News

15 German venues submit applications to host EURO 2024

15 stadia and cities have announced their desire to host matches at the 2024 European Championship which Germany are hoping to host as a nation. The German Football Association (DFB) received the applications on time before the 12:00 CEST deadline today (Wednesday 26/04). Applications were received from the following venues: Berlin (Olympiastadion), Bremen (Weserstadion), Dortmund (Signal Iduna Park), Düsseldorf (ESPRIT arena), Frankfurt am Main (Commerzbank-Arena), Gelsenkirchen (VELTINS-Arena), Hamburg (Volksparkstadion), Hannover (HDI Arena), Kaiserslautern (Fritz-Walter-Stadion), Köln (RheinEnergieSTADION), Leipzig (Red Bull Arena), Mönchengladbach (BORUSSIA-PARK), München (Allianz Arena), Nürnberg (Stadion Nürnberg) and Stuttgart (Mercedes-Benz Arena).

The application procedure began on 11th April with a workshop in Frankfurt am Main. Of the 17 originally interested towns, Freiburg (Neues Stadion Freiburg) and Karlsruhe (Wildparkstadion) withdrew their applications.

The 15 venues have until 12th June 2017 to submit their full applications to the DFB. The DFB’s committee will announce the ten successful applicants on 15th September 2017 and will then present these ten venues to UEFA as part of Germany’s application procedure. Interested nations have until 27th April 2018 to submit a full application and the host nation for EURO 2024 will be announced in September 2018.


15 stadia and cities have announced their desire to host matches at the 2024 European Championship which Germany are hoping to host as a nation. The German Football Association (DFB) received the applications on time before the 12:00 CEST deadline today (Wednesday 26/04). Applications were received from the following venues: Berlin (Olympiastadion), Bremen (Weserstadion), Dortmund (Signal Iduna Park), Düsseldorf (ESPRIT arena), Frankfurt am Main (Commerzbank-Arena), Gelsenkirchen (VELTINS-Arena), Hamburg (Volksparkstadion), Hannover (HDI Arena), Kaiserslautern (Fritz-Walter-Stadion), Köln (RheinEnergieSTADION), Leipzig (Red Bull Arena), Mönchengladbach (BORUSSIA-PARK), München (Allianz Arena), Nürnberg (Stadion Nürnberg) and Stuttgart (Mercedes-Benz Arena).

The application procedure began on 11th April with a workshop in Frankfurt am Main. Of the 17 originally interested towns, Freiburg (Neues Stadion Freiburg) and Karlsruhe (Wildparkstadion) withdrew their applications.

The 15 venues have until 12th June 2017 to submit their full applications to the DFB. The DFB’s committee will announce the ten successful applicants on 15th September 2017 and will then present these ten venues to UEFA as part of Germany’s application procedure. Interested nations have until 27th April 2018 to submit a full application and the host nation for EURO 2024 will be announced in September 2018.