UEFA Euro 2036

Hosted in: 🇧🇦 Bosnia and Herzegovina & 🇭🇷 Croatia & 🇩🇰 Denmark & 🇫🇮 Finland & 🇲🇰 North Macedonia & 🇳🇴 Norway & 🇵🇱 Poland & 🇷🇸 Serbia & 🇸🇪 Sweden

UEFA Euro 2036 host stadium map

UEFA Euro 2036 does not yet have a host nation — several rival bids are competing to stage the tournament. This page maps every proposed host stadium grouped by bid, so you can compare who is bidding and with which grounds. 3 bids are in the running across 20 proposed venues: Poland (solo bid, 9 venues), Nordic (joint bid, 4 venues), Balkan (joint bid, 7 venues).

Confirmed venues
0
Candidate venues
20
Venue locations
Host not yet decided. The bids below are proposals discussed by national associations, media and fans — none has been awarded by UEFA. Stadiums are colour-coded by bid on the map and in the cards.
Poland bid solo bid 9 venues · 350,367 seats
Nordic bid joint bid 4 venues · 88,565 seats

The Nordic joint bid is led by Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden, proposing 4 stadiums with a combined capacity of about 88,565 seats. Proposed venues include Parken - connected by 3, Bolt Arena, Ullevaal Stadion, Strawberry Arena.

🇩🇰 Denmark
🇫🇮 Finland
🇳🇴 Norway
🇸🇪 Sweden
Balkan bid joint bid 7 venues · 211,521 seats

The Balkan joint bid is led by Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, North Macedonia and Serbia, proposing 7 stadiums with a combined capacity of about 211,521 seats. Proposed venues include Koševo City Stadium, Bilino Polje, Maksimir, Poljud, Nacionalna Arena Tose Proeski, National Stadium (Serbia), Rajko Mitić.

🇧🇦 Bosnia and Herzegovina
🇭🇷 Croatia
🇲🇰 North Macedonia
🇷🇸 Serbia
The rise of the joint bid

The joint, multi-country bid is fast becoming the norm for the European Championship. Rather than carrying the cost, security and infrastructure demands alone, national federations are teaming up to spread the financial risk, pool a wider set of world-class stadiums and strengthen both the appeal and the likelihood of success of their bid. The last single-nation host was Germany at UEFA Euro 2024; the next two editions are already co-hosted — Euro 2028 by the United Kingdom and Ireland, and Euro 2032 by Italy and Turkey. Of the 3 Euro 2036 bids tracked on this page, 2 joint multi-country bids and 1 solo bid. Will UEFA return to a single-country host model, or is shared hosting simply the new reality of staging a modern Euro? For now, teaming up looks like the winning strategy. To stage the tournament a host must field around 10 stadiums meeting UEFA's capacity tiers — at least 3 of 50,000–60,000+ seats (for the opening match, semi-finals and final), 4 of at least 40,000 and 3 of at least 30,000.