It has been nine months since Manchester United announced plans to build a new stadium and now fans have been provided with an exciting update.
After much deliberation, it was ultimately decided that Manchester United will move into a new 100,000-seater stadium instead of renovating Old Trafford.
Sir Jim Ratcliffe and lead architect Norman Foster explained that the stadium is set to be complete by 2030, although the ambition behind that timeline has been questioned because construction work is still yet to begin.
Man Utd’s new stadium plans, what we know right now
Set to be complete by 2030/31 season
Expected cost around £2 billion
Old Trafford set to be demolished
Expected to create 92,000 new jobs, 17,000 new homes and drive 1.8 million visitors annually
Capacity of 100,000 with steepest stands allowable in UK (35 degree angle)
Munich clock and other iconic club landmarks set to be included in new design
Manchester United v Luton Town - Premier League
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The new stadium is set to cost £2 billion, and currently negotiations are ongoing to purchase land around Old Trafford so the club can be granted planning permission and begin work.
It has proven to be a slow-moving project so far, but United chief Collette Roche has provided an update.
Old Trafford aerial view
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New update on Man United stadium
When the stadium plans were first announced, it was suggested that work on the stadium could begin this year.
However, with only a few weeks of 2025 remaining, that seems extremely unlikely.
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United’s chief operating officer, Roche, has now provided a positive update speaking to Sky Sports.
“We’ve still got a huge ambition to build a new stadium here at Old Trafford. There’s clearly a lot of work that needs to be done to get us to the point before we put any spades in the ground,” Roche said.
Should United prioritise building a new stadium or winning on the pitch now?
Manchester United Announce Plans to Build New World Class Stadium
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Once built, new stadium could deliver…
✅ Extra £100-150m matchday income
✅ £40m-a-year naming rights deal
✅ £30-40m commercial boost
✅ Reinstate United as football superpower
❌ But £2bn-plus debt = less cash for transfers/wages in short term
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“We’re currently in several conversations with local landowners to make sure we can secure the best piece of land that we wanna put this stadium on that will hopefully be there for over 100 years. And in the background, we’re doing a lot of work with the local authorities to make that happen.
“They’re gonna launch Mayoral Development Corporation, formally, in January and I think that will be a good sort of milestone if you like, in terms of the wider regeneration.
“We’re really, really ambitious, a lot of work is happening – albeit behind the scenes – and hopefully soon we’ll be able to come forward with some bigger news.”
Man United stadium construction should begin in 2026
If Ineos are determined to stick to their opening date of the 2030/31 season, then construction needs to start sooner rather than later.
In positive news, United are confident of agreeing a land purchase with reports that a deal is close. That has proven to be the biggest hurdle in the stadium process so far.
READ MORE: Abandoned 90,000-seater project inspired Man United’s £2bn stadium design
United are already planning to bid for hosting rights in the 2035 Women’s World Cup, so there must be confidence behind the scