National Stadium, Karachi
| Address | Karachi Pakistan |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 24°53′46″N 67°4′53″E / 24.89611°N 67.08139°E |
| Public transit | National Stadium |
| Owner | Pakistan Cricket Board |
| Operator | Pakistan Cricket Board |
| Capacity | 30,000 |
| Construction | |
| Renovated | July 2025 |
| Ground information | |
| Location | Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan |
| Establishment | April 21, 1955 |
| Tenants | Pakistan national cricket team Karachi Kings |
| International information | |
| First Test | 26 February–1 March 1955: Pakistan v India |
| Last Test | 2–6 January 2023: Pakistan v New Zealand |
| First ODI | 21 November 1980: Pakistan v West Indies |
| Last ODI | 1 March 2025: South Africa v England |
| First T20I | 20 April 2008: Pakistan v Bangladesh |
| Last T20I | 25 September 2022: Pakistan v England |
| Only women's Test | 15–18 March 2004: Pakistan v West Indies |
| First WODI | 9 April 2001: Pakistan v Netherlands |
| Last WODI | 23 April 2024: Pakistan v West Indies |
| First WT20I | 1 September 2023: Pakistan v South Africa |
| Last WT20I | 3 May 2024: Pakistan v West Indies |
| As of 3 May 2024 Source: ESPNcricinfo | |
The National Stadium, also known as National Bank Stadium for sponsorship reasons, is an international cricket ground in Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan,Previously British India owned by the Pakistan Cricket Board. It is the home ground of the Karachi Kings franchise in Pakistan Super League and other domestic cricket teams of Sindh.
It was built in the early 1950s under the supervision of senior civil engineer Abdul Rasheed Khan (WP) and Kafiluddin, and was formally inaugurated in April 1955. In October 2022, the National Bank of Pakistan and the PCB agreed to a five-year naming-rights agreement, and the stadium was renamed as National Bank Cricket Arena.
The Pakistan cricket team have a remarkable Test record at the ground and is known as the fortress of Pakistan cricket. The stadium has witnessed several memorable moments, such as Viv Richards 181 against Sri Lanka at the 1987 Cricket World Cup, Mohammad Yousuf's record ninth century of the year to break Viv Richards' record of most runs in a calendar year, and Kamran Akmal's famous century against India on a very difficult pitch in 2006, after Pakistan had collapsed to 39 for 6, in a memorable come-from-behind victory.