The Redmen TV
·7 luglio 2026
How Does Anfield Compare to the World’s Biggest Football Stadiums?

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsThe Redmen TV
·7 luglio 2026

Anfield has never been the biggest stadium in world football, and Liverpool fans have never needed it to be. What the ground lacks in raw capacity, it more than makes up for in noise, history, and the kind of atmosphere that visiting teams talk about long after the final whistle. Still, with the ongoing Anfield Road expansion pushing capacity past 61,000, it’s worth taking a step back and looking at how Liverpool’s home compares to the true giants of world football.
Anfield has been reshaped multiple times since Liverpool moved there in 1892. The most recent expansion of the Anfield Road End added thousands of extra seats, bringing the ground closer to the capacities of rival Premier League stadiums like Old Trafford and the Emirates. It’s a meaningful upgrade for matchday revenue and atmosphere, but even at its new capacity, Anfield remains modest compared to some of the largest football venues on the planet.
Some stadiums operate on an entirely different scale. North Korea’s Rungrado 1st of May Stadium, for example, is widely considered the largest football stadium in the world, with a capacity estimated at around 114,000 — nearly double Anfield’s. Camp Nou in Barcelona, following its ongoing redevelopment, is set to hold over 105,000 once fully reopened, making it comfortably the biggest club football stadium in Europe. Estadio Azteca in Mexico City, the only stadium to have hosted two men’s World Cup finals, holds close to 87,000 and will again be at the centre of the football world when it features in the 2026 World Cup.
For a full breakdown of these venues, including capacities, history, and what makes each one significant, this piece on the Largest Football Stadium in the World is a solid reference point for anyone curious about how the numbers stack up.
None of this changes what makes Anfield special. Fans who’ve been to Camp Nou or the Azteca will tell you that scale and atmosphere don’t always go hand in hand — some of the most intimidating away days in football happen at grounds well under 60,000 capacity. Anfield’s tight stands, close to the pitch, and the tradition built up around matchdays like European nights create an intensity that raw seat counts don’t capture.







































