Live Cameras Around Celtic Park
Watch real-time traffic on the M8, the M74, London Road, and the Gallowgate before a Celtic match, an Old Firm derby, or a stadium concert in Glasgow's East End. Free live feeds from Scotland's trunk road network, refreshed regularly.
VIEW GLASGOW CAMERAS โCeltic Park sits in Parkhead in Glasgow's East End, a short distance east of the city centre and the M8. With a seated capacity of 60,411, it is the largest football stadium in Scotland and the eighth-largest in the United Kingdom, according to Wikipedia. Locals call it "Paradise." The ground opened on its current site in 1892 and has been Celtic's home ever since.
On a full matchday, more than 60,000 supporters converge on a compact grid of residential and industrial streets that were never built for that volume. The M8 to the west, the M74 to the south, and the arterial routes of London Road, the Gallowgate, and Springfield Road all tighten in the windows either side of kick-off. TrafficVision.Live aggregates live camera feeds from Traffic Scotland, the trunk road service run by Transport Scotland, so you can see how the motorways and approaches are moving before you set off. The wider Glasgow traffic camera network is free to view with no account required.
Approach Corridors to Celtic Park
M8 Motorway
Cameras across the Glasgow urban motorway
The M8 is the busiest motorway in Scotland and runs right through the city centre on an elevated viaduct west of Parkhead (Wikipedia). Most drivers from the west and north funnel off it toward the East End.
M74 and Kingston Bridge
Feeds on the southern approach
Drivers from the south and the M74 extension join the network near the Kingston Bridge, one of the busiest river crossings in Europe. It carries around 150,000 vehicles a day against an original design of 120,000, per Wikipedia.
London Road
The primary east-west artery
London Road runs directly past the stadium and is the main route in from the city centre. It absorbs the heaviest matchday pressure as coaches, taxis, and cars queue for the ground.
Gallowgate and Springfield Road
Local access streets
The Gallowgate feeds the north side of Parkhead while Springfield Road handles local access and car park approaches. Both are managed by stewards and police on major event days.
Parking around Celtic Park is limited and heavily managed on matchdays, so the club and the police direct most supporters onto public transport. Watching the approach feeds before you leave is the difference between a clean run in and a long crawl along London Road.
Matchday and Event-Day Traffic Patterns
Celtic play a busy home calendar across the Scottish Premiership, the Scottish Cup, the League Cup, and European competition, with attendances routinely above 55,000. The single biggest traffic event is the Old Firm derby against Rangers. It is one of the most heavily policed fixtures in Britain, and matches are now deliberately scheduled for early afternoon kick-offs to reduce disruption, according to Wikipedia. An early kick-off pulls the inbound rush forward into the late morning.
The pattern on a full house is consistent:
- Three hours before kick-off: Coaches and early arrivals begin filling London Road and the Gallowgate. The M8 and M74 approaches start to slow.
- Ninety minutes before kick-off: Peak inbound congestion. Dalmarnock station queues heavily and stewarding tightens on Springfield Road and around the car parks.
- Kick-off: London Road near the ground is often at a standstill. A drive from within a mile can take longer than the walk.
- Full-time: Peak outbound congestion for roughly an hour as the crowd disperses west toward the city and south toward the M74.
Check the M8 and London Road Now
Live feeds from Scotland's trunk road network show the Glasgow motorways and East End approaches in real time.
VIEW LIVE CAMS โPublic Transport Is the Better Option
Rail is the practical choice for Celtic Park. Dalmarnock station, on the ScotRail Argyle Line, is roughly a 15-minute walk from the ground and is the closest option. It gets extremely busy on matchdays, with a managed queueing system in place on Swanson Street to control the crowds, per Wikipedia. Bridgeton station, also on the Argyle Line about a mile from the stadium, spreads the load and is a useful alternative when Dalmarnock is at capacity. Both run through Glasgow Central Low Level, so supporters can connect from across the Central Belt.
ScotRail typically strengthens services on major matchdays. Check the ScotRail journey planner for times and any football-service alterations before you travel, since post-match platform queues at Dalmarnock can add time to the trip home.
For drivers, the honest position is that on-street parking near Parkhead is scarce and controlled on event days, and the residential streets fill quickly. If you must drive, arriving well before the pre-match rush and watching the live feeds on London Road and the Gallowgate is the only way to avoid the worst of it.
Plan Your Route to Celtic Park
Use the route builder to plot your drive across Glasgow and see every live camera along the way: M8, M74, and the East End approaches.
BUILD YOUR ROUTE โDerbies, European Nights, and Concerts
Not every big night at Celtic Park is a league game. European fixtures bring midweek evening kick-offs that collide with the Glasgow commuter peak, pushing congestion onto the M8 and Kingston Bridge at their busiest. The ground has also hosted major events beyond football: it staged the opening ceremony of the 2014 Commonwealth Games and has held stadium concerts by acts including U2 and Prince over the years, according to Wikipedia. Concert nights draw a different, less transit-savvy crowd and tend to congest the local streets earlier than a routine league match.
Whatever brings the crowd, the traffic signature is the same: the motorways feed the pressure, and London Road, the Gallowgate, and Springfield Road absorb it.
Weather and Fixture Timing
Glasgow matchdays run through a wet, dark Scottish winter. League and cup fixtures from November through February bring rain, occasional snow, and early darkness that slow the M8 approaches and the East End arterials. The live camera feeds show current road-surface conditions directly, which tells you more than a general forecast: a warning about "rain in Glasgow" does not reveal whether London Road is actually flooding near the ground. A camera does.
Watching Glasgow Traffic from Anywhere
For coverage beyond Parkhead, our Scotland traffic cameras guide covers the motorways and trunk roads across the country, and the United Kingdom directory aggregates feeds nationwide. Football supporters travelling to grounds elsewhere in Britain can check our guides to Old Trafford, Anfield, and Etihad Stadium for the approach routes to England's biggest venues.
Are there live traffic cameras near Celtic Park?
Yes. TrafficVision.Live aggregates feeds from Traffic Scotland, the trunk road service run by Transport Scotland, covering the M8 through Glasgow, the M74 and Kingston Bridge to the south, and the approaches toward the East End. The Glasgow-area cameras are free to view with no account required.
What is the best way to get to Celtic Park on a matchday?
Rail is the practical choice. Dalmarnock station on the ScotRail Argyle Line is about a 15-minute walk from the ground, with a managed queueing system on Swanson Street on busy matchdays. Bridgeton station, also on the Argyle Line and about a mile away, is a useful alternative. Both connect through Glasgow Central Low Level.
When is traffic worst around Celtic Park?
The Old Firm derby against Rangers is the peak event, and those matches are scheduled for early afternoon kick-offs to reduce disruption. For any sellout near the 60,411 capacity, the M8 and London Road start slowing around three hours before kick-off, with peak inbound congestion about 90 minutes out and peak outbound for roughly an hour after full-time.
Can I park at Celtic Park?
Parking around Parkhead is limited and heavily managed on event days, and the residential streets fill quickly. The club and police direct most supporters onto public transport. If you must drive, arrive well before the pre-match rush and check the live feeds on London Road and the Gallowgate first.
Which roads feed Celtic Park?
The M8, the busiest motorway in Scotland, runs through the city centre west of Parkhead, and the M74 joins from the south near the Kingston Bridge, which carries around 150,000 vehicles a day. Locally, London Road runs directly past the stadium, while the Gallowgate and Springfield Road handle north-side and car park access.
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