
TSG Hoffenheim
TSG
GermanyTSG Hoffenheim Stadium

PreZero Arena
The PreZero Arena is the home of TSG 1899 Hoffenheim, located in Sinsheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, roughly 50 kilometres south of Heidelberg. The stadium holds 30,150 spectators and opened in January 2009, replacing the old Dietmar-Hopp-Stadion that had served the club during its lower-league years. The ground was initially known as the Rhein-Neckar-Arena and subsequently the Wirsol Rhein-Neckar-Arena before adopting the PreZero name in 2018 following a new naming rights agreement. The stadium represents a remarkable transformation of what was once a small village club, enabled almost entirely by the patronage of software billionaire Dietmar Hopp, who grew up in Hoffenheim and invested massively in the club from the 1990s onwards.
Hoffenheim's rise from the German amateur football pyramid to the Bundesliga was one of the most striking stories in early 21st-century German football. The club was promoted to the top flight in 2007 and has remained there since, establishing the PreZero Arena as a consistent Bundesliga venue. The stadium hosted Europa League football following strong league finishes, and Hoffenheim qualified for the Champions League in 2018-19 under Julian Nagelsmann, giving the Sinsheim ground its first taste of European elite competition. Despite the stadium's relatively modest capacity compared to Germany's largest grounds, it offers excellent facilities and strong sight lines in a purpose-built setting.
The PreZero Arena is notable for its bold modern architecture, featuring a curved roof and a striking exterior that has made it one of the more distinctive stadiums in the Bundesliga despite its provincial location. The stadium sits adjacent to the AutoTeam Arena, a major motor racing and motorsport events venue, creating an unusual sporting complex on the outskirts of Sinsheim. Hoffenheim regularly fill the ground for top Bundesliga fixtures, and European nights against clubs from across the continent have brought significant attention to a stadium that few observers would have predicted would ever host top-flight German football.