing and a flat-rate applies to all matches regardless of the quality of opposition facing Viktoria. Ticket prices to sit in the Haupttribüne (Blocks A-C) are €16 for adults, €14 for seniors and concessions; and children (aged 3-12) can get in for €6. €12 will get full-payers a place on the Stehtribüne terraces (Blocks I-J) with discounts seeing seniors and concessions paying €10 and children (aged 3-12 years) getting in for €3.
If you like watching your football in a bit of comfort, it's €95 for adults to join the VIPs (Blocks B-C) with 13-18 year olds paying €40 and children (aged 3-12) €25. The VIP tent closes two hours after full-time.
Free 'Lap Tickets' are also available for fans aged 2 and under - although these don't entitle the child to a seat of their own however and, as the name suggests, they must sit on their parent's lap throughout the game.
GETTING THERE & AWAY
Stadium Address:
Kleine Schönbuschallee 92,
63741 Aschaffenburg


BY CAR:
Follow the A3 in the direction of Würzburg and take the Aschaffenburg-West / Stockstadt double exit and take the Mainaschaff exit. Here follow the signs to Aschaffenburg-Zentrum (B8) and continue straight ahead. Shortly after entering the village (near the Esso petrol station), turn right onto the B26 in the direction of Darmstadt. From here the stadium is also signposted! Follow the A3 in the direction of Frankfurt and take the Aschaffenburg-Ost exit. Follow the signs to Aschaffenburg (B8) and continue straight ahead – towards Darmstadt, from here the stadium is also signposted!
Parking is available at:
P1 Stadionparkplatz (Darmstädter Straße, 63741 Aschaffenburg)
P2 Kleine Schönbuschallee - Away Fans only (Kleine Schönbuschallee 27, 63741 Aschaffenburg)
P3 Volksfestplatz (Darmstädter Straße. 14, 63741 Aschaffenburg)
P4 Eishalle / Friebad (Stadtbadstraße 5, 63741 Aschaffenburg)
P5 Parkhaus Linde MH Arena (Seidelstraße 2, 63741 Aschaffenburg)
PUBLIC TRANSPORT:
Arriving into Aschaffenburg at the Hauptbahnhof, just jump on Bus 3 (Direction: Leider) for the 15-minute ride to the Stadtbad (P+R) stop next to the Volksfestplatz . From here, cross the road onto
Großostheimer Straße and then turn right onto Kleine Schönbuschallee. The ground will be on your right after quarter-of-a-mile walk through woodland.
WALKING DIRECTIONS:
The stadium is just over a mile from the centre of Aschaffenburg and can be easily reached on foot.
Come out of the Hauptbahnhof towards the city centre, cross Ludwigstraße and make a slight right onto Frohsinnstraße. Follow Frohsinnstraße as it bends round to the right until you come to the junction with Weißburger Straße. Follow Weißburger Straße for 100 metres before turning right and crossing the road onto Herstallstraße. Follow this road through the city centre for 300 metres before crossing Wermbachstraße onto Dalbergstraße.
After quarter-of-a-mile, turn right onto Willigisbrücke as it crosses the Main river. Once you've crossed this bridge, make a slight left onto Großostheimer Straße and then cross the road onto Kleine Schönbuschallee and the ground will be on your right after quarter-of-a-mile walk through woodland.
FAN SHOP, MUSEUM & STADIUM TOURS
FAN SHOP:
Carola Schweibert's Fanshop
(Kleine Schönbuschallee 92,63741 Aschaffenburg ; open one hour before kick-off and for 30 minutes after full-time on matchdays).
Club volunteer Carola Schweibert started selling Viktoria merchandise in 2018 from under a gazebo in front of the VIP tent before being given the keys to a purpose built shop at the stadium four years later. For a wider stock range and longer 'opening' hours though - have a browse on Viktoria's website here.
FOOD & DRINK OPTIONS


The centre of Aschaffenburg is your best bet when it comes to pub grub and beer and we recommend that you head to Gastwirtschaft Schlappeseppel where they've been serving beer brewed in accordance with Bavarian Purity Law since 1631. They also dish up good food and when you've had your fill, you can have a wander around the brewing museum inside the restaurant - get a 'taste' of it here.
A number of kiosk vendors offering typical fan favourites set up at the stadium and you can watch the match with a few pints and a burnt bratwurst from the griddle. Viktoria operate a 'voucher system' which means you have to place and pay for your order in advance. Head to Box Office 5 (on the terraces) or Box Office 12 (in the seating area) and tell them what you want. After paying (cash only !), you'll be given a voucher. You then hand this over to the staff at any kiosk in the ground and they'll put your order together.
Unused vouchers don't lose their validity and can be used at future matches. And if you ask for "Sechs Biere im Träger", you'll get six beers (and a carrier) for a discount !
OTHER CLUBS IN THE AREA
BUNDESLIGA: 1.FSV Mainz 05, Eintracht Frankfurt
BUNDESLIGA 2: 1.FC Nürnberg, SpVgg Greuther Fürth, SV Darmstadt 98
3.LIGA: SV Waldhof Mannheim, SV Wehen Wiesbaden


























