Having home field advantage is important in every sport, especially at the college level. Lack of travel and thousands of screaming fans lighting into the other team affirms the old saying: There’s no place like home.

That advantage can be increased based on the number of fans praying on the away team’s downfall. Michigan’s Big House and Penn State’s Beaver Stadium are the 2 largest in the country, coming in just north and south, respectively, of 107,000.

The SEC has 4 stadiums that can seat over 100,000: Kyle Field, Tiger Stadium, Neyland Stadium and Bryant-Denny Stadium. All except Vanderbilt can hold at least 60,000 fans.

A few stadiums have undergone renovations that have changed their usual attendance numbers from year to year. Tennessee underwent such a renovation in 2022, kicking its mark of 102,455 down to 101,915. Vanderbilt is also in the process of renovating (the season is a week away).

Here’s a full look at each SEC stadium’s capacity heading into the 2023 season.

  1. Kyle Field, Texas A&M: 102,733
  2. Tiger Stadium, LSU: 102,321
  3. Neyland Stadium, Tennessee: 101,915
  4. Bryant-Denny Stadium, Alabama: 101,821
  5. Sanford Stadium, Georgia: 92,746
  6. Ben Hill Griffin Stadium, Florida: 88,548
  7. Jordan-Hare Stadium, Auburn: 87,451
  8. Williams-Brice Stadium, South Carolina: 77,559
  9. Donald W. Reynolds Stadium, Arkansas
  10. Vaught-Hemingway Stadium, Ole Miss: 64,038
  11. Faurot Field, Mizzou: 61,620
  12. Davis Wade Stadium, Mississippi State: 61,337
  13. Kroger Field, Kentucky: 61,000
  14. FirstBank Stadium, Vanderbilt: 40,350

And just in case you’re wondering, here’s where Texas’ Darrell K Royal- Texas Memorial Stadium and Oklahoma’s Gaylord Family – Oklahoma Memorial Stadium stand for when they join the conference in 2024:

  • Texas: 100,119
  • Oklahoma: 80, 126