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2025-26 Premier League: What are the stadiums for the new top-flight season?

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The 2025-26 Premier League season is around the corner.

Liverpool look to defend their title after a thrilling run to the top of the table last season under Arne Slot, while the likes of Arsenal, Manchester City and Chelsea will surely hope to usurp the Reds as the best in the league.

That's not to mention the likes of Tottenham and Manchester United, who aim to rebound from a disappointing league campaign, while several other clubs boast enough firepower to disrupt the traditional powers.

But just where will all the matches take place? Here, DAZN News profiles the 20 stadiums for the new campaign.

Emirates Stadium (Arsenal)

  • City: London
  • Year opened: 2006
  • Capacity: 60,704

Emirates Stadium Arsenal Premier LeagueGetty Images

It's hard to believe, but Arsenal's "new" home is coming up on its 20th birthday.

The replacement for the famed Highbury Stadium, the Emirates is a stone's throw from the old ground and still stands as one of the more spectacular venues in the Premier League.

Villa Park (Aston Villa)

  • City: Birmingham
  • Year opened: 1897
  • Capacity: 42,918

A community institution since the late 19th century, Villa Park has undergone several renovations as it grew alongside the stature of the sport and the club that calls it home.

Along with the decades of history from the main tenants, Villa Park has been a part of some of the most memorable competitions in international football, including the 1996 FIFA World Cup and Euro '96.

Vitality Stadium (Bournemouth)

  • City: Bournemouth
  • Year opened: 1910
  • Capacity: 11,307

Originally known as Dean Court, the Vitality Stadium is the smallest by seating capacity in the Premier League.

The ground's last major renovation came in 2001, but Bourrnemouth have announced a plan to add approximately 10,000 more seats by the end of the decade.

Gtech Community Stadium (Brentford)

  • City: London
  • Year opened: 2020
  • Capacity: 17,250

A modern, intimate venue, Brentford's home ground is part of a local revitalisation project and while it is the second-smallest by seating capacity in the Premier League, it boasts top-notch sight lines and all the amenities of a building that opened in the current decade.

It's not only home to Brentford Football Club as rugby union side London Irish also play out of the Gtech Community Stadium.

American Express Stadium (Brighton & Hove Albion)

  • City: Brighton and Hove
  • Year opened: 2011
  • Capacity: 31,876

A UEFA four-star rated stadium, the venue has played host to matches at the Rugby World Cup on both the men's and women's sides, as well as games in the 2022 Women's Euro.

The "Amex" is the second-largest stadium in South East England. 

Turf Moor (Burnley)

  • City: Burnley
  • Year opened: 1883
  • Capacity: 21,944

Like many of the other older stadiums in England, Turf Moor has undergone several dramatic changes over the years before reaching its current form.

Burnley's home ground holds the distinction of being the first football stadium to be visited by a member of the Royal Family, which happened in 1886.

Stamford Bridge (Chelsea)

  • City: London
  • Year opened: 1877
  • Capacity: 40,173

Stamford Bridge Chelsea 2019imago images / Uk Sports Pics Ltd

Chelsea were not the first tenants of their stadium, as that honour belonged to the London Athletic Club.

The Blues were founded in 1905 as then-Stamford Bridge owner Gus Mears wanted a football club to occupy the ground. 

Selhurst Park (Crystal Palace)

  • City: London
  • Year opened: 1924 
  • Capacity: 25,486

The stadium is best known as Crystal Palace's home but it has also hosted Charlton Athletic and Wimbledon for multi-year stretches.

In additon to club football, the stadium has hosted boxing, cricket, concerts and football matches from the 1948 Summer Olympics.

Hill Dickinson Stadium (Everton)

  • City: Liverpool
  • Year opened: 2025
  • Capacity: 51,565

Everton Stadium Test Event – Bramley-Moore Dock – Monday February 17thPA

The newest stadium in the Premier League is a spectacular one.

Everton's new ground replaces Goodison Park, the club's home for over 130 years, and is the tentpole of a massive redevelopment on the Bramley-Moore Dock.

Craven Cottage (Fulham)

  • City: London
  • Year opened: 1896
  • Capacity: 28,800

In a league filled with historical stadiums, Craven Cottage boasts the longest history as the original hunting lodge that eventually evolved into a football stadium was built nearly 250 years ago.

