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The Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, the home of Real Madrid, is a category 4 stadium. UEFA stadium categories are categories for football stadiums laid out in UEFA's Stadium Infrastructure Regulations. [1] Using these regulations, stadiums are rated as category one, two, three, or four (renamed from elite) in ascending ranking order.
Since 22 May 2023, finals from 2026 onward will only be able to be staged in the Category 4 stadiums with a capacity of over: 70,000 for the UEFA Champions League. 60,000 for the UEFA Euro. 40,000 for the UEFA Europa League. 30,000 for the UEFA Europa Conference League, the UEFA Women's Champions League and the UEFA Nations League.
UEFA Category 4 stadium: Jan Breydel Stadium: 29,062 [76] Club Brugge, Cercle Brugge: Bruges: Stade Maurice Dufrasne: 27,670 [77] Standard Liège: Liège: UEFA Category 3 stadium Cegeka Arena: 23,718 [78] Racing Genk: Genk: UEFA Category 4 stadium Lotto Park: 22,500 [79] Anderlecht: Anderlecht: UEFA Category 3 stadium Planet Group Arena: 20,175 ...
1998 UEFA Category 4 stadium: 2: Stade Vélodrome: 67,394: Marseille: Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur: Olympique de Marseille: 1937: UEFA Category 4 stadium 3: Parc Olympique Lyonnais
The following is a list of association football stadiums in Latvia, ... UEFA Category 4 stadium: 2: Skonto Stadium: 8,087: Riga: Latvia national football team, Riga FC:
This is a list of football stadiums in England, ranked in descending order of capacity. There is an extremely large number of football stadiums and pitches in England, and a definitive list of stadiums would be difficult to produce. This list, therefore, is limited to stadiums that meet one of the following criteria based on current capacity:
The National Stadium is a Category 4 venue and as such, it hosted the UEFA Europa League 2011–12 final, as announced by UEFA at Nyon on 29 January 2009. [13] It was required to host at least two major events beginning in July 2011, one with an attendance of 10,000 and the second with an attendance of at least 40,000.
Since renovations in 2004, the Olympiastadion has a permanent capacity of 74,475 seats and is the largest stadium in Germany for international football matches. The Olympiastadion is a UEFA category four stadium. Besides its use as an athletics stadium, the arena has built a footballing tradition. Since 1963, it has been the home of the Hertha BSC.