List of NCAA Division I FBS football stadiums
Appearance
(Redirected from List of Division I-FBS college football stadiums)
This is a list of stadiums that currently serve as the home venue for Football Bowl Subdivision college football teams. These include most of the largest stadiums in the United States.
Conference affiliations reflect those in the 2024 season.
Current stadiums
[edit]In addition to the following list of FBS football stadiums, there is also a List of NCAA Division I FBS football programs.
- ^ Largest football crowd. Larger attendance records may exist for other configurations of the stadium. Also, a few stadiums now have lower football capacity than in the past; one example is California Memorial Stadium, whose capacity dropped by more than 9,000 in its most recent renovation.
- ^ Year of most recent completed stadium expansion/major upgrade.
- ^ Mailing address is Las Vegas.
- ^ Mailing address is Chestnut Hill.
- ^ The mailing address for the entire Penn State campus, including the stadium, is University Park.
- ^ The stadium has a Charlottesville mailing address, but is physically located in Albemarle County, which encloses but does not include the city of Charlottesville.
- ^ Virtually the entire Mississippi State campus, including the stadium, is outside the Starkville city limits in unincorporated Oktibbeha County. "Mississippi State" is the postal designation for the entire campus, and the census designation for all but the tiny portion of the campus that lies within Starkville.
- ^ The stadium and virtually all of the Academy grounds are outside the Colorado Springs city limits. The Academy is respectively designated by the US Census Bureau and US Postal Service as "Air Force Academy" and "USAF Academy".
- ^ The stadium and the main UCF campus have an Orlando mailing address, but both are located in unincorporated Orange County.
- ^ The stadium and the main KSU campus have a Kennesaw mailing address, but both are located in unincorporated Cobb County.
- ^ Mailing address is Dallas.
- ^ The stadium and the main FIU campus have a Miami mailing address, but both are located in unincorporated Miami-Dade County.
- ^ Mailing address is Buffalo.
- ^ The stadium and the Ole Miss campus lie outside the Oxford city limits in unincorporated Lafayette County. The US Census Bureau designates the campus as "University, Mississippi".
- ^ Mailing address is Amherst.
Future stadiums
[edit]This list includes the following:
- Stadiums either under construction or confirmed to be built in the future.
- Existing stadiums of teams either (1) transitioning to FBS and not yet football members of FBS conferences, or (2) returning to FBS football.
Here, conference affiliations are those expected to be in effect when the stadium becomes an FBS venue, whether by opening, reopening, or a school's entry into provisional or full FBS membership.
Stadium | City | State | Team | Conference | Capacity | Record1 | Built | Expanded2 | Surface |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Delaware Stadium | Newark | DE | Delaware | Conference USA (2025) | 18,309[172] | 23,619 (October 27. 1973 vs. Temple)[172] |
1952[172] | FieldTurf | |
Robert W. Plaster Stadium | Springfield | MO | Missouri State | Conference USA (2025) | 17,500[173] | 18,386 (September 13, 2014 vs. North Dakota)[174] |
1941[175] | 2014[176] | FieldTurf |
New Ryan Field | Evanston | IL | Northwestern | Big Ten | 35,000 | — | 2026 (expected)[109] | N/A | TBD |
Future South Florida on-campus stadium | Tampa | FL | South Florida | American | 35,000 | — | 2027 (expected)[177] | N/A | TBD |
New Aloha Stadium | Honolulu | HI | Hawaiʻi | Mountain West | 25,000 | — | 2028 (expected)[178] | N/A | TBD |
See also
[edit]- Map of NCAA Division I FBS football stadiums
- List of NCAA Division I FBS football programs
- List of NCAA Division I FCS football stadiums
- List of current National Football League stadiums
- List of American football stadiums by capacity
- List of U.S. stadiums by capacity
- List of North American stadiums by capacity
- List of stadiums by capacity
- Lists of stadiums
Notes
[edit]- Capacity
- Record
- Other
- ^ Due to extensive ongoing construction at David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium, Kansas will play its 2024 home games at a combination of Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri and Children's Mercy Park in Kansas City, Kansas.[41]
- ^ Northwestern's previous stadium, Ryan Field, was demolished at the end of the 2023 season. A new Ryan Field is currently being built at the site of the old Ryan Field, and will not be completed until 2026; Northwestern plans to play most of its home games for 2024 and 2025 at an enhanced Martin Stadium, currently home to its soccer and women's lacrosse teams.[109]
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