The stadium in 2021 | |
![]() Interactive map of Rice–Eccles Stadium | |
| Address | 451 South 1400 East Salt Lake City, Utah United States |
|---|---|
| Location | University of Utah |
| Coordinates | 40°45′36″N111°50′56″W / 40.759974576198005°N 111.84885323661989°W /40.759974576198005; -111.84885323661989 |
| Elevation | 4,637 ft (1,413 m) |
| Public transit | |
| Owner | University of Utah[1] |
| Operator | University of Utah |
| Executive suites | 25 |
| Capacity | 51,444 (2021–present)[2] |
| Record attendance | 54,383 (vs.BYU, 2024) |
| Surface | |
| Construction | |
| Broke ground | June 1997 |
| Opened | September 12, 1998; 27 years ago (1998-09-12) |
| Construction cost | US$50,000,000 (equivalent to $96,000,000 in 2024) |
| Architect | FFKR Architects[6] |
| Structural engineer | Reaveley Engineers + Associates[7] |
| Services engineer | Van Boerum & Frank Associates, Inc.[8] |
| General contractor | Layton Construction |
| Tenants | |
| |
| Website | |
| stadium | |
Rice–Eccles Stadium is an outdoorcollege footballstadium located on the campus of theUniversity of Utah inSalt Lake City, Utah. It is the home field of theUtah Utes of theBig 12 Conference. It was built to serve as the stadium for theOpening andClosing ceremonies of2002 Winter Olympics, a role it is expected to reprise for the2034 Winter Olympics.
TheFieldTurf playing field runs in the traditional north-south configuration at an elevation of4,637 feet (1,413 m) above sea level,400 feet (120 m) above downtown Salt Lake City.
When Salt Lake City was awarded the 2002 Winter Olympics in June 1995, it was obvious thatRobert Rice Stadium, the largest outdoor stadium in Salt Lake City, was not suitable to serve as the main stadium.[9] The concrete, timber, and earth-fill facility was built in 1927 and had not aged well. In 1996, U of U athletic director Chris Hill announced plans to renovate Rice Stadium into a new facility that would be up to Olympic standards. It was initially expected to take three years to completely overhaul the facility.
However, in 1997,Spencer Eccles, a Utah alumnus and chairman of Utah's biggest bank,First Security Corporation (now part ofWells Fargo), announced that theGeorge S. and Dolores Dore Eccles Foundation would donate $10 million toward the project. In recognition of this gift, the university received permission from the Eccles family to add George Eccles's name to the stadium alongside that ofRobert L. Rice, who had funded the original renovation project to Rice Stadiumin 1972.[10] Before 1972, it wasUte Stadium, which opened in 1927 with a Utah win overColorado Mines.
Immediately after the1997 season's final home game on November 15, fittingly a 31–14 victory overRice, Rice Stadium was almost completely demolished, replaced with a modern steel, concrete and glass facility. All that remained of the old stadium were the stands in the south end zone, built in1982. The stadium did not miss a football season, as the project was timed not to disrupt the 1997 home schedule.[11] The new stadium was ready less than 10 months later for the1998 home opener, a 45–22 win overLouisville on September 12. The stadium then seated 45,017, plus a new six-story press box.

In 2014, a row of bleachers were added in the standing room areas on the east, west and north sections of Rice–Eccles Stadium. 40 ADA seats were also added for a total of 790 new seats, increasing the capacity of Rice–Eccles Stadium to 45,807, plus additional space for standing room behind the new row of bleachers.[3]
In June 2010, the U of U accepted an invitation to join the Pacific-10 Conference (which changed its name to thePac-12 Conference shortly after the Utah Utes and theColorado Buffaloes joined)[12] and began playing in the conference during 2011–2012 season.[13] Claims that Rice-Eccles would again be expanded and the locker room facilities upgraded were furthered when both KSL.com[14] and theDeseret News[15] reported that the university was seriously considering expanding the stadium by at least 10,000 seats, which would bring the expected capacity to 51,444.[16]
In 2019, the University announced a renovation of the seating at the south end zone. The announced renovation was planned to add 6,000 more seats, high-end suites, locker rooms, offices, terrace seating, and a restaurant, all for $80 million. TheKen Garff Family donated $17.5 million and the section was named the "Ken Garff Red Zone" in his honor.[17] Construction on the South End Zone was completed on August 12, 2021 and opened to the public that season. After construction, the stadium's capacity had increased by 5,637 seats.
