NBA & NHL Arenas 30

All 30 NBA team home arenas, sorted alphabetically. The majority also serve as the home of an NHL franchise (10 venues), making them the largest cluster of professional multipurpose arenas in North America.

American Airlines Center

United States

Opened in July 2001 in the Victory Park area of Dallas, American Airlines Center is shared by the NBA's Dallas Mavericks and the NHL's Dallas Stars. Capacity is 19,200 for basketball and 18,532 for hockey. The Mavericks won their first NBA championship at the venue during the 2011 season.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
32.790489, -96.810283
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
32° 47′ 25.76″ N, 96° 48′ 37.02″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
32° 47.4293′ N, 96° 48.617′ W

Ball Arena

United States

Opened in October 1999 as Pepsi Center and renamed Ball Arena in 2020, the venue in downtown Denver is owned by Kroenke Sports and Entertainment. It is shared by the NBA's Denver Nuggets, the NHL's Colorado Avalanche and the NLL's Colorado Mammoth. Capacity is 19,520 for basketball and 18,007 for hockey.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
39.748684, -105.007544
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
39° 44′ 55.26″ N, 105° 00′ 27.16″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
39° 44.921′ N, 105° 0.4526′ W

Barclays Center

United States

Opened in September 2012 at the intersection of Atlantic and Flatbush Avenues in Brooklyn, Barclays Center has a basketball capacity of 17,732. It is the home of the NBA's Brooklyn Nets and, since 2021, the WNBA's New York Liberty. The arena also hosts boxing, college basketball and major concerts.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
40.682511, -73.975252
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
40° 40′ 57.04″ N, 73° 58′ 30.91″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
40° 40.9507′ N, 73° 58.5151′ W

Capital One Arena

United States

Opened in December 1997 in Washington's Penn Quarter and originally known as MCI Center, the arena became Verizon Center in 2006 and took its current name Capital One Arena in 2017. It is shared by the NBA's Washington Wizards and the NHL's Washington Capitals, with a capacity of 20,356 for basketball and 18,573 for hockey. The Capitals won the 2018 Stanley Cup during their tenure at the venue.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
38.898188, -77.020938
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
38° 53′ 53.48″ N, 77° 01′ 15.38″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
38° 53.8913′ N, 77° 1.2563′ W

Chase Center

United States

Opened in September 2019 in San Francisco's Mission Bay neighborhood, Chase Center has a basketball capacity of 18,064. It is the home of the NBA's Golden State Warriors, who relocated from Oracle Arena in Oakland, and the WNBA's Golden State Valkyries. The Warriors won the 2022 NBA championship in their third season at the venue.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
37.768056, -122.387500
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
37° 46′ 5″ N, 122° 23′ 15″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
37° 46.0834′ N, 122° 23.25′ W

Crypto.com Arena

Staples Center
United States

Crypto.com Arena (formerly Staples Center) in downtown Los Angeles, California, opened on October 17, 1999 with a basketball capacity of 19,079 and a hockey capacity of 18,145. It is home to the NBA's Los Angeles Lakers, the WNBA's Los Angeles Sparks and the NHL's Los Angeles Kings, having hosted the Clippers as a co-tenant from 1999 until they moved to Intuit Dome in 2024. The arena was renamed in December 2021 as part of a 20-year naming-rights deal with Crypto.com.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
34.043056, -118.267222
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
34° 02′ 35.00″ N, 118° 16′ 02.00″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
34° 02.5834′ N, 118° 16.0333′ W

Delta Center

United States

Opened in October 1991 in downtown Salt Lake City, the venue was known as Delta Center until 2006, then EnergySolutions Arena and Vivint Smart Home Arena, before reverting to Delta Center in 2023. It has a basketball capacity of 18,186 and is the home of the NBA's Utah Jazz, joined since the 2024 to 2025 season by the NHL's Utah Mammoth.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
40.768327, -111.901055
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
40° 46′ 5.98″ N, 111° 54′ 3.8″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
40° 46.0996′ N, 111° 54.0633′ W

