TheAustralian Football League has numerous grounds upon which seniorVFL/AFL games have been played. This list comprises current grounds in use, former grounds in use (both major and minor), regional pre-season grounds and international grounds.
In accordance with theLaws of Australian football, a ground must be grass, have a length of 135 metres (443 ft) to 185 metres (607 ft) and a width of 110 metres (360 ft) and 155 metres (509 ft).[1] Most Australian rules football grounds are also used forcricket, which is also played on a grassed, oval-shaped ground, and it is commonplace for a ground to be used for football in winter and cricket in summer.
Due to the popularity of Australian rules football, particularly in southern Australia, most of Australia's largest stadiums by capacity are used for Australian rules football; and it is therefore common to use those stadiums for other high-drawing events, particularly sporting events. Sports such asrugby andsoccer can be readily played on an Australian rules football arena, as their rectangular fields are small enough to be set on the larger oval.
The oldest Australian Football League ground is theMelbourne Cricket Ground. The ground was built in 1854 and is still used for hostingAFL matches, including each year's grand final. The ground also has the largest capacity, at 100,024. The ground that made its most recent AFL debut isBarossa Park inLyndoch, South Australia, andHands Oval inSouth Bunbury, Western Australia, which host their first matches during the 2025 season.
As of 2025, 52 different venues have hosted VFL/AFL premiership matches since the league was established in 1897.
The following table shows a list of all of grounds that are currently regularly used in theAustralian Football League, as of the2025 AFL season. The table includes grounds where teams have commercial deals in place to transfer home games to these grounds each season but are not full-time tenants of those grounds; in these cases, the club is shown in italics in the current tenants column.
| Ground | Image | Other/sponsored names | City | State/territory | Capacity | First used | Games | Current tenant(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Melbourne Cricket Ground | MCG The 'G | Melbourne | Victoria | 100,024[2] | 1897 | 3151 | Collingwood Hawthorn Melbourne Richmond Essendon Carlton | |
| Perth Stadium | Optus Stadium(2018–present) | Perth | Western Australia | 61,266[3] | 2018 | 181 | West Coast Fremantle | |
| Docklands Stadium | Colonial Stadium(2000–2002) Telstra Dome(2003–2008) Etihad Stadium(2009–2018) Marvel Stadium(2018–present) | Melbourne | Victoria | 56,347[4] | 2000 | 1159 | Essendon North Melbourne St Kilda Western Bulldogs Carlton | |
| Adelaide Oval | Adelaide | South Australia | 53,583[5] | 1877[6][n 1] | 291 | Adelaide Port Adelaide | ||
| Sydney Cricket Ground | SCG | Sydney | New South Wales | 48,000[7] | 1903[8] | 474 | Sydney | |
| The Gabba | Brisbane Cricket Ground | Brisbane | Queensland | 42,000[9] | 1991 | 421 | Brisbane | |
| Kardinia Park | Shell Stadium(1999–2001) Baytec Stadium(2002 pre-season) Skilled Stadium(2002–2011) Simonds Stadium(2012–2017) GMHBA Stadium(2017–present)[10] | Geelong | Victoria | 40,000[11] | 1941 | 730 | Geelong | |
| Carrara Stadium | Metricon Stadium(2011–2022) Heritage Bank Stadium(2023) People First Stadium(2024–present) | Gold Coast | Queensland | 25,000[n 2][12] | 1987 | 255 | Gold Coast | |
| Sydney Showground Stadium | Škoda Stadium(2012–2013) Spotless Stadium(2014–2018) GIANTS Stadium(2019–2023)[13] ENGIE Stadium (2024–present) | Sydney | New South Wales | 23,500 | 2012 | 111 | Greater Western Sydney[14] | |
