32 NFL Stadiums.
How many have you visited?
Track NFL football stadiums. From Lambeau Field to SoFi Stadium, mark every gridiron venue.
By the Numbers
Stadiums
Total Capacity
Largest
Breakdown by Region
Highlights worth a visit
A hand-picked sample. There are many more on the nfl stadiums tracker.
Lambeau Field, Green Bay
Unique fact: The NFL's oldest stadium in continuous use (since 1957) is owned by the fans. The Packers are the only publicly-owned franchise in American pro sports. The "Frozen Tundra" has hosted legendary games in temperatures below -13°F.
Why visit: Experience the legendary "Lambeau Leap" celebration and tailgate with the most dedicated fans in football. Tour the stadium, learn about the Ice Bowl, and understand why Green Bay is the most storied franchise in NFL history.
AT&T Stadium, Dallas
Unique fact: Features the world's largest column-free interior and a video board so massive (160 feet wide) that punts have hit it during games. Jerry Jones filled the stadium with $1.2 billion worth of contemporary art.
Why visit: Tour "Jerry World" and its museum-quality art collection, from Anish Kapoor to Ellsworth Kelly. Stand on the 50-yard line, see the world's largest video board, and experience football as only Texas can deliver it.
SoFi Stadium, Los Angeles
Unique fact: The most expensive stadium ever built at $5.5 billion features a transparent roof and the "Infinity Screen," a double-sided, 70,000-square-foot video board that wraps around the entire bowl.
Why visit: Experience the stunning architectural achievement that reinvented what a stadium can be. Watch the ocean through the translucent roof, marvel at the Infinity Screen from any angle, and see why this is the future of sports venues.
Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City
Unique fact: Holds the Guinness World Record for loudest stadium at 142.2 decibels, louder than a jet engine at takeoff. The roar of Chiefs Kingdom has been known to cause false earthquake readings.
Why visit: Feel the roar of the loudest fans in professional sports and experience the legendary tailgate scene that starts at sunrise. Join the tomahawk chop, feel the ground shake when the Chiefs score, and understand why it's called the "Sea of Red."
Caesars Superdome, New Orleans
Unique fact: The first domed stadium to host a Super Bowl (1978) and served as emergency shelter for 30,000 people during Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The dome's return in 2006 symbolized the city's resilience.
Why visit: Experience the electric atmosphere of Who Dat Nation in a stadium that represents New Orleans' strength and spirit. The acoustics amplify crowd noise to deafening levels, making home games a true advantage for the Saints.
Highmark Stadium, Buffalo
Unique fact: Famous for the most intense tailgate culture in the NFL, where fans have been known to jump through flaming tables and brave below-zero temperatures. The stadium's exposed design creates legendary cold-weather games.
Why visit: Join the wildest tailgate scene in professional sports where Bills Mafia breaks tables and grills for hours before kickoff. Experience the passion of a fanbase that waited decades for a championship and braves brutal winters with pride.
Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia
Unique fact: The only NFL stadium with its own jail and municipal courtroom inside for unruly fans, a testament to the intensity (and occasional excess) of Eagles supporters. The stadium once booed Santa Claus.
Why visit: Experience the passion of Eagles fans at the "Linc," where opposing fans think twice before wearing their team's colors. Feel the energy of the most notoriously dedicated fanbase in the NFL and join the "E-A-G-L-E-S" chant.