FedExForum

United States

Opened in September 2004 in downtown Memphis, FedExForum has a basketball capacity of 16,667. It is the home of the NBA's Memphis Grizzlies and the University of Memphis Tigers men's basketball program. The arena's design incorporates references to the music heritage of Memphis.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
35.138233, -90.050769
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
35° 08′ 17.64″ N, 90° 03′ 2.77″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
35° 8.294′ N, 90° 3.0461′ W

Fiserv Forum

United States

Opened in August 2018 in downtown Milwaukee, Fiserv Forum has a basketball capacity of 17,385. It is the home of the NBA's Milwaukee Bucks, who won the 2021 NBA championship at the venue, and the Marquette Golden Eagles men's basketball program. The arena replaced the BMO Harris Bradley Center as the Bucks' home.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
43.045010, -87.917487
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
43° 02′ 42.04″ N, 87° 55′ 2.95″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
43° 2.7006′ N, 87° 55.0492′ W

Frost Bank Center

United States

Opened in October 2002 on the East Side of San Antonio, the arena was originally known as SBC Center, then AT&T Center from 2006 until being renamed Frost Bank Center in September 2023. It has a basketball capacity of 18,418 and is the home of the NBA's San Antonio Spurs, who have won four NBA championships at the venue (2003, 2005, 2007 and 2014).

Decimal Degrees (DD)
29.426921, -98.437506
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
29° 25′ 36.92″ N, 98° 26′ 15.02″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
29° 25.6153′ N, 98° 26.2504′ W

Gainbridge Fieldhouse

United States

Opened in November 1999 in downtown Indianapolis as Conseco Fieldhouse, the venue was renamed Bankers Life Fieldhouse in 2011 and Gainbridge Fieldhouse in 2021. It has a basketball capacity of 17,274 and is home to the NBA's Indiana Pacers and the WNBA's Indiana Fever. Its retro fieldhouse design pays homage to the legacy of Indiana high school basketball.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
39.763933, -86.155502
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
39° 45′ 50.16″ N, 86° 09′ 19.81″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
39° 45.836′ N, 86° 9.3301′ W

Golden 1 Center

United States

Opened in September 2016 in downtown Sacramento on the former Downtown Plaza site, Golden 1 Center has a basketball capacity of 17,608. It is the home of the NBA's Sacramento Kings and replaced ARCO Arena (later Sleep Train Arena) as the franchise's venue. The arena is one of the most technologically advanced and sustainable in the NBA.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
38.580141, -121.499501
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
38° 34′ 48.51″ N, 121° 29′ 58.2″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
38° 34.8085′ N, 121° 29.9701′ W

Intuit Dome

United States

Opened in August 2024 in Inglewood, California, the Intuit Dome is the privately financed home of the NBA's Los Angeles Clippers, with a basketball capacity of 18,300. It is the first arena in franchise history that the Clippers own outright, ending their tenure as a tenant of Crypto.com Arena. The venue is scheduled to host basketball events at the 2028 Summer Olympics.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
33.944259, -118.342172
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
33° 56′ 39.33″ N, 118° 20′ 31.82″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
33° 56.6555′ N, 118° 20.5303′ W

Kaseya Center

United States

Opened on December 31, 1999 along Biscayne Bay in downtown Miami, the arena has a basketball capacity of around 19,600 and is home to the NBA's Miami Heat. It has been known as American Airlines Arena from 1999 to 2021, FTX Arena from 2021 to 2023, briefly Miami-Dade Arena, and Kaseya Center since April 2023. The Heat have won three NBA championships during their tenure at the venue.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
25.781360, -80.187944
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
25° 46′ 52.9″ N, 80° 11′ 16.6″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
25° 46.8816′ N, 80° 11.2766′ W

Kia Center

United States

Opened in October 2010 in downtown Orlando as Amway Center, the arena was renamed Kia Center in December 2023. It has a basketball capacity of 18,846 and is the home of the NBA's Orlando Magic. The arena replaced the Amway Arena (formerly Orlando Arena) as the Magic's home venue.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
28.539287, -81.383889
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
28° 32′ 21.43″ N, 81° 23′ 2″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
28° 32.3572′ N, 81° 23.0333′ W

Little Caesars Arena

United States

Opened in September 2017 in Detroit's District Detroit, Little Caesars Arena replaced both Joe Louis Arena and the Palace of Auburn Hills as home of the NHL's Detroit Red Wings and the NBA's Detroit Pistons. Capacity is 20,332 for basketball and 19,515 for hockey. It is one of the few arenas in North America to host both an NBA and an NHL team.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
42.340977, -83.054955
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
42° 20′ 27.52″ N, 83° 03′ 17.84″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
42° 20.4586′ N, 83° 3.2973′ W

Madison Square Garden

United States

Madison Square Garden in midtown Manhattan, the world's most famous arena, is the home of the New York Knicks and Rangers. The current Garden, its fourth incarnation, opened in 1968.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
40.750513, -73.993516
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
40° 45′ 1.85″ N, 73° 59′ 36.66″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
40° 45.0308′ N, 73° 59.611′ W

Moda Center

United States

Opened in October 1995 as the Rose Garden in Portland's Rose Quarter, the venue was renamed Moda Center in August 2013. It has a basketball capacity of 19,393 and is the home of the NBA's Portland Trail Blazers. The arena has hosted three NBA Western Conference Finals series for the Trail Blazers, in 1999, 2000 and 2019.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
45.531579, -122.666834
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
45° 31′ 53.68″ N, 122° 40′ 0.6″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
45° 31.8947′ N, 122° 40.01′ W

Mortgage Matchup Center

United States

Opened in June 1992 in downtown Phoenix, the arena has cycled through the names America West Arena, US Airways Center, Talking Stick Resort Arena, Phoenix Suns Arena, Footprint Center and, since October 2025, Mortgage Matchup Center. It has a basketball capacity of 17,071 and is the home of the NBA's Phoenix Suns.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
33.446039, -112.071101
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
33° 26′ 45.74″ N, 112° 04′ 15.96″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
33° 26.7623′ N, 112° 4.2661′ W

Paycom Center

United States

Opened in June 2002 in downtown Oklahoma City, the venue has been known as Ford Center, Oklahoma City Arena, Chesapeake Energy Arena and, since 2021, Paycom Center. It has a basketball capacity of 18,203 and has been the home of the NBA's Oklahoma City Thunder since the franchise relocated from Seattle in 2008.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
35.463396, -97.515082
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
35° 27′ 48.23″ N, 97° 30′ 54.3″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
35° 27.8038′ N, 97° 30.9049′ W

Rocket Arena

United States

Opened in October 1994 in downtown Cleveland and previously known as Gund Arena, Quicken Loans Arena and Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse, the venue was renamed Rocket Arena in 2025. It is the home of the NBA's Cleveland Cavaliers, with a basketball capacity of 19,432, and hosted the NBA Finals during the Cavaliers' run from 2015 to 2018. The Cleveland Monsters of the AHL also play here.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
41.496686, -81.688575
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
41° 29′ 48.07″ N, 81° 41′ 18.87″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
41° 29.8012′ N, 81° 41.3145′ W

Scotiabank Arena

Canada

Opened in February 1999 on Bay Street in downtown Toronto and known as Air Canada Centre until July 2018, Scotiabank Arena is shared by the NBA's Toronto Raptors and the NHL's Toronto Maple Leafs. Capacity is 19,800 for basketball and 18,819 for hockey. The Raptors won the 2019 NBA championship during their tenure at the venue.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
43.643434, -79.379078
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
43° 38′ 36.36″ N, 79° 22′ 44.68″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
43° 38.606′ N, 79° 22.7447′ W

