Cox Pavilion, 2009 | |
| Address | 4505 S Maryland Pkwy #2022 |
|---|---|
| Location | Las Vegas, Nevada |
| Coordinates | 36°6′15″N115°8′35″W / 36.10417°N 115.14306°W /36.10417; -115.14306 |
| Owner | University of Nevada, Las Vegas |
| Capacity | Basketball: 2,454 Boxing: 3,286 Concerts: 3,372[1] |
| Opened | May 25, 2001 |
| Tenants | |
| UNLV Lady Rebels (NCAA) Women’s Basketball (2001–present) UNLV Rebels women's volleyball (2001–present) NBA Summer League (2009–Present) SlamBall (2023–present) | |
Cox Pavilion is a 78,300-square-foot (7,270 m2), multi-purposeindoor arena on theUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas campus, connected to theThomas & Mack Center. The Pavilion serves as the home court for UNLV Lady Rebels women's basketball and volleyball programs as well as the annualNBA Summer League.
Cox Communications and UNLV formed a partnership for the new facility in 2001. The arena cost $16.8 million. As part of a $5 million agreement, Cox Communications secured the naming rights for the facility as well as opportunities for sponsorship and hospitality.
The pavilion is a two-level structure. The ground floor features new men's and women's locker facilities, player lounges and practice courts for basketball and volleyball. The top level is a multi-purpose venue with a seating capacity of 2,500 to 3,100 for sporting events.
In addition to UNLV athletic events, the Cox Pavilion hosts a variety of events, including small concerts, boxing events, theater-style family shows, corporate parties, trade shows and more.
On November 15, 2007, the arena hosted theDemocratic Presidential Debate for the2008 presidential election.
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling held theirUnbreakable pay-per-view event at the venue on April 17, 2025.[2]
WWE held theirWorlds Collide: Las Vegas event at the venue on September 12, 2025.