The Eliteserien is the top association football league in Norway. It was established in 1963 as the 1. divisjon and has consisted of between 10 and 16 teams. Fifty-six different venues have been used to host matches.[1]
The following is a list of all stadia used for matches in the Norwegian top division, including while it was known as the 1. divisjon. It consists of the venue's name, the municipality it where it is located, its current capacity, whether it has natural grass or artificial turf (an asterisk (*) indicates current artificial turf, but previous natural grass), the number of top-league matches contested on the venue, the teams which have played their home games at the venue and how many matches for each team, and the years the stadium was used at the top level. The data is up to date as of the end of the 2023 season.
^Strindheim played at Lerkendal in 1984 and 1995[2]
^Vålerenga had Ullevaal as their main home ground in 1994–1996 and from 2000 until 14 August 2017, although they prior to that often had a minority of their home games at Ullevaal, and were not in the top league in 2001
^Lyn has had Ullevaal has it main home venue, and has played in the top league in 1963–69, 1971–73, 1978, 1980–81, 1991–93, 1997, 2001–09
^Rosenborg played one match at Ullevaal in 1971 due to severe rain fall ruining the pitch at their home ground Lerkendal Stadion ahead of the last home match against Strømsgodset.[6]
^The turf has been artificial since the start of the 2008 season.
^The turf has been artificial since the start of the summer of 2006.
^Skagerak Arena was known as Odd Stadion until 2007. For sponsorship reasons, the stadium is named for the power company Skagerak Energi.[14]
^Vålerenga had Bislett as their main home stadium until 1993 and in 1998–99. In this period, they played in the top league in 1963–67, 1974–75, 1977–90 and 1998–99.
^Aker Stadion was known as Molde Stadion until 3 May 2006. For sponsorship reasons, the stadium is named for the industrial conglomerate Aker. The turf has been artificial since the start of the 2014 season.[17]
^Sarpsborg 08 played at the top level in 2011 and 2013–
^For sponsorship reasons, the stadium is named SR-Bank Arena. It was known as Viking Stadion until 2018.[21]
^Vard Haugesund played at the top level in 1976[13]
^Vålerenga played one home match at Briskeby in 1984, a year Hamarkameratene was not in the top league
^Molde Idrettspark was known as Molde Stadion until 1998, when Aker Stadion opened and took the name Molde Stadion
^For sponsorship reasons, Color Line Stadium is named for the ferry operator Color Line.
^Consto Arena was named Nedre Eiker Stadion from 1950 until 2012 and Mjøndalen Stadion from 2012 until 2015. For sponsorship reasons, the stadium was named Isachsen Stadion for the Isachsen Group from 2016 until 2018. It has been named Consto Arena for the Consto AS from the 2019 season. The turf has been artificial since the start of the 2012 season.
^Strømsgodset played eight home games at Nedre Eiker Stadion in 1996, while Marienlyst was being renovated[27]
^Old Fredrikstad Stadion was known as Fredrikstad Stadion until 2007, when a new Fredrikstad Stadion opened.
^For sponsorship reasons, Sør Arena is named for the bank Sparebanken Sør. The turf has been artificial since the summer of 2012.
^For sponsorship reasons, It was formerly named Komplett Arena for the online retailer Komplett. Before this known as Komplett.no Arena.
^KFUM Oslo will play their first two home matches of the 2024 season at the Intility Arena due to ongoing upgrades of KFUM Arena.[32]
^For sponsorship reasons, Aka Arena is named for the investment company Aka.
^For sponsorship reasons, Telenor Arena is named for the telecommunications company Telenor.
^Stabæk are planning a new stadium which possibly opens in 2026