Antalyaspor team logo

Antalyaspor

ANT
Founded: 1966
Type: domestic
Country: Türkiye Türkiye
Last Played:
Manager: Sami Uğurlu
Active Seasons: 57

Antalyaspor Stadium

Antalya Stadyumu

Antalya, 100. Yıl Bulvarı 32,537 capacity

The Antalya Stadyumu is the modern home of Antalyaspor, located on 100. Yil Bulvari in Antalya, Turkey's premier resort city on the Mediterranean coast. The stadium holds 32,537 spectators and provides a purpose-built, modern venue for Super Lig football in a city renowned worldwide for beach tourism, ancient ruins, and Mediterranean sunshine. The ground was built as part of Turkey's broader stadium modernisation programme and replaced the older facilities that had served the club in earlier decades, providing Antalyaspor with infrastructure befitting their Super Lig ambitions in one of Turkey's fastest-growing major cities.

Antalyaspor have competed in the Super Lig across multiple periods, representing Turkey's Mediterranean coast and the broader Antalya province in national football. The club's Super Lig seasons have attracted significant investment from foreign owners, including Russian businessman Turgay Duzgoren and international investors who recognise the club's commercial potential in one of the world's most visited tourist destinations. Antalya receives over 15 million tourists annually and the region's population has grown dramatically in recent decades as both permanent residents and expatriate communities have settled on the Turquoise Coast.

The Antalya Stadyumu's Mediterranean setting - sunshine, warm evenings, and the Taurus Mountains visible to the north - creates an unusual backdrop for top-flight Turkish football. The stadium benefits from Antalya's year-round mild climate, making it one of Turkey's most comfortable venues for supporters and teams alike. The city's significant expatriate population from Russia, Germany, and Britain adds an international dimension to the matchday audience. Antalyaspor's role as the principal football club of Turkey's tourism capital gives them commercial opportunities beyond the traditional Turkish football market, and the stadium serves as the anchor of professional sport in a city that is otherwise primarily defined by its beaches and ancient Lycian heritage.