Paris Saint Germain team logo

Paris Saint Germain

PSG
Founded: 1970
Type: domestic
Country: France France
Last Played:
Manager: Luis Enrique
Active Seasons: 116

Paris Saint Germain Stadium

Parc des Princes

Parc des Princes

Paris, 24, rue du Commandant Guilbaud 48,583 capacity

The Parc des Princes is the iconic home of Paris Saint-Germain Football Club, located at 24 rue du Commandant Guilbaud in the 16th arrondissement of Paris, adjacent to the Bois de Boulogne. The stadium holds 48,583 spectators and was inaugurated in 1972, replacing an earlier ground on the same site that had existed since 1897. Designed by Roger Taillibert in a distinctive circular design with a dramatic pre-stressed concrete roof providing full coverage without interior pillars, the Parc des Princes is one of the most architecturally celebrated football stadiums in Europe. The ground is owned by the City of Paris and leased to PSG.

The Parc des Princes has been the stage for some of French and European football's most extraordinary moments. It hosted the European Cup final in 1975, the European Cup Winners' Cup final in 1978, and UEFA Cup Finals, establishing itself as a premier European venue. Since the Qatari ownership group Qatar Sports Investments acquired PSG in 2011 and transformed the club into one of the world's richest, the stadium has hosted Champions League knockout matches featuring the likes of Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Edinson Cavani, Neymar Jr., Kylian Mbappe, and Lionel Messi. The Kop of Boulogne and Tribune Auteuil ends house the club's most passionate supporter groups, who create one of Ligue 1's loudest atmospheres.

The French national team used the Parc des Princes as their primary home venue from 1972 until the Stade de France opened in 1998, hosting World Cup qualifiers and international friendlies that are fondly remembered by French football supporters. PSG have been actively exploring plans to purchase the stadium from Paris City Hall or build a new dedicated arena, as the lease arrangement and ownership structure have been a recurring source of friction. Any new development would need to match or exceed the existing ground's 48,583 capacity while providing the elite commercial facilities the club requires to remain competitive with Europe's wealthiest clubs.