Eighteen grounds. One hundred and fifteen matches. A season that runs from late May deep into July.
The T20 Blast 2026 is the biggest domestic T20 competition in England and Wales, and knowing which stadiums host which matches is the first step to planning your summer cricket.
Whether you are after a ticket at Lord’s, a family night at Grace Road, or a seat at Edgbaston for Finals Day, the full T20 Blast 2026 stadiums list is everything you need in one place.
T20 Blast 2026 Stadiums List

Here it is — broken down by group, with capacities, home sides, and the details that actually matter when you are working out where to go.
Complete T20 Blast 2026 Stadiums List
The Vitality Blast 2026 runs from 22 May to 18 July 2026, with 18 counties each playing at their home ground. The 18 venues are split across three regional groups.
| Venue | City | Capacity | Home Team | Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lord’s Cricket Ground | London | 30,000 | Middlesex | Group C (South) |
| Kia Oval | London | 25,500 | Surrey | Group C (South) |
| Emirates Old Trafford | Manchester | 26,000 | Lancashire Lightning | Group A (North) |
| Edgbaston | Birmingham | 25,000 | Warwickshire Bears | Group B (Central) |
| Headingley | Leeds | 18,350 | Yorkshire | Group A (North) |
| Trent Bridge | Nottingham | 17,500 | Notts Outlaws | Group A (North) |
| Sophia Gardens | Cardiff | 15,643 | Glamorgan | Group B (Central) |
| County Ground, Bristol | Bristol | 7,000 | Gloucestershire | Group B (Central) |
| Utilita Bowl | Southampton | 15,000 | Hampshire Hawks | Group C (South) |
| Riverside Ground | Chester-le-Street | 15,000 | Durham | Group A (North) |
| County Ground, Taunton | Taunton | 6,500 | Somerset | Group B (Central) |
| St Lawrence Ground | Canterbury | 15,000 | Kent Spitfires | Group C (South) |
| County Ground, Hove | Hove | 5,500 | Sussex Sharks | Group C (South) |
| County Ground, Derby | Derby | 9,500 | Derbyshire Falcons | Group A (North) |
| County Ground, Chelmsford | Chelmsford | 6,000 | Essex | Group C (South) |
| Grace Road | Leicester | 12,000 | Leicestershire Foxes | Group A (North) |
| County Ground, Northampton | Northampton | 6,500 | Northants Steelbacks | Group B (Central) |
| New Road | Worcester | 4,500 | Worcestershire Rapids | Group B (Central) |
Group A (North) Venues
Group A is the most geographically spread of the three, covering grounds from Manchester down to Derby. Northern crowds tend to be loud and fiercely local — particularly in the Roses rivalry between Lancashire and Yorkshire.
- Emirates Old Trafford, Manchester — Lancashire Lightning
One of the biggest T20 grounds in the north, Old Trafford holds 26,000 and has been Lancashire’s home since 1864. A major redevelopment completed in 2013 brought floodlights, a hotel, and hospitality facilities that rival any county ground in England. The standout fixture here in 2026 is the first-ever T20 Roses double header on 10 July — Lancashire hosting Yorkshire in a format that ought to generate the kind of noise Old Trafford reserves for its best nights.
- Headingley Cricket Ground, Leeds — Yorkshire
Capacity 18,350. A Test ground since 1899. Evening T20 cricket at Headingley under the floodlights is a different experience from the day-game atmosphere — tighter, louder, and faster. The pitch offers seam movement early on, but short square boundaries mean batters rarely stay quiet for long. It is also one of the seven grounds hosting the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026.
- Trent Bridge, Nottingham — Notts Outlaws
Widely regarded as the best batting surface on the county circuit, Trent Bridge holds 17,500 and has produced some of the T20 Blast’s highest-scoring matches. The Notts Outlaws won the competition in 2017 and 2020 and consistently attract high-quality overseas players. If you want to watch a 200-plus total, this is a very good place to start.