Smoothie King Center

United States

Opened in October 1999 in New Orleans's Central Business District next to the Caesars Superdome, the arena was originally known as New Orleans Arena and was renamed Smoothie King Center in 2014. It has a basketball capacity of 16,867 and has been the home of the NBA's New Orleans Pelicans (formerly the Hornets) since 2002.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
29.949039, -90.082069
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
29° 56′ 56.54″ N, 90° 04′ 55.45″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
29° 56.9423′ N, 90° 4.9241′ W

Spectrum Center

United States

Opened in October 2005 in uptown Charlotte, Spectrum Center has a capacity of 19,444 for NBA games. It has been home to the Charlotte franchise since the 2005 to 2006 season, when the team was known as the Bobcats before returning to the Hornets name in 2014. The arena also hosts ACC men's basketball tournament games and major concerts.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
35.225098, -80.839154
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
35° 13′ 30.35″ N, 80° 50′ 20.95″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
35° 13.5059′ N, 80° 50.3492′ W

State Farm Arena

United States

Opened in September 1999 in downtown Atlanta, the arena was originally known as Philips Arena and was renamed State Farm Arena in 2018. It is the home of the Atlanta Hawks of the NBA, with a basketball capacity of around 17,608. It also hosts major concerts and entertainment events in the Atlanta market.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
33.757370, -84.396385
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
33° 45′ 26.53″ N, 84° 23′ 46.99″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
33° 45.4422′ N, 84° 23.7831′ W

TD Garden

United States

Opened in September 1995 above North Station in Boston, TD Garden replaced the historic Boston Garden as home of the NBA's Boston Celtics and the NHL's Boston Bruins. Capacity is 19,156 for basketball and 17,850 for hockey following a 2019 expansion. The arena has hosted multiple NBA Finals and Stanley Cup Finals games for its tenant franchises.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
42.366299, -71.062162
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
42° 21′ 58.68″ N, 71° 03′ 43.78″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
42° 21.9779′ N, 71° 3.7297′ W

Target Center

United States

Opened in October 1990 in downtown Minneapolis, Target Center is owned by the City of Minneapolis and has a basketball capacity of 18,798. It is the home of the NBA's Minnesota Timberwolves and the WNBA's Minnesota Lynx, who have won four WNBA championships during their tenure. The arena is named after Minneapolis-based retailer Target.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
44.979592, -93.275983
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
44° 58′ 46.53″ N, 93° 16′ 33.54″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
44° 58.7755′ N, 93° 16.559′ W

Toyota Center

United States

Opened in October 2003 in downtown Houston, Toyota Center has a basketball capacity of 18,104 and is the home of the NBA's Houston Rockets. The arena replaced the Compaq Center as the Rockets' home venue. It also hosts major concerts and was the venue for the 2013 NBA All-Star Game.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
29.750747, -95.362232
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
29° 45′ 2.69″ N, 95° 21′ 44.04″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
29° 45.0448′ N, 95° 21.7339′ W

United Center

United States

Opened in August 1994 on Chicago's Near West Side, the United Center is shared by the NBA's Chicago Bulls and the NHL's Chicago Blackhawks. Capacity is 20,917 for basketball and 19,717 for hockey, making it one of the largest arenas in the NBA. It hosted three NBA Finals during the Bulls' second three-peat from 1996 to 1998.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
41.880683, -87.674185
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
41° 52′ 50.46″ N, 87° 40′ 27.07″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
41° 52.841′ N, 87° 40.4511′ W

Xfinity Mobile Arena

United States

Opened in 1996 in the South Philadelphia Sports Complex, the arena was successively known as CoreStates Center, First Union Center, Wachovia Center and Wells Fargo Center before being renamed Xfinity Mobile Arena in 2025. It is shared by the NBA's Philadelphia 76ers and the NHL's Philadelphia Flyers, with a capacity of 20,478 for basketball and 19,173 for hockey, and is owned by Comcast Spectacor.

