List of ice hockey arenas by capacity

The following is a list of ice hockey arenas by capacity. Only those arenas that regularly host ice hockey games with paid admission (e.g. professional, major junior, or university) are included. Outdoor stadiums that have hosted occasional hockey games are not included. Buildings under construction are not included. Buildings which no longer host hockey matches are listed but not ranked, and the capacity for defunct buildings is the capacity at the time of closing, or last use for hockey, unless otherwise mentioned. Buildings are ranked by their current maximum capacity for hockey games, not for other events—which is often substantially different because of ice hockey's unique playing surface, the ice rink. Capacities do not include standing room tickets. All arenas with a capacity of more than 15,000 or smaller are included.

The majority of these arenas are in Canada and the United States, with a small number in Europe; none are on any other continent. Most of the largest arenas are home to professional teams, mainly from the National Hockey League (NHL). All 32 current NHL arenas are listed. None of the teams in the top leagues in Finland (Liiga) or Sweden (SHL), and only one team each in the top league of Czech Republic (Czech Extraliga), and Germany (Deutsche Eishockey Liga), Switzerland (National League A) or the international Kontinental Hockey League (KHL) (Belarus, China, Kazakhstan, and Russia), play in an arena with a capacity of 15,000 or larger.

Arenas by capacity

RankArenaCapacity
(Seating capacity only)
CityCountryHome Team(s) (League, Dates)
1Bell Centre21,105[1]Montreal CanadaMontreal Canadiens (NHL) (1996–present)
2United Center19,717[2]Chicago United StatesChicago Blackhawks (NHL) (1995–present)
3Wells Fargo Center19,537[3]Philadelphia United StatesPhiladelphia Flyers (NHL) (1996–present)
4Little Caesars Arena19,515[4]Detroit United StatesDetroit Red Wings (NHL) (2017–present)
5Scotiabank Saddledome19,289[5]Calgary CanadaCalgary Flames (NHL) (1983–present), Calgary Hitmen (WHL) (1995–present)
6FLA Live Arena19,250[6] Sunrise United StatesFlorida Panthers (NHL) (1998–present)
7Amalie Arena19,092[7]Tampa United StatesTampa Bay Lightning (NHL) (1996–present)
8KeyBank Center19,070[8]Buffalo United StatesBuffalo Sabres (NHL) (1996–present)
9Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse18,924[9]Cleveland United StatesCleveland Monsters (AHL) (2007–present)
10Rogers Arena18,910[10]Vancouver CanadaVancouver Canucks (NHL) (1995–present)
11Scotiabank Arena18,800[11]Toronto CanadaToronto Maple Leafs (NHL) (1999–present)
12PNC Arena18,680[12]Raleigh United StatesCarolina Hurricanes (NHL) (1999–present)
13Canadian Tire Centre18,652[13]Ottawa CanadaOttawa Senators (NHL) (1996–present)
14Rogers Place18,641Edmonton CanadaEdmonton Oilers (NHL) (2016–present), Edmonton Oil Kings (WHL) (2016–present)
15Capital One Arena18,573[14]Washington United StatesWashington Capitals (NHL) (1997–present)
16American Airlines Center18,532[15]Dallas United StatesDallas Stars (NHL) (2001–present)
17Lanxess Arena18,500[16]Cologne GermanyKölner Haie (DEL) (1998–present)
18PPG Paints Arena18,387[17]Pittsburgh United StatesPittsburgh Penguins (NHL) (2010–present)