Standing as close to the River Thames as possible without actually floating on it, the stadium is a true London landmark.

Elland Road (Leeds United)

  • City: Leeds
  • Year opened: 1897
  • Capacity: 37,645

Now known as Leeds United's home, the ground was originally occupied by a rugby club and is still heavily associated with both rugby codes to this day.

Along with having hosted Euro '96, Elland Road was a venue for the 1989-1992 Rugby League World Cup, 2015 Rugby Union World Cup, 2021 Rugby League World Cup and 2024 Super League Magic Weekend.

Anfield (Liverpool)

  • City: Liverpool
  • Year opened: 1884
  • Capacity: 61,276

anfield-liverpool-fc-getty-ftrGetty Images

One of football's cathedrals, Anfield was actually the home ground of Liverpool's rivals Everton before the Reds were formed.

However, Liverpool have made the stadium an unmistakeable part of their club identity and culture in their 130-plus years at the site, and now a match at Anfield is a terrifying prospect for opposing sides.

Etihad Stadium (Manchester City)

  • City: Manchester
  • Year opened: 2002
  • Capacity: 52,900

Manchester City v Brentford – Premier League – Etihad StadiumPA

Originally built as an athletics stadium for the 2002 Commonwealth Games, the Sky Blues have transformed "The Etihad" into a home worthy of one of the world's wealthiest and most successful sides.

The stadium hasn't completely lost its multi-purpose roots though, as it's a regular host to major concerts and other events.

Old Trafford (Manchester United)

  • City: Manchester
  • Year opened: 1910
  • Capacity: 74,197

The biggest stadium in the Premier League, "The Theatre of Dreams" has been the site of countless iconic moments for Manchester United.

One of many venues designed by architect Archibald Leitch, Old Trafford has undergone at least eight renovations in its 115 years and remains a bucket list spot for football fans around the world.

St James' Park (Newcastle United)

  • City: Newcastle
  • Year opened: 1892
  • Capacity: 52,305

Several renovations over the years have given St James' Park a unique asymmetrical look, with two sides of the stadium looming high over the other two.

Now exclusively the home of Newcastle United, the stadium also counted three other local area sides as tenants in the late 1800s.

City Ground (Nottingham Forest)

  • City: Nottingham
  • Year opened: 1898
  • Capacity: 30,404

Another riverside stadium in the Premier League, the City Ground has been the home of Nottingham Forest since its opening.

The stadium sits just 300 yards away from Notts County's Meadow Lane, making them the closest professional football stadiums in England.

Stadium of Light (Sunderland)

  • City: Sunderland
  • Year opened: 1997
  • Capacity: 49,000

Built in the late 1990s after the Taylor Report required all stadiums in England to become all-seaters, Sunderland's ground was a matter of necessity.

However, that didn't mean corners were cut into order to quickly get something done, as the Stadium of Light is a UEFA four-star venue that has hosted major international matches and globally recognised music artists.

Tottenham Hotspur Stadium (Tottenham Hotspur)

  • City: London
  • Year opened: 2019
  • Capacity: 62,850

Tottenham Hotspur StadiumMichael Regan/Getty Images

Arguably the most technologically advanced stadium in the United Kingdom, Spurs' home ground was the first in the country to be designed with both football and the NFL in mind.

Tottenham Hotspur Stadium features the world's first dividing fully retractable football pitch, with an artificial surface lying underneath for American football, concerts and boxing.

London Stadium (West Ham United)

  • City: London
  • Year opened: 2012
  • Capacity: 62,500

Originally known as the Olympic Stadium, the venue was built as the centre-piece of the 2012 Summer Olympics.

West Ham won a bid to become the stadium's primary tenant following the Games, but athletics are still held in the venue as the annual London Athletics Meet takes place there every summer.

Molineux Stadium (Wolverhampton Wanderers)

  • City: Wolverhampton
  • Year opened: 1889
  • Capacity: 31,750

Although it is humble in size and appearance in comparison to many of the other grounds in the Premier League, the Molineux Stadium is a history-maker of its own.

Wolves' home was the first to be built for use by a Football League club and was one of the earliest adopters of the use of floodlights in Britain.