Decimal Degrees (DD)
39.901111, -75.171944
Degrees, Minutes, Seconds (DMS)
39° 54′ 4″ N, 75° 10′ 19″ W
Degrees, Decimal Minutes (DDM)
39° 54.0667′ N, 75° 10.3166′ W

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is the largest NBA arena by capacity?
The United Center in Chicago (Bulls + Blackhawks) has the largest basketball capacity in the NBA at 20,917 (and around 19,717 for hockey). Other large arenas include Madison Square Garden in New York (around 19,812 for basketball), Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles (19,068) and Wells Fargo / Xfinity Mobile Arena in Philadelphia (around 21,000 for boxing/concerts but 20,478 for basketball).
Which is the only NBA team based outside the United States?
The Toronto Raptors are the only NBA franchise based outside the United States. Their home arena is Scotiabank Arena in downtown Toronto, Ontario, Canada, which they share with the NHL's Toronto Maple Leafs. The Raptors won the NBA championship in 2019.
Which is the newest NBA arena?
The Intuit Dome in Inglewood, California, is the newest NBA arena. It opened in August 2024 as the new home of the Los Angeles Clippers, who moved out of Crypto.com Arena (where they had been a co-tenant of the Lakers since 1999). Designed by AECOM, the arena features a 38,000-square-foot "Halo" LED display ring around the seating bowl. Earlier modern arenas include Chase Center (Warriors, 2019), Fiserv Forum (Bucks, 2018), Little Caesars Arena (Pistons + Red Wings, 2017) and Golden 1 Center (Kings, 2016).
Are NBA arenas also used for concerts and other events?
Yes. Most NBA arenas double as concert venues, hosting hundreds of events per year. Madison Square Garden, the O2 Arena (London, listed in our Olympic & Multipurpose Arenas page), Crypto.com Arena and TD Garden are among the highest-grossing concert venues in the world by ticket revenue. They also host boxing, MMA (UFC), wrestling (WWE), college basketball, ice shows and family entertainment.
How many NBA arenas are listed in this catalog?
All 30 NBA team home arenas are included, one per franchise. Where two NBA teams share an arena (Lakers and Clippers historically shared Crypto.com Arena, but the Clippers moved to the new Intuit Dome in 2024) the venue is listed once. Madison Square Garden in New York and Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles, previously listed in our Olympic & Multisport Arenas category, were moved here for consistency.
Which arenas host both NBA and NHL teams?
Most large multipurpose arenas in North America serve both NBA and NHL teams. Examples: Madison Square Garden (Knicks + Rangers), TD Garden (Celtics + Bruins), United Center (Bulls + Blackhawks), Scotiabank Arena (Raptors + Maple Leafs), Capital One Arena (Wizards + Capitals), American Airlines Center (Mavericks + Stars), Wells Fargo / Xfinity Mobile Arena (76ers + Flyers), Ball Arena (Nuggets + Avalanche), Little Caesars Arena (Pistons + Red Wings), Crypto.com Arena (Lakers + Kings).
Why are NBA arenas constantly being renamed?
Sponsor naming-rights deals expire and are renewed with new partners. Recent renames include: Wells Fargo Center (Philadelphia) → Xfinity Mobile Arena (August 2025); Footprint Center (Phoenix) → Mortgage Matchup Center (October 2025); AT&T Center (San Antonio) → Frost Bank Center (September 2023); American Airlines Arena → FTX Arena → Miami-Dade Arena → Kaseya Center (Miami); Vivint Smart Home Arena → Delta Center (Salt Lake City, reverted in 2023). The names in this catalog reflect the venue names current as of May 2026.
Where do these coordinates point inside each arena?
Each coordinate marks the geometric centre of the arena building footprint. With six-decimal precision (~11 cm) the pin will reliably land inside the venue, near centre-court for basketball or centre-ice for hockey games. From the pin you can navigate to the appropriate gate via the venue's official map.