19The Moda Center18,280Portland United StatesPortland Winterhawks (WHL) (1995–present)
20Videotron Centre18,259[18]Quebec City CanadaQuebec Remparts (QMJHL) (2015–present)
21Crypto.com Arena18,230[19]Los Angeles United StatesLos Angeles Kings (NHL) (1999–present)
22Nationwide Arena18,144[20]Columbus United StatesColumbus Blue Jackets (NHL) (2000–present)
23Enterprise Center18,096[21]St. Louis United StatesSt. Louis Blues (NHL) (1994–present)
24Xcel Energy Center18,064[22]St. Paul United StatesMinnesota Wild (NHL) (2000–present)
25Ball Arena18,007[23]Denver United StatesColorado Avalanche (NHL) (1999–present)
26Madison Square Garden18,006[24]New York City United StatesNew York Rangers (NHL) (1968–present)
27TD Garden17,565[25]Boston United StatesBoston Bruins (NHL) (1995–present)
28SAP Center at San Jose17,562[26]San Jose United StatesSan Jose Sharks (NHL) (1993–present), San Jose Barracuda (AHL) (2015–present)
29Value City Arena17,500[27]Columbus United StatesOhio State Buckeyes men's ice hockey (NCAA) (1998–present)
30T-Mobile Arena17,500[28]Las Vegas United StatesVegas Golden Knights (NHL) (2017–present)
31FirstOntario Centre17,383Hamilton CanadaHamilton Bulldogs (OHL) (2015–present), Hamilton Bulldogs (AHL) (1996-2015)
32O2 Arena17,360Prague Czech RepublicHC Sparta Praha (Czech Extraliga) (2015–present), HC Slavia Praha (Czech Extraliga, 2004–2015), HC LEV Praha (KHL, 2012–2014)
33UBS Arena17,255[29]Hempstead United StatesNew York Islanders (NHL) (2021–present)
34Honda Center17,174[30]Anaheim United StatesAnaheim Ducks (NHL) (1993–present)
35Gila River Arena17,125[31]Glendale United StatesArizona Coyotes (NHL) (2003–2022)
35Bridgestone Arena17,159[32]Nashville United StatesNashville Predators (NHL) (1998–present)
37Climate Pledge Arena17,151[33]Seattle United StatesSeattle Kraken (NHL) (2021–present)
38BOK Center17,096[34]Tulsa United StatesTulsa Oilers (ECHL) (2008–present)
39PostFinance-Arena17,031BernSwitzerland SwitzerlandSC Bern (NLA) (1967–present)
40Allstate Arena16,692Rosemont United StatesChicago Wolves (AHL) (1994–present)
41Prudential Center16,514[35]Newark United StatesNew Jersey Devils (NHL) (2007–present)
42Barclays Center15,813Brooklyn United StatesNew York Islanders (NHL) (2015–2020)
43XL Center15,564[36][38]Hartford United StatesNew England Whalers (WHA) (1975–1978), Hartford Whalers (NHL) (1980–1997),
Hartford Wolf Pack (AHL) (1997–present), Connecticut Huskies (NCAA) (2014–present)
44Wells Fargo Arena15,581Des Moines United StatesIowa Stars (AHL) (2005–2009), Iowa Chops (AHL) (2005–2009), Iowa Wild (AHL) (2013–present)
45Canada Life Centre15,294[39]Winnipeg CanadaWinnipeg Jets (NHL) (2011–present), Manitoba Moose (AHL) (2004–2011, 2015–present)
46Kohl Center15,237[40]Madison United StatesWisconsin Badgers men's ice hockey (NCAA) (1998–present)[41]
47SaskTel Centre15,195Saskatoon CanadaSaskatoon Blades (WHL) (1988–present), Saskatchewan Rush (NLL) (2016–present)
48Minsk-Arena15,086Minsk BelarusDinamo Minsk (KHL) (2008–present)

Defunct arenas by seating

In this table, "defunct" refers to its status as an ice hockey venue. Many of the venues listed here remain in use for other sports.

