Bernabéu (stadium)

Bernabéu
El Bernabéu
Nuevo Chamartín
 
Interior view (top), Exterior view (bottom)
Interactive map of Bernabéu
Full nameBernabéu
Former names
  • Estadio Real Madrid Club de Fútbol (1947–1955)
  • Estadio Santiago Bernabéu (1955–2025)
LocationMadrid, Spain
Capacity83,186
List
  • 100,000 (1947–1952)
    125,000 (1952–1978)
    90,000 (1978–1994)
    110,000 (1994–1999)
    81,044 (1999–2020)
    83,186 (since 2024)
Executive suites245
RoofRetractable
SurfaceMixto hybrid grass
Record attendance129,690 (Real Madrid v. AC Milan, 19 April 1956)
Field size105 m × 68 m (344 ft × 223 ft)
Public transit at Santiago Bernabéu
Construction
BuiltOctober 1944 – December 1947
Opened14 December 1947 (1947-12-14)
Renovated1982, 2001, 2019–2024
Expanded1952, 1992, 1994, 2011
Reopened23 December 2023 (2023-12-23)
Construction cost288,342,653 Ptas (€1,732,943)
Renovations:
1982: $4.7 million
2000: €127 million
2024: €1.76 billion
ArchitectManuel Muñoz Monasterio
Luis Alemany Soler
Antonio Lamela (expansion)
Tenants
Real Madrid (1947–2020, 2021–present)
Spain (selected matches)
Website
Bernabéu

Bernabéu (Spanish: El Bernabéu, [βeɾnaˈβew] ) is a retractable roof football stadium in Madrid, Spain. With a seating capacity of 83,186 following its extensive renovation completed in late 2024, the stadium has the second-largest seating capacity for a football stadium in Spain, behind Camp Nou in Barcelona. It has been the home stadium of Real Madrid since its completion in 1947.

Named after footballer and Real Madrid’s legendary president Santiago Bernabéu (1895–1978), the stadium is one of the world's most famous football venues. It has hosted the final of the European Cup/UEFA Champions League on four occasions: in 1957, 1969, 1980 and 2010. The stadium also hosted the second leg of the 2018 Copa Libertadores Finals, making Santiago Bernabéu the only stadium to host finals of both competitions.

The final matches for the 1964 European Nations' Cup and the 1982 FIFA World Cup were also held at the Bernabéu, making it the first stadium in Europe to host both a UEFA Euro final and a FIFA World Cup final.

The stadium, formerly known as the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, has now been officially renamed to simply "Bernabéu".