Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
StadiumDB.com is an English-language database-style media site focused on football stadiums, originating from the Polish website Stadiony.net. It is not a ticketing platform or a general sports news site, but a long-term archive covering the design, construction, operation, renovation, demolition, and history of football stadiums around the world. The crawled content shows that the site maintains stadium profiles, construction updates, design proposals, news listings, and dedicated sections for World Cup venues.
The site’s greatest value lies in its dual structure of “database + news”: users can look up specific stadium entries while also following construction and renovation updates for venues such as Nou Mestalla, Camp Nou, and Raymond James Stadium. It also covers venue preparations for major events like the 2026 World Cup and 2030 World Cup, including topics such as pitch upgrades, transport infrastructure, public funding, and urban governance. In addition, the site runs the annual Stadium of the Year vote and publishes Ranking 10+ attendance reports, giving it a certain level of industry-observation value.
Based on the site content, StadiumDB.com appears to be mainly free to access, with no visible membership subscription or paid database information. Its business model seems more like an ad-supported media site, with ads, sponsored content, and a “Buy World Cup 2026 Tickets” entry appearing on its pages. For ordinary users looking up information or reading articles, the barrier to use is low.
Its strengths are its extremely vertical focus and global coverage, making it especially useful for researching football stadium construction, renovation, and event-hosting conditions. It is updated frequently, with dense news coverage, and it also accepts reader corrections and photo contributions, which helps improve the completeness of its information. The drawbacks are also clear: there are many ads and soft promotional placements, and betting, lottery, or commercial service copy sometimes appears, which can affect the professional reading experience. Although the data is extensive, it is not an official database, so key information such as capacity, budget, and construction timelines should still be cross-checked against club, government, or official event sources. The English interface is also not especially friendly for Chinese-speaking users.
It is suitable for football fans, stadium-hopping enthusiasts, sports architecture researchers, sports industry media, urban infrastructure researchers, and anyone following World Cup venue preparations. If you are only looking for match scores or team news, it is not the best choice; but if your focus is “the stadium itself,” it offers high value.
Judging by its domain and content type, StadiumDB.com should generally be directly accessible from China. However, loading speed may be affected by overseas servers, ad scripts, and image resources. Chinese-speaking users can use it together with browser translation.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on stadiumdb.com official site.
stadiumdb.com is an International News provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach stadiumdb.com directly.