RankArenaCapacityCityCountryHome Team(s) (League, Dates)
1Thunderdome28,183[42][43]St. Petersburg United StatesTampa Bay Lightning (NHL) (1993–1996)
2Greensboro Coliseum Complex21,273Greensboro United StatesCarolina Hurricanes (NHL) (1997–1999), Carolina Monarchs (AHL) (1995–1997), Greensboro Monarchs (ECHL) (1989–1995)
3The Palace20,804Auburn Hills United StatesDetroit Vipers (IHL) (1994–2001)
4Joe Louis Arena20,027[44]Detroit United StatesDetroit Red Wings (NHL) (1979–2017)
5Vélodrome d'hiver20,000Paris FranceClub des Patineurs (Championnat de France) (1931–1937), Racing Club (Championnat de France) (1931–1933),
Stade Français (Championnat de France) (1931–1937), Français Volants (Championnat de France) (1933–1938)
6Izod Center19,040East Rutherford United StatesNew Jersey Devils (NHL) (1982–2007)
7Richfield Coliseum18,544Richfield, Ohio United StatesCleveland Crusaders (WHA) (1974–76), Cleveland Barons (NHL) (1976–78)
8Capital Centre18,130Landover United StatesWashington Capitals (NHL) (1974–97)
9Chesapeake Energy Arena18,036Oklahoma City United StatesOklahoma City Blazers (CHL) (2002–2009)
10BMO Harris Bradley Center17,845Milwaukee United StatesMilwaukee Admirals (AHL) (1988–2016)
11Toyota Center17,800Houston United StatesHouston Aeros (AHL) (2003–2013)
12Kemper Arena17,647Kansas City United StatesKansas City Scouts (NHL) (1974–1976), Kansas City Blues (CHL) (1976–1977),
Kansas City Blades (IHL) (1990–2001), Kansas City Outlaws (UHL) (2004–2005)
13Philips Arena17,624Atlanta United StatesAtlanta Thrashers (NHL) (1999–2011)
14Manchester Arena17,500ManchesterUnited Kingdom United KingdomManchester Storm (1995–2002)
15Wachovia Spectrum17,380Philadelphia United StatesPhiladelphia Flyers (NHL) (1967–1996), Philadelphia Phantoms (AHL) (1996–2009)
16Chicago Stadium17,317ChicagoUnited States United StatesChicago Blackhawks (NHL) (1929–1994)
17St. Louis Arena17,188St. LouisUnited States United StatesSt. Louis Eagles (NHL) (1934–1935), St. Louis Blues (NHL) (1967–1994)
18Reunion Arena17,001Dallas United StatesDallas Stars (NHL) (1993–2001)
19Verizon Arena17,000North Little Rock United StatesArkansas RiverBlades (ECHL) (1999–2003)
20Civic Arena16,958Pittsburgh United StatesPittsburgh Hornets (AHL) (1961–1967), Pittsburgh Penguins (NHL) (1967–2010)
21Northlands Coliseum16,839Edmonton CanadaEdmonton Oilers (NHL) (1979–2016), Edmonton Oilers (WHA) (1974–1979), Edmonton Oil Kings (WHL) (1974–1976, 2007–2016)
22Buffalo Memorial Auditorium16,433Buffalo United StatesBuffalo Bisons (AHL) (1940–1970), Buffalo Sabres (NHL) (1970–1996)
23Montreal Forum16,400[45]Montreal CanadaMontreal Maroons (NHL) (1924–1938), Montreal Canadiens (NHL) (1926–1996), Montreal Junior Canadiens (QJHL, (OHA) (1933–1972),
Montreal Voyageurs (AHL) (1969–1971), Montreal Bleu Blanc Rouge (QMJHL) (1972–1975), Montreal Juniors (QMJHL) (1975–1982)
24Maple Leaf Gardens16,307[46]Toronto CanadaToronto Maple Leafs (NHL) (1931–1999), Toronto Marlboros (OHL) (1931–1989), Toronto Toros (WHA) (1974–1976)
25Pacific Coliseum16,281[47]Vancouver CanadaVancouver Canucks (WHL) (1968–1970), Vancouver Canucks (NHL) (1970–1995), Vancouver Nats (WHL) (1971–1973),
Vancouver Blazers (WHA) (1973–1975), Vancouver Voodoo (RHI) (1994–1995), Vancouver Giants (WHL) (2001–2016)
26Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum16,234[48]Uniondale United StatesNew York Islanders (NHL) (1972–2015, 2017-2020)
27US Airways Center16,210[49]Phoenix United StatesPhoenix Coyotes (NHL) (1996–2003), Phoenix RoadRunners (ECHL) (2005–2009)
28McNichols Sports Arena16,061Denver United StatesColorado Rockies (NHL) (1976–1982), Colorado Flames (CHL) (1982–1984), Denver Grizzlies (IHL) (1994–1995), Colorado Avalanche (NHL) (1995–1999)
29The Forum16,005Inglewood United StatesLos Angeles Kings (NHL) (1967–1999)
30CenturyLink Center Omaha15,959[50]Omaha United StatesOmaha Mavericks men's ice hockey (NCAA) (2003–2015)
31Amway Arena15,948Orlando United StatesOrlando Solar Bears (IHL) (1995–2001), Orlando Seals (ACHL) (2002–2004)
32Madison Square Garden (III)15,925New York City United StatesNew York Rangers (NHL) (1926–1968), New York Americans (NHL) (1925–1942)
33Winnipeg Arena15,565Winnipeg CanadaWinnipeg Warriors (WHL) (1955–1961), Winnipeg Monarchs (WHL), Winnipeg Jets (WHA, NHL) (1972–1996),
Winnipeg Warriors (WHL) (1980–1984), Manitoba Moose (IHL, AHL) (1996–2004)
34Omni Coliseum15,278Atlanta United StatesAtlanta Flames (NHL) (1972–1980), Atlanta Knights (IHL) (1992–1996)
35Colisée Pepsi15,176[51]Quebec City CanadaQuebec Aces (AHL) (1959–1971), Quebec Nordiques (WHA),(NHL) (1972–1995), Quebec Rafales (IHL) (1996–1998),
Quebec Citadelles (AHL) (1999–2002), Quebec Remparts (QMJHL) (1969–1985, 1999–2015)
36London Arena15,000London United KingdomLondon Knights
37Detroit Olympia15,000Detroit United StatesDetroit Cougars/Falcons/Red Wings (NHL) (1927–1979)
38Met Center15,000Bloomington United StatesMinnesota North Stars (NHL) (1967–1993)
39Boston Garden14,448 [52]Boston United StatesBoston Bruins (NHL) (1928–1995), Boston Braves (AHL) 1971–1974, New England Whalers (WHA) 1972–1974

See also

References

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  5. Barnes, Dan. "Alberta bid targets $18 million in profits" Archived 2008-09-06 at the Wayback Machine, The Vancouver Sun, August 28, 2008. Accessed September 22, 2008. "Rexall Place seats 16,839 and will host Team Canada's early-round games, while Pengrowth Saddledome, site of the medal round games, holds 19,289."
  6. "Facts and Figures". Archived from the original on 2012-02-08. Retrieved 2012-04-22.
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  15. Center Venues Archived 2008-09-13 at the Wayback Machine, American Airlines Center. Accessed September 25, 2008. "Since opening in July 2001, the American Airlines Center has set a new standard for sports and entertainment and has become the premier venue of the South. Its grand complex with sweeping vistas and inviting passages comprise five concourses, 142 luxury suites and rooms for 20,000 fans or 18,532 hockey fans."
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  42. This venue was built for baseball and has a much larger capacity than any hockey-specific arena ever built, but it was never filled to capacity in the three years ice hockey was played there. The record for a Stanley Cup playoff game — 28,183 — was set here on April 23, 1996, during a Tampa Bay LightningPhiladelphia Flyers game.
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  45. Total capacity of 17,959 with approximately 1,600 in standing room subtracted.
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