NBA Arena Capacity: All 30 Arenas Ranked by Size

An NBA arena on a packed night is one of the loudest, most electric places in sports. But not every building holds the same crowd. The gap between the league’s largest arena and its smallest is more than 4,000 seats, which is the difference between a cavernous big-market house and a tighter, louder room. So which NBA arena seats the most fans, which holds the fewest, and where does your team’s building land?

All 30 teams play in arenas that range from around 16,800 up to nearly 21,000 seats for basketball, and the rankings include a few surprises, since the biggest building does not belong to the biggest market.

The full capacity chart for all 30 arenas is below, ranked from largest to smallest, along with some history on the league’s old buildings and how arena sizes have changed over the decades. Take a look, then we’ll break down the highlights.

NBA Arena Capacity
All 30 arenas ranked by basketball seating
Largest
20,917
United Center
Smallest
16,867
Smoothie King Center
League Average
~19,000
across 30 teams
Newest
2024
Intuit Dome
All 30 arenas, largest to smallest
# Arena Team Capacity Opened
1 United Center Chicago Bulls 20,917 1994
2 Capital One Arena Washington Wizards 20,333 1997
3 Little Caesars Arena Detroit Pistons 20,332 2017
4 Xfinity Mobile Arena Philadelphia 76ers 20,007 1996
5 Madison Square Garden New York Knicks 19,812 1968
6 Scotiabank Arena Toronto Raptors 19,800 1999
7 Kaseya Center Miami Heat 19,600 1999
8 Ball Arena Denver Nuggets 19,520 1999
9 Rocket Arena Cleveland Cavaliers 19,432 1994
10 Moda Center Portland Trail Blazers 19,411 1995
11 American Airlines Center Dallas Mavericks 19,200 2001
12 Spectrum Center Charlotte Hornets 19,077 2005
13 Crypto.com Arena Los Angeles Lakers 18,997 1999
14 Kia Center Orlando Magic 18,846 2010
15 TD Garden Boston Celtics 18,624 1995
16 Frost Bank Center San Antonio Spurs 18,354 2002
17 Delta Center Utah Jazz 18,306 1991
18 Paycom Center Oklahoma City Thunder 18,203 2002
19 Toyota Center Houston Rockets 18,055 2003
20 Chase Center Golden State Warriors 18,064 2019
21 Target Center Minnesota Timberwolves 18,024 1990
22 Intuit Dome Los Angeles Clippers 18,000 2024
23 Gainbridge Fieldhouse Indiana Pacers 17,923 1999
24 FedExForum Memphis Grizzlies 17,794 2004
25 Barclays Center Brooklyn Nets 17,732 2012
26 Golden 1 Center Sacramento Kings 17,611 2016
27 Fiserv Forum Milwaukee Bucks 17,341 2018
28 Mortgage Matchup Center Phoenix Suns 17,071 1992
29 State Farm Arena Atlanta Hawks 17,044 1999
30 Smoothie King Center New Orleans Pelicans 16,867 1999
Basketball seating capacities; figures vary slightly by source and configuration. Some arenas were recently renamed. Opened year refers to the building, not the team’s first season there.
Arenas of the Past
From cramped gyms to giant domes
68,323
The record NBA regular-season crowd, set in 2023 when the Spurs hosted the Warriors at the Alamodome for their 50th anniversary
22,076
The Palace of Auburn Hills, the Pistons’ home from 1988 to 2017, was one of the largest dedicated NBA arenas ever built
4,200
Edgerton Park Arena, home of the Rochester Royals into the 1950s, held only about 4,200 fans
1968
Madison Square Garden, the oldest arena still in NBA use, opened its current building this year
The era of the giant domes
Several teams briefly played home games in cavernous football stadiums. The Pistons used the Pontiac Silverdome (listed at 33,000 for basketball) in the 1980s, and the Hawks, SuperSonics, and Jazz all played stretches in domes seating 50,000 or more. The huge capacities produced record crowds but a poor viewing experience for most fans.
The Palace set the modern template
When the Detroit Pistons opened The Palace of Auburn Hills in 1988, its luxury-suite design became the model every new NBA arena would follow. It seated more than 22,000 and stood until the team moved downtown in 2017.
Early NBA buildings were tiny
In the league’s first years, teams played in modest arenas, armories, and even high school gyms. The Fort Wayne Pistons once played in a high school gym holding about 3,000, and several early-1950s venues seated well under 10,000.
Famous old barns
Classic arenas like the original Boston Garden (14,890) and Chicago Stadium (18,676) hosted decades of NBA history before being replaced in the mid-1990s by the modern buildings their teams use today.

The Largest NBA Arena

The United Center in Chicago, home of the Bulls, is the largest arena in the NBA, seating 20,917 for basketball. Opened in 1994 to replace the old Chicago Stadium, it has held the top spot for years. Just behind it are a cluster of 20,000-plus buildings: Washington’s Capital One Arena, Detroit’s Little Caesars Arena, and Philadelphia’s arena all top that mark. It is worth noting that Chicago, not New York or Los Angeles, owns the biggest house in the league.

The Smallest NBA Arena

At the other end, the New Orleans Pelicans play in the smallest NBA arena, the Smoothie King Center, which seats 16,867 for basketball. Atlanta’s State Farm Arena and Phoenix’s arena are also on the smaller side. Smaller is not necessarily worse, since a tighter building can feel louder and more intense, and several teams have deliberately renovated to improve sightlines and atmosphere rather than chase raw capacity.

Why Capacities Vary

A few things drive the differences. Many NBA arenas are multi-purpose buildings that also host hockey, concerts, and other events, so their basketball capacity reflects how the floor and lower bowl are configured. The arena’s age and the era it was built in matter too, along with how many premium suites and club areas a team has added, since those upgrades often trade raw seats for higher-revenue space. The newest arena in the league, the Clippers’ Intuit Dome, opened in 2024 and was designed around atmosphere and an intimate seating bowl rather than sheer size.

Madison Square Garden, the Famous Exception

One arena stands apart for reasons beyond capacity. Madison Square Garden, home of the New York Knicks, seats 19,812 and is the only current NBA arena not named after a corporate sponsor. The current building opened in 1968, making it one of the oldest still in use, and its name and history give it a status no naming-rights deal can buy.

How Arena Sizes Have Changed

NBA buildings were not always this large. In the league’s early decades, teams played in compact arenas and even high school and college gyms. Some historical venues went the opposite direction and were enormous: a handful of teams briefly played in domed football stadiums that could theoretically hold tens of thousands. The modern era settled into the 17,000 to 21,000 range as purpose-built arenas with luxury suites became the standard. The history section in the chart above covers some of the most notable old buildings, from intimate early gyms to the giant domes.

The Bottom Line

NBA arena capacities run from the United Center’s league-high 20,917 down to the Smoothie King Center’s 16,867, with most teams landing somewhere in the high 17,000s to 19,000s. The biggest building belongs to Chicago, the smallest to New Orleans, and the most storied to New York. Capacity is only part of what makes an arena great, but it is a fun lens on how each franchise has built its home, and on how far the league has come from the cramped gyms where it started.