The Ken Garff Red Zone features new home and visiting locker rooms, sports medicine facilities and hospitality areas, the University Club restaurant, Diglisic Lounge, Layton Field Club, and various premium seating options, including suites, loge boxes, ledge, club, and premium terrace seating as well as additional bleacher seating. Utah’s new locker room is 5,300 square feet with 90 lockers. It features a one-of-a-kind locker design with hidden storage, wireless charging, and a locking box for athletes.[18]

Immediately south of the stadium was theSalt Lake 2002 Olympic Cauldron Park, which contained a 2002 Winter Olympic museum, the Olympic cauldron, and other memorabilia from the games. Only the cauldron remains at the stadium today; the museum and other memorabilia have all since been removed.Hoberman Arch was located until its removal in October 2014.[19] The cauldron has undergone refurbishment and was relocated to a new Olympic plaza at the Southwest corner outside the stadium, just west of the South Endzone expansion.[20]
Since2002, the playing field at Rice–Eccles Stadium has beenFieldTurf. It was most recently replaced in2015.[21]
When the stadium reopened in1998, its surface was SportGrass, a hybrid of natural grass andartificial turf. Earlier, Rice Stadium had been among the first facilities to use SportGrass. A fullnatural grass was installed in2000 for two seasons, then was covered by asphalt blacktop for the Opening and Closing Ceremonies of the2002 Winter Olympics.
It was the second-highest field in the Pac-12, about 700 feet (210 m) lower thanColorado'sFolsom Field inBoulder, and over 2,000 feet (610 m) above the third-highest,Washington State'sMartin Stadium inPullman. After moving to theBig 12 Conference in 2024, Colorado and Utah again have the two highest fields in the conference.
During the 2002 Winter Olympics, the stadium served as the venue for the Opening Ceremony on February 8, 2002, and for the Closing Ceremony on February 24, 2002. To host the ceremonies, the grass field was paved over withasphalt and a stage was constructed, scoreboards were removed, flags and Olympic livery were installed, temporary seating was brought in (allowing more than 50,000 spectators), and the 2002 Olympic cauldron was installed atop the southern bleachers.
For the duration of the games, the stadium was temporarily renamed theRice–Eccles Olympic Stadium. Through broadcasts from the stadium, an estimated 3.5 billion people worldwide watched the Opening and Closing Ceremonies on television.[22]
The Opening Ceremony of the2002 Winter Paralympics was also held in the stadium on March 7, 2002. The corresponding Closing Ceremony followed suit on March 16, 2002.[23]
During the 2034 Winter Olympics and Paralympics, the stadium is expected to serve as the venue for the Opening and Closing ceremonies.[24]
| Date | Headline artist | Opening act(s) | Tour / Concert name | Attend. | Revenue | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| June 17, 2000 | NSYNC | Pink | No Strings Attached Tour | |||
| May 24, 2011 | U2 | The Fray | 360° Tour | 47,710 / 47,710 | $3,029,760 | Postponed from June 3, 2010, due toBono's emergency back surgery. |
| July 28, 2018 | Imagine Dragons | Grace VanderWaal Zedd Mike Shinoda Tyler Glenn Vagabon A.W. Cameron Esposito | LoveLoud2018 Evolve World Tour | |||
| July 17, 2021 | Garth Brooks | — | The Garth Brooks Stadium Tour | |||
| June 7, 2024 | Luke Combs | Growin’ Up And Gettin’ Old Tour | ||||
| June 8, 2024 | ||||||
| April 29, 2025 | Post Malone | Sierra Ferrell Jelly Roll | Big Ass Stadium Tour |
Rice–Eccles Stadium was also the home field of theMajor League Soccer franchiseReal Salt Lake from 2005 until October 2008, whenRio Tinto Stadium was opened in the suburb ofSandy, south of Salt Lake City.
