From Death Valley to The Swamp, to going Between the Hedges, the Southeastern Conference is home to American cathedrals and coliseums of sport. Saturdays in the South are set aside for football with iconic venues and passionate fan bases. When Oklahoma and Texas joined the SEC, it was like going home.
Oklahoma and Texas’ home environments and venues have been perfect fits for what you see on SEC Saturdays in the fall.
In the SEC, five stadiums can hold more than 100,000 people, and another five can hold 80,000 or more. The ACC has just one stadium with a capacity of more than 80,000: Clemson. The Big Ten has five schools with a capacity of more than 80,000, while the Big 12’s biggest stadium, BYU’s LaVell Edwards Stadium, holds just 62,073. Thirteen SEC schools have stadiums larger than BYU’s.
The SEC is literally built different.
Here’s a look at how the SEC stadiums stack up by capacity, from smallest to largest.
16. FirstBank Stadium
Capacity: 40,350
Location: Nashville, Tennessee
Year built: 1981 (on the same site as Dudley Field, which was built in 1922).
14. Mississippi State’s Davis Wade Stadium
Capacity: 60,311
Location: Starkville, Mississippi
Year built: 1914
14. Kentucky’s Kroger Field
Capacity: 61,000
Location: Lexington, Kentucky
Year built: 1973
13. Ole Miss‘ Vaught-Hemingway Stadium
Capacity: 64,038
Location: Oxford, Mississippi
Year built: 1915
12. Missouri’s Faurot Field at Memorial Stadium (The Zou)
Capacity: 65,000
Location: Columbia, Missouri
Year built: 1926
11. Arkansas‘ Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium
Capacity: 76,212
Location: Fayetteville, Arkansas
Year built: 1938
10. South Carolina’s Williams-Brice Stadium
Capacity: 77,559
Location: Columbia, South Carolina
Year built: 1934
9. Oklahoma’s Gaylord Family-Oklahoma Memorial Stadium (Palace on the Prairie)
Capacity: 80,126
Location: Norman, Oklahoma
Year built: 1925
8. Auburn’s Jordan-Hare Stadium
Capacity: 88,043
Location: Auburn, Alabama
Year built: 1939
7. Florida’s Ben Hill Griffin Stadium (The Swamp)
Capacity: 88,548
Location: Gainesville, Florida
Year built: 1930
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6. Georgia’s Sanford Stadium (Between the Hedges)
Capacity: 93,033
Location: Athens, Georgia
Year built: 1929
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5. Alabama’s Bryant-Denny Stadium
Capacity: 100,077
Location: Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Year built: 1929
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4. Texas’ Darrell K. Royal – Texas Memorial Stadium
Capacity: 100,119
Location: Austin, Texas
Year built: 1924
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3. Tennessee’s Neyland Stadium
Capacity: 101,915
Location: Knoxville, Tennessee
Year built: 1921
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2. LSU’s Tiger Stadium (Death Valley)
Capacity: 102,321
Location: Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Year built: 1924
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1. Texas A&M’s Kyle Field
Capacity: 102,733
Location: College Station, Texas
Year built: 1905
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This article originally appeared on Sooners Wire: SEC stadiums capacities ranked from smallest to largest for 2026