| Bellerive Oval | Blundstone Arena(2012–2024) Ninja Stadium(2024-present) | Hobart | Tasmania | 19,500[15] | 2012 | 42 | Richmond Tasmania Football Club | |
| York Park | Aurora Stadium(2004–2016) University of Tasmania Stadium(2017–present) | Launceston | Tasmania | 15,615[16] | 2001 | 96 | Hawthorn[n 3] Tasmania Football Club | |
| Manuka Oval | StarTrack Oval Canberra(2013–2016) UNSW Canberra Oval(2017–2024) Corrobbee Group Oval(2025–present)[17] | Canberra | ACT | 15,000[18] | 1998 | 65 | Greater Western Sydney | |
| Marrara Oval | TIO Stadium(2006–present) | Darwin | Northern Territory | 12,000[19] | 2004 | 30 | Gold Coast[n 3] | |
| Eureka Stadium | Mars Stadium(2017–present) | Ballarat | Victoria | 11,000 | 2017 | 15 | Western Bulldogs[n 3] | |
| Traeger Park | TIO Traeger Park | Alice Springs | Northern Territory | 10,000[20] | 2014[21] | 11 | Melbourne[n 3] | |
| Hands Oval | JE Hands Memorial Park | South Bunbury | Western Australia | 8,000[22] | 2025 | 1 | North Melbourne[n 3] |
| Stadium | City | State/Territory | Capacity | Tenants | Opening Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Macquarie Point Stadium | Hobart | Tasmania | 23,000 | Tasmania Football Club | 2029 |
| Brisbane Olympic Stadium | Brisbane | Queensland | 63,000 | Brisbane Lions | 2032 |

The following table comprises a list of former grounds that were at one stage the primary home ground, or a long-term secondary home ground, for a club to play its VFL/AFL matches on.
Most of the grounds were the original homes of current teams (for example,Arden Street Oval wasNorth Melbourne's home ground) and have ceased hosting VFL/AFL matches, usually due to location and lack of capacity.Princes Park was the last of the Victorian suburban venues to host an AFL game, with the last match occurring in2005. These grounds now usually serve as a boutique training oval and administrative base for these AFL clubs, and some are used for underage,VFL,AFL Women's, or suburban league matches.
Waverley Park (originally known as VFL Park), located inMulgrave, Victoria was the first purpose-built stadium for VFL/AFL matches, opening in 1970. Until the 1990s, it did not serve as any team's home ground, but was instead a neutral venue to which each club shifted one or two of its home matches each year; in the 1990s, it was adopted as a home ground byHawthorn andSt Kilda. Original plans called for the ground's capacity to be 155,000, which would have made it one of the largest stadiums in the world. The venue, with its planned higher capacity, was originally to be a replacement for the Melbourne Cricket Ground as host of the VFL's Grand Final. However, in 1982/1983, when the extensions to finish the original plans were due to commence, the Government of Victoria refused to approve the plans for the stadium because the upgrade would have threatened the Melbourne Cricket Ground's right to host the Grand Final: hence, no further development ever occurred and the capacity was set at 78,000. It was used until 1999, and was replaced by the Docklands Stadium.
Football Park, which was located inWest Lakes, Adelaide, had a similar history to Waverley Park; it was purpose built forSouth Australian National Football League (SANFL) games and opened in 1974, replacingAdelaide Oval as the primary venue for the league: unlike Waverley Park, it became the venue for SANFL Grand Finals. It was the primary South Australian venue for VFL/AFL matches from 1991 (when the league expanded into Adelaide) until 2013, and it was replaced by the newly refurbished Adelaide Oval.
