List of current NFL stadiums
This article is a list of current National Football League stadiums, sorted by capacity, their locations, their first year of usage, and home teams. Although the National Football League (NFL) has 32 teams, there are only 31 full-time NFL stadiums because the New York Giants and New York Jets share MetLife Stadium. This number is scheduled to decrease to 30 when the Los Angeles Rams and the Los Angeles Chargers will begin to share Los Angeles Stadium at Hollywood Park in 2020.
The newest full-time NFL stadium is Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, home of the Atlanta Falcons, which opened for the 2017 season. Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, temporary home of the Los Angeles Rams, is the oldest, having opened in 1923.
The NFL uses several other stadiums on a regular basis in addition to the teams' designated regular home sites. In England, two London venues—Tottenham Hotspur Stadium and Wembley Stadium—are contracted to host a combined four games per season, as part of the NFL International Series which runs through 2020. The former is the newest stadium that hosts NFL games, having opened in April 2019. Estadio Azteca in Mexico City, Mexico, will also host a NFL International Series game in 2019. In addition, Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium in Canton, Ohio, is the location of the annual exhibition Pro Football Hall of Fame Game. Since 2016, Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Florida has hosted the Pro Bowl.
The majority of current NFL stadiums have sold naming rights to corporations. As of the 2018 season, Arrowhead Stadium, Lambeau Field, Paul Brown Stadium, and Soldier Field have never sold naming rights, while Broncos Stadium at Mile High[1] have previously sold naming rights. The Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum—a temporary NFL venue—has sold their naming rights in a deal that will officially change the stadium's name in August 2019.[2]
Stadium characteristics
Stadiums represent a considerable expense to a community, and thus their construction, use, and funding often enter the public discourse.[3] Also, given the perceived advantage a team gets to playing in its home stadium, particular attention is given in the media to the peculiarities of each stadium's environment. Climate, playing surface (either natural or artificial turf), and the type of roof all contribute to giving each team its home-field advantage.
Stadiums are either open, enclosed, or have a retractable roof. For retractable roofs, the home team determines if the roof is to be opened or closed 90 minutes before kickoff. The roof remains open unless precipitation or lightning is within the vicinity of the stadium, the temperature drops below 40 °F (4 °C), or wind gusts are greater than 40 miles per hour (64 km/h), in which case the roof operators will close the roof.[4]
Seating
With a peak capacity of over 100,000 spectators, AT&T Stadium has the highest capacity of any NFL stadium, while MetLife Stadium has the highest listed seating capacity at 82,500. The smallest stadium is Dignity Health Sports Park, which is hosting the Los Angeles Chargers for the 2017–2019 seasons, with a capacity of 27,000 seats; it is the smallest stadium to host a full NFL season for a team since a 25,000-seat City Stadium hosted its last Green Bay Packers games in 1956.
In their normal configurations, 29 of the league's 31 stadiums have a seating capacity of at least 60,000 spectators; of those, a majority (16) have less than 70,000 seats, while eight have between 70,000 and 80,000 and five can seat 80,000 or more. In contrast to college football stadiums, the largest of which can and regularly do accommodate over 100,000 spectators, no stadium in the league currently has a listed seating capacity of more than 82,500. Teams rarely build their stadiums far beyond the 80,000 seat threshold (and even then, only in the largest markets) because of the league's blackout policy, which prohibited the televising of any NFL game within 75 miles of its home market if a game does not sell all of its non-premium seating. For this reason, until the blackout was suspended in 2015, the Los Angeles Rams cap capacity at the 93,607-seat Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum to 80,000 seats for most games. Oakland–Alameda County Coliseum, the stadium that hosts the Oakland Raiders, has over 60,000 seats, but the team has restricted capacity to under 57,000 in more recent seasons.[5] In the opposite direction, the league has a firm minimum on the number of seats an NFL stadium should have; since 1971 the league has not allowed any stadium under 50,000 seats to host a full-time NFL team (not counting Dignity Health Sports Park; there have been two exceptions to this: 45,000-seat Metropolitan Stadium in Minnesota was not replaced until 1982, and 40,000-seat Vanderbilt Stadium hosted the Tennessee Oilers for one season in 1998 after a planned two-year residency in Memphis was cut in half). In normal circumstances, all NFL stadiums are all-seaters.
Legend
†Denotes stadium with a fixed roof. |
‡Denotes stadium with a retractable roof. |
List of current stadiums
Some stadiums can be expanded to fit larger crowds for other events such as concerts or conventions. Official seating capacities do not include standing room.
Map of current stadiums
Additional stadiums
Image | Stadium | Capacity | Location | Surface | Roof type | Event(s) | Opened | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Camping World Stadium | 65,000 | Orlando, Florida | AstroTurf GameDay Grass 3D | Open | Pro Bowl | 1936[nb 2] | ||
Estadio Azteca | 87,523[49] | Mexico City, Mexico | Grass | Open | NFL Mexico Game | 1966 | ||
File:Tom Benson HOF Stadium-July2017.jpg | Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium | 22,364 | Canton, Ohio | FieldTurf Classic HD | Open | Hall of Fame Game | 1938[nb 3] | [50] |
Wembley Stadium‡ | 86,000[nb 4] | London, England | Desso GrassMaster | Partially retractable | NFL London Games | 2007 | ||
Tottenham Hotspur Stadium | 62,062 | London, England | Artificial turf | Open | NFL London Games | 2019 | [51] |
Future stadiums
Image | Stadium | Capacity | Location | Surface | Roof type | Team(s) | Opening | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Las Vegas Stadium† | 65,000 | Paradise, Nevada | Grass | Fixed | Las Vegas Raiders* | 2020 | [52] | |
Los Angeles Stadium† | 70,240 | Inglewood, California | Artificial turf | Open | Los Angeles Rams Los Angeles Chargers |
2020 | [53] |
*In 2020, the Oakland Raiders will move to Las Vegas and become the Las Vegas Raiders.
Stadium | Capacity | Location | Surface | Roof type | Team(s) | Opening | Ref(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
New Era Field II | Buffalo, New York | Grass | Open | Buffalo Bills | |||
Redskins Stadium | 60,000 | Open | Washington Redskins |
See also
- Chronology of home stadiums for current National Football League teams
- National Football League
- Stadiums to host the Super Bowl (including future years)
- List of NCAA Division I FBS football stadiums
- List of NCAA Division I FCS football stadiums
- List of American football stadiums by capacity
- List of U.S. stadiums by capacity
- List of North American stadiums by capacity
- List of Canadian Football League stadiums
- List of current Major League Baseball stadiums
- List of Major League Soccer stadiums
- List of Major League Lacrosse stadiums
- List of National Basketball Association arenas
- List of National Hockey League arenas
- List of quarterbacks with consecutive regular season games with at least two touchdown passes at a stadium
Notes
- ^ Soldier Field opened in 1924; Bears became tenants in 1971; playing field and seating bowl renovated in 2003.
- ^ Camping World Stadium opened in 1936 as Orlando Stadium; lower seating bowl rebuilt in 2014.
- ^ Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium opened as Fawcett Stadium in 1938; rebuilt in 2015–2016.
- ^ Wembley Stadium seating reduced from 90,000 for NFL games
References
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