Allegiant Stadium

Allegiant Stadium
The Death Star
Allegiant Stadium in September 2021
Allegiant Stadium
Location in Nevada
Allegiant Stadium
Location in the United States
Allegiant Stadium
Allegiant Stadium (North America)
Full nameAllegiant Stadium
Former namesLas Vegas Stadium (planning/construction)
Address3333 Al Davis Way
LocationParadise, Nevada, U.S.
Coordinates36°05′26″N 115°11′2″W / 36.09056°N 115.18389°W / 36.09056; -115.18389
Elevation2,190 feet (670 m) AMSL
OperatorAEG Facilities
Executive suites128
CapacityNFL: 65,000
(expandable to 71,835)
Soccer: 61,000
Record attendance63,969 (2024 Vegas Kickoff Classic, USC vs. LSU, September 1, 2024)
Acreage62 acres (0.25 km2)
SurfaceBermuda grass (Raiders)
Artificial turf (UNLV)
Construction
Broke groundNovember 13, 2017
Built2017–2020
OpenedJuly 31, 2020 (2020-07-31)
Construction costUS$1.9 billion
($2.31 billion in 2024 dollars)
ArchitectMANICA Architecture
HNTB
Project managerICON Venue Group
Structural engineerArup
Services engineerSmith Seckman Reid, Inc.
General contractorMortenson Construction
McCarthy Building Companies, Inc.
Tenants
Las Vegas Raiders (NFL) 2020–present
UNLV Rebels (NCAA) 2020–present
Las Vegas Bowl (NCAA) 2021–present
Vegas Kickoff Classic (NCAA) Triennial
Website
allegiantstadium.com

Allegiant Stadium is a domed multi-purpose stadium located in Paradise, Nevada, southwest of adjacent Las Vegas. Opened in 2020, it is the home field of the Las Vegas Raiders of the National Football League (NFL) and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) Rebels college football team. The stadium also hosts the Vegas Kickoff Classic in early September and the Las Vegas Bowl in December. The stadium hosted Super Bowl LVIII in February 2024 and WrestleMania 41 in April 2025 and will host WrestleMania 42 in April 2026 and the College Football Playoff National Championship game in January 2027.

The venue is located on about 62 acres (0.25 km2) of land west of Mandalay Bay at Russell Road and Hacienda Avenue, between Polaris Avenue and Dean Martin Drive, just west of Interstate 15. At $1.9 billion, it is among the most expensive stadiums in the world. Construction of the stadium began on November 13, 2017, and its certificate of occupancy was issued on July 31, 2020. Due to the stadium's round and dark exterior design, it has also garnered the nickname of "Roomba" because of its resemblance to the automatic vacuum cleaners of the same name.