| Ground | Other/sponsored names | City | State | Capacity | Games | First used | Last used | Tenant(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arden Street Oval | North Melbourne Recreation Reserve | North Melbourne | Victoria | 35,000 | 529 | 1925 | 1985 | North Melbourne |
| Brunswick Street Oval | Fitzroy Cricket Ground | North Fitzroy | Victoria | 10,000[23] | 612 | 1897 | 1966 | Fitzroy |
| Coburg City Oval | Coburg | Victoria | 36,000 | 9 | 1965 | 1965 | North Melbourne | |
| Corio Oval | Geelong | Victoria | 25,000 | 371 | 1897 | 1940 | Geelong | |
| East Melbourne Cricket Ground | East Melbourne | Victoria | 18,000 | 225 | 1897 | 1921 | Essendon: 1897–1921 University: 1908–1910 | |
| Football Park | AAMI Stadium(2002–2015) | West Lakes | South Australia | 51,240[24] | 458 | 1991 | 2015[n 1] | Adelaide Port Adelaide |
| Glenferrie Oval | Hawthorn | Victoria | 36,000 | 443 | 1925 | 1973 | Hawthorn | |
| Junction Oval | St Kilda Cricket Ground | St Kilda | Victoria | 47,000 | 734 | 1897 | 1984 | St Kilda: 1897–1964 Fitzroy: 1970–1984 |
| Lake Oval | South Melbourne Cricket Ground | Albert Park | Victoria | 41,000 | 704 | 1897 | 1981 | South Melbourne |
| Moorabbin Oval | RSEA Park(2019–present) | Moorabbin | Victoria | 51,370 | 254 | 1965 | 1992 | St Kilda |
| Princes Park | Optus Oval(1994–2006) MC Labour Park(2007–2008) Visy Park(2009–2015) Ikon Park(2015–Present) | Carlton | Victoria | 62,986 | 1,277 | 1897 | 2005 | Carlton: 1897–2005 Fitzroy: 1967–1969, 1987–1993 Hawthorn: 1974–1991 South Melbourne: 1942–1943 Western Bulldogs: 1997–1999 |
| Punt Road Oval | Richmond Cricket Ground meBank Centre(2011–2016) Swinburne Centre(2017–present) | Richmond | Victoria | 46,000 | 544 | 1908 | 1964 | Richmond: 1908–1964 Melbourne: 1942–1946, 1956 |
| Stadium Australia | Telstra Stadium(2002–2007) ANZ Stadium(2008–2016) | Sydney Olympic Park | New South Wales | 82,500 | 56 | 2002 | 2022 | Sydney |
| Subiaco Oval | Patersons Stadium(2011–2014) Domain Stadium(2015–2017) | Perth | Western Australia | 42,922[25] | 545 | 1987 | 2017 | West Coast: 1987–2017 Fremantle: 1995–2017 |
| Victoria Park | Abbotsford | Victoria | 47,000 | 880 | 1897 | 1999 | Collingwood: 1897–1999 Fitzroy: 1985–1986 | |
| WACA Ground | East Perth | Western Australia | 35,000[26] | 72 | 1987 | 2000 | West Coast: 1987–2000 Fremantle: 1995–2000 | |
| Waverley Park | VFL Park(1970–1991) | Mulgrave | Victoria | 78,000 92,935* | 732 | 1970 | 1999 | Central ground: 1970–1991 Hawthorn: 1992–1999 St Kilda: 1993–1999 |
| Western Oval | Whitten Oval | West Footscray | Victoria | 42,354 | 665 | 1925 | 1997 | Footscray: 1925, 1941, 1943–1997 Fitzroy: 1994–1996 |
| Windy Hill | Essendon Recreation Reserve | Essendon | Victoria | 43,487 | 629 | 1922 | 1991 | Essendon |
Minor grounds have been used in the VFL/AFL, but only sparingly. In addition to former commercial deals to sell home games which are no longer active, there have been two main reasons historically for this:
Number of times used is correct to September 2025.
The following list, is a list of the venues that have been used in AFL pre-season competition.
Many of the grounds were used in the Regional Challenge stage of the AFL pre-season competition,NAB Cup, which was used to bring AFL games to regional centres ofSouth Australia,New South Wales,Queensland,Tasmania,Australian Capital Territory,Northern Territory,Western Australia andVictoria.
The following is a list of all of the international venues where a game of Australian rules football featuring VFL/AFL clubs has been played (in order of year last used). International matches have included pre-season competition matches or postseason exhibition matches. As of the end of 2018, the only international venues to host matches for premiership points areWestpac Stadium, inWellington, New Zealand; and Adelaide Arena atJiangwan Stadium,Shanghai, China.
The first internationalAustralian rules football exhibition match was in London in 1916. A team of Australian soldiers stationed in England at the time formed a team to play against a "training group". The game brought a crowd of 3,000 people that even included thePrince of Wales (laterKing Edward VIII) andKing Manuel II of Portugal.
The more recent AFL international matches have been part of the pre-season competition format and been highly successful. Countries that have hosted such matches include:United Arab Emirates,South Africa and the United Kingdom. There are also plans to expand the game further into countries such as India[48] and Japan.[49]
Below are the venues that have been used since the commencement of theAFL Women's competition in2017.