- Riverside Ground, Chester-le-Street — Durham
The Riverside holds up to 15,000 with temporary seating and brought international cricket to the North-East when it opened in 1995. Durham is a genuine white-ball force — they reached the 2024 Vitality Blast Final — and their home ground has the kind of atmosphere that punches above its size. Durham also streams home matches free on YouTube, which is worth knowing if a sold-out fixture catches you short.
- Grace Road, Leicester — Leicestershire Foxes
A 12,000-capacity ground with a genuinely intimate feel. Leicestershire share the record for most T20 Blast titles with three championships, which is easy to forget given the modest scale of their home ground. For fans who prefer watching cricket close to the action without the logistics of a major international venue, Grace Road delivers.
- County Ground, Derby — Derbyshire Falcons
Around 9,500 capacity, compact boundaries, and an attacking Derbyshire side built on aggressive batting. Fixtures here tend to be high-scoring with momentum swings. The ground is small enough that there is no bad seat in the house.
Group B (Central) Venues
Group B covers the English Midlands, the South West, and Wales — and it contains both the home of Finals Day and the defending champions’ ground.
- Edgbaston, Birmingham — Warwickshire Bears
The spiritual home of T20 Blast Finals Day. Edgbaston’s 25,000-capacity ground has hosted the competition’s showpiece event since 2013, and the atmosphere it generates — particularly from the Hollies Stand — has no real equivalent in English domestic cricket. The ground is cashless and well-organised for large crowds. Men’s Finals Day 2026 takes place here on Saturday, 18 July, with two semi-finals in the afternoon and the final under the lights. Edgbaston is also the opening host for the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026, staging England vs Sri Lanka and the India vs Pakistan group match.
- County Ground, Taunton — Somerset
Somerset are the defending T20 Blast champions, having won their third title in 2025. Their home ground holds 6,500 and has a reputation for flat pitches and short boundaries that regularly push match totals to 200 or beyond. Their opening 2026 fixture is a home rematch against Hampshire Hawks — the same tie as the 2025 final. If the early-season schedule has a must-attend game outside London, that is probably it.
- Sophia Gardens, Cardiff — Glamorgan
The only T20 Blast venue in Wales, with a capacity of 15,643. Glamorgan consistently offers some of the competition’s most accessible pricing — advance group tickets start from £13 per adult. Sophia Gardens has hosted international cricket and is one of seven grounds selected for the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026. For fans in Wales or the West, it is a straightforward and affordable option.
- County Ground, Bristol — Gloucestershire
Gloucestershire are the 2024 T20 Blast champions, and Bristol’s Nevil Road ground is another ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 venue. Capacity sits at around 7,000 for Blast fixtures. The pitch tends to assist seam bowling early, making first-innings totals less predictable than at Taunton or Lord’s.
- County Ground, Northampton — Northants Steelbacks
Capacity 6,500. The Steelbacks won the T20 Blast in 2013 and 2016, giving this modest-sized ground a more decorated history than most casual followers realise. Short boundaries and compact dimensions make matches here genuinely unpredictable — sides that chase well often have the advantage.
- New Road, Worcester — Worcestershire Rapids
The most visually distinctive ground on the circuit. New Road’s capacity of 4,500 makes it the smallest T20 Blast venue, but the view of Worcester Cathedral across the outfield makes it one of the most photographed. Worcestershire won the Blast in 2018 and remain competitive in white-ball cricket. The 2026 season includes a first-ever Blast fixture between Worcestershire and Kent Spitfires on 3 July.
Group C (South) Venues
Group C carries the heaviest concentration of large grounds and historic venues. Two of England’s top five biggest cricket stadiums are here, and the group is as competitive on paper as any in the competition.
- Lord’s Cricket Ground, London — Middlesex
The Home of Cricket opens the T20 Blast 2026 season on Friday, 22 May, with Middlesex hosting Kent in a men’s and women’s double header. Lord’s holds 30,000 — the largest cricket ground in England — and also stages the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 Final on 5 July. Adult tickets start from £33, with Under-16s admitted for £1 on Sundays. Groups of six or more receive automatic discounts.