Rice–Eccles Stadium replacedRobert Rice Stadium, the former home field of theUtah Utes football team. The first Utes game at the stadium was a 45–22 victory over theLouisville Cardinals held on September 12, 1998, with 44,112 in attendance. The Utes have a 120-41 (.745) record at the stadium through the2024 season.[25]
TheSalt Lake Stallions of theAlliance of American Football (AAF) played at Rice–Eccles Stadium during the league's lone season in 2019.[26][27]
The stadium hosted a round of theAMA Supercross Championship from 2001 to 2004, 2009 to 2013 and 2017. In 2020, it hosted the final seven rounds of the series in a “COVID-19 bubble” withno fans being allowed in the stands. Since 2021, Rice–Eccles Stadium has been the home of the Championship round of the series.[28]
Rice–Eccles Stadium hosted its first Monster Jam event in 2022. The series then stopped by every year the week before the Monster Energy Supercross championship took place in the same stadium. In May 2024 it was announced that the stadium would host Monster Jam World Finals 24 in 2025.[29]Mexico played againstSwitzerland for an international soccer friendly on June 7, 2025 where they lost 4–2 in front of 41,000 fans.[30]

| Attendance records[4] | |||||
| Rank | Date | Time | Opponent | Result | Attendance |
| 1 | November 9, 2024 | 7:30 pm | #9BYU | L 22-21 | 54,383 |
| 2 | August 31, 2023 | 5:00 pm | Florida | W 24-11 | 53,644 |
| 3 | October 15, 2022 | 6:00 pm | #7USC | W 43–42 | 53,609[31] |
| 4 | October 28, 2023 | 1:30 pm | #7Oregon | L 35-6 | 53,586 |
| 5 | October 19, 2024 | 8:30 pm | TCU | L 7–13 | 53,299 |
| 6 | September 23, 2023 | 1:30 pm | #22UCLA | W 14–7 | 52,919 |
| 7 | September 28, 2024 | 8:15 pm | Arizona | L 10–23 | 52,898 |
| 8 | September 7, 2024 | 1:30 pm | Baylor | W 23–12 | 52,827 |
| 9 | November 20, 2021 | 5:30 pm | #3Oregon | W 38–7 | 52,724[32] |
| 10 | September 20, 2025 | 10:00 am | #17Texas Tech | L 10-34 | 52,236 |
| 11 | August 29, 2024 | 7:00 pm | Southern Utah | W 49–0 | 52,210 |
| 12 | October 14, 2023 | 1:00 pm | California | W 34–14 | 52,115 |
| 13 | November 4, 2023 | 12:00 pm | Arizona State | W 55-3 | 52,104 |
| 14 | October 30, 2021 | 8:00 pm | UCLA | W 44-24 | 51,922 |
| 15 | October 1, 2022 | 12:00 pm | Oregon State | W 42-16 | 51,729 |
| 16 | October 16, 2021 | 8:00 pm | #18Arizona State | W 35-21 | 51,724 |
| 17 | September 17, 2022 | 8:00 pm | San Diego State | W 35-7 | 51,602 |
| 18 | November 25, 2023 | 1:00 pm | Colorado | W 40-17 | 51,511 |
| 19 | November 26, 2021 | 2:00 pm | Colorado | W 23-17 | 51,595 |
| 20 | September 16 , 2023 | 12:00 pm | Weber State | W 31–7 | 51,532 |
| 21 | September 10, 2022 | 11:30 am | Southern Utah | W 73-7 | 51,531 |
| Preceded by | Winter Olympics Opening and Closing Ceremonies (Olympic Stadium) 2002 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Winter Olympics Opening and Closing Ceremonies (Olympic Stadium) 2034 | Succeeded by TBD |
| Preceded by N/A (first stadium) | Home of Real Salt Lake 2005–2008 | Succeeded by |