
Dundee United
DUDDundee United Stadium

Tannadice Park
Dundee United FC plays at Tannadice Park, located in the Tannadice Street area of Dundee, Scotland's fourth-largest city. With a capacity of approximately 14,209 spectators, Tannadice has been the club's home since 1909 and shares its immediate neighbourhood with the home ground of city rivals Dundee FC — Dens Park is located just metres away, making it the most geographically proximate pair of major club grounds in British football. Tannadice is a traditional Scottish football stadium with a covered main stand and characteristic features that reflect the architectural styles of different eras of its development over more than a century of use.
Tannadice witnessed Dundee United's golden era under manager Jim McLean, who transformed the club from perennial also-rans into one of Europe's finest sides in the 1980s. The club won their only Scottish championship in 1982–83, reached the UEFA Cup final in 1987 (losing to IFK Göteborg on aggregate), and reached the semi-finals of the European Cup in 1984, defeating Roma in Rome in one of British football's most extraordinary results. These extraordinary European nights — with packed crowds at Tannadice generating phenomenal atmospheres — remain the most celebrated moments in the club's history and have given the stadium a legendary status in Scottish football.
Tannadice Park has undergone various improvements over the decades while retaining its traditional character. The stadium's proximity to Dens Park makes the Dundee derby one of the most geographically unique fixtures in world football, with supporters able to walk between the two grounds in minutes. The rivalry between Dundee United and Dundee FC — the "City of Discovery Derby" — generates passionate occasions at Tannadice, reflecting the deep football culture of a city that has produced extraordinary clubs and players despite its modest size. Dundee United's continued presence in the Scottish Premiership ensures that Tannadice remains a venue where Scottish top-flight football and the memories of extraordinary European achievements coexist.
Scotland