Hibbert was born in
Liverpool and brought up in
Huyton. Growing up as an Everton supporter, Hibbert joined the club as a boy. He was a member of the Everton youth team that won the
FA Youth Cup in 1998 beating
Blackburn Rovers 5–3 on aggregate. Three years later, he made his first-team debut for the club in a
Premier League match against
West Ham United on 31 March 2001, He missed the end of the
2005–06 season with a hernia problem and his preparations for the
2006–07 season were hampered after he was infected by
cryptosporidium parasite. Hibbert's 2006–07 season was seriously disrupted by injury. He again played regularly in the
2007–08 and the
2008–09 seasons. At the start of the
2010–11 season, Hibbert was Everton's longest-serving player, the only player who had been at the club throughout the entire reign of former manager
David Moyes, In addition, he had not scored in a competitive game during his professional career. Alongside his commitment to the club, the goal drought contributed to his cult hero status among Everton fans, to the extent that a banner reading "If Hibbert Scores, We Riot" was displayed at the
2009 FA Cup semi-final. Hibbert was awarded a testimonial match for Everton following 10 years of service. The match was played on 8 August 2012 against Greek side
AEK Athens, the team against whom Hibbert made his eighteenth appearance in all European competitions for Everton, equalling a club record. Hibbert scored Everton's fourth goal, a free kick, in a 4–1 win prompting a pitch invasion. Hibbert's
2012–13 season was littered with injuries. In the early part of the season he suffered neck and calf injuries which kept him out of action until November. He only returned for a few games before a recurrence of the calf injury forced him to have surgery which meant he did not play again until he came on as a substitute in Everton's final home game of the season. The match was manager David Moyes' last home game in charge of the side following his decision to end his 11-year reign to join
Manchester United. Hibbert's appearance meant that he was the only remaining player at the club who had featured in Moyes' first squad. The form of
Séamus Coleman who was later named the club's
2013–14 Player of the Season kept Hibbert out of the first team to such an extent that he only made one league appearance during the campaign. In July 2014, he signed a two-year contract with the club. Hibbert saw very little gametime come his way over the following two seasons. At the end of the
2015–16 season he was released by the club after 25 years, of which 18 were as a professional Everton player. He announced his retirement shortly afterwards. In April 2017 he joined amateur side Hares FC in the
Skelmersdale Sunday league and continued the next season.{{cite web|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/everton-liverpool-tony-hibbe>rt-s-return-football-debut-a7664481.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220525/https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/everton-liverpool-tony-hibbert-s-return-football-debut-a7664481.html |archive-date=25 May 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live ==International career==