Champions League 2027 Final: Host City Confirmed | UEFA News

He Madrid Metropolitan Stadium has been chosen as the headquarters for the final of the Champions League 2027determination taken by the Executive Committee of the UEFA.

The rojiblanco enclosure, which competed with the Baku Olympic Stadium In Azerbaijan, the headquarters of the final of the maximum continental competition will be for the second time, after hosting it in the 2018-2019 edition, in which the Liverpool He won the title against Tottenham.

Included among the eleven Spanish stadiums to host matches to the semifinals of the 2030was inaugurated on September 16, 2017, is the scenario in which the first rojiblanco team plays its matches and has the capacity to 70.692 spectators, 96% covered

The stadium has 1,000 parking spaces within the building itself and another 3,000 seats abroad. The club has a perimeter owned by the entity itself in which two have been launched ‘fan zones’one next to the South Fund and another next to the North Fund.

The final of the ‘Champions’ of this season will be played on May 30, 2026 in the Budapest sand puskas And that of the Metropolitan will be the sixth in the capital of Spain, since before the one played in 2019 at the Rojiblanco stadium, it was also played at Santiago Bernabéu four times.

The Metropolitan Stadium will host the Champions League final. (Photo: EFE)

In 2010 the Inter defeated the Bayern Munich In the Madrid stadium, in 1980 the Nottinghan Forest He won the Hamburg, in 1969 the Milan was proclaimed champion against Ajax and in 1957 Real Madrid was crowned before his audience by winning Fiorentina (2-0), with goals from Alfredo Di Stéfano and Paco Gento.

The UEFA executive also decided that the next Super Cup is played in Salzburg (Austria), that the Sub’19 Football Championship in 2027 is held in Astana (Kazakhstan) and that the Women’s Eurocup Sala also in 2027 is played in Osijek (Croatia).

Marcus Cole

Marcus Cole is a senior football analyst at Archysport with over a decade of experience covering the NFL, college football, and international football leagues. A former NCAA Division I player turned journalist, Marcus brings an insider's understanding of the game to every breakdown. His work focuses on tactical analysis, draft evaluations, and in-depth game previews. When he's not breaking down film, Marcus covers the intersection of football culture and the communities it shapes across America.

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