- Kia Oval, London — Surrey
England’s first-ever Test match was played here in 1880. The Kia Oval holds 25,500 and hosts Women’s Finals Day on Friday, 17 July 2026 — the day before the men’s showpiece at Edgbaston. Sam Curran leads a Surrey side widely tipped as pre-tournament favourites. The Oval pitch is one of England’s best batting surfaces and reliably produces high-scoring T20 encounters. The ground is also a Women’s T20 World Cup semi-final host.
- Utilita Bowl, Southampton — Hampshire Hawks
Opened in 2001, the Utilita Bowl holds 15,000 and is one of England’s newest international grounds. Hampshire Hawks are serial T20 Blast contenders with three titles to their name. The ground features an on-site hotel and produces balanced conditions that offer something to both pace bowlers and batters.
- St Lawrence Ground, Canterbury — Kent Spitfires
Capacity up to 15,000. Canterbury has staged first-class cricket since 1847, and Canterbury Week — a festival of cricket dating back to 1842 — remains one of the calendar’s most enduring fixtures. Kent is placed in a tough Group C field, and away sides will find this a challenging venue to read, particularly in the early weeks of the season.
- County Ground, Hove — Sussex Sharks
Sussex Sharks hold a unique place in T20 history — they played in the very first domestic T20 match in England on 13 June 2003. The 1st Central County Ground holds 5,500 and provides an intimate seaside setting. The 2026 season features a first-ever Blast fixture between Sussex and Leicestershire Foxes on 5 June. Blast Passes at Sussex start from £120 adults / £35 children.
- County Ground, Chelmsford — Essex
Chelmsford holds 6,000 and is one of the most easily accessible grounds on the circuit for London-based fans, with fast rail connections from Liverpool Street. Essex brings consistently competitive squads to the Blast, and this compact ground rewards batting aggression.
Finals Day and Knockout Venues
The knockout stage opens with quarter-finals on Tuesday, 15 July 2026. Eight teams qualify — the top two from each group plus the two best third-placed sides — with the higher-ranked qualifier hosting.
| Event | Date | Venue |
|---|---|---|
| Quarter-Finals | Tuesday, 15 July 2026 | Home grounds of qualifiers |
| Women’s Finals Day | Friday, 17 July 2026 | Kia Oval, London |
| Men’s Finals Day | Saturday, 18 July 2026 | Edgbaston, Birmingham |
For the first time in the competition’s history, Women’s Finals Day and Men’s Finals Day fall on consecutive days — creating a genuine back-to-back celebration of English T20 cricket.
T20 Blast 2026 Ticket Prices by Venue
Pricing is set by each county independently. There is no centralised national ticketing portal — check the ECB Vitality Blast official website for direct links to all 18 county pages.
| Venue | Adult (Advance) | Child / U17 | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lord’s | From £33 | £1 (U16, Sundays) | 6+ adult groups get discounts |
| Kia Oval | From £24 | Varies | Women’s Finals Day host |
| Sophia Gardens | £13 – £18 | £5 (U17) | Cheapest advance tickets in Blast |
| Trent Bridge | From £10 | Varies | Excellent value for a large venue |
| Sussex (Hove) | Varies | From £35 (Blast Pass) | Season pass from £120 for adults |
| Edgbaston (Finals Day) | From £45 (GA) | Varies | Cashless ground; sells fast |
T20 Blast Venues Hosting the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026
The ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2026 runs from 12 June to 5 July in England, overlapping directly with the Blast group stage. Seven grounds appear in both competitions.
| Venue | Blast Home Team | WT20 WC Role |
|---|---|---|
| Edgbaston | Warwickshire Bears | Opening match — England vs SL, IND vs PAK |
| Lord’s | Middlesex | Final — 5 July 2026 |
| Kia Oval | Surrey | Semi-finals — 30 June & 2 July |
| Emirates Old Trafford | Lancashire Lightning | Group stage — AUS vs SA, SA vs IND |
| Headingley | Yorkshire | Group stage — ENG vs SCO, AUS vs BAN |
| County Ground, Bristol | Gloucestershire | Group stage — WI vs SL, SA vs NED |
| Sophia Gardens | Glamorgan | Multiple group-stage matches |
Fans planning to attend both tournaments should cross-reference schedules carefully — some Blast home fixtures at Lord’s and Old Trafford may sit close to World Cup match days.
How to Watch From Home?
| Region | Platform | Coverage |
|---|---|---|
| UK | Sky Sports Cricket | ~23 live matches + Finals Day |
| UK (free) | ECB Website / App | Non-televised group games |
| India | FanCode / SonyLIV | Live + highlights |
| USA & Canada | Willow TV | Live and on-demand |
| Australia | Prime Video / Foxtel | Selected matches |
Durham, Lancashire, and Middlesex also stream home Blast fixtures free on their YouTube channels, with local commentary.
Key Dates for T20 Blast 2026
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 22 May 2026 | Season opener — Lord’s (Middlesex vs Kent double header) |
| 22–25 May 2026 | Bank Holiday Weekend — 16 double headers across the country |
| 3 July 2026 | First-ever Worcestershire vs Kent Spitfires Blast fixture |
| 5 June 2026 | First-ever Sussex vs Leicestershire Foxes Blast fixture |
| 10 July 2026 | First-ever T20 Roses double header — Emirates Old Trafford |
| 15 July 2026 | Quarter-Finals — venues TBC based on qualifiers |
| 17 July 2026 | Women’s Finals Day — Kia Oval, London |
| 18 July 2026 | Men’s Finals Day — Edgbaston, Birmingham |
FAQs
- How many stadiums are in the T20 Blast 2026?
18 stadiums are hosting the T20 Blast 2026, covering all 18 first-class counties in England and Wales.
- Where is the T20 Blast 2026 Finals Day?
Men’s Finals Day is at Edgbaston, Birmingham, on Saturday, 18 July 2026. Women’s Finals Day is at the Kia Oval, London, on Friday, 17 July 2026.
- Which T20 Blast 2026 ground is the largest?
Lord’s Cricket Ground in London is the largest, with a capacity of 30,000. Emirates Old Trafford (26,000) and the Kia Oval (25,500) are the next largest.
- Which T20 Blast 2026 venue has the cheapest tickets?
Sophia Gardens in Cardiff consistently offers the lowest advance pricing, with adult group tickets available from £13. Trent Bridge is also a strong value for a large international venue, with tickets from £10.
- Are any T20 Blast 2026 venues shared with the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup?
Yes — seven venues host matches in both competitions: Edgbaston, Lord’s, Kia Oval, Emirates Old Trafford, Headingley, County Ground Bristol, and Sophia Gardens Cardiff.
- When does the T20 Blast 2026 start?
The competition begins on Friday, 22 May 2026, with the season opener at Lord’s — Middlesex vs Kent in a men’s and women’s double header.
Conclusion:
The T20 Blast 2026 stadiums list covers as wide a range of cricketing environments as any domestic competition in the world — from a 30,000-seat international venue at Lord’s to a 4,500-capacity riverside ground in Worcester.
Every match has a different texture. Every ground has a different personality.
If you are picking one game to attend, the Bank Holiday weekend fixtures at the end of May offer the easiest entry point, with double headers at most venues.
If you want the peak experience, book Edgbaston Finals Day before it sells out — it always does.
Plan Your Visit
Tickets for individual matches are available through each county’s own website. Head to the ECB Vitality Blast page for a full list of county ticketing links.
For Finals Day at Edgbaston, book as early as you can — general admission tends to disappear quickly once the knockout picture becomes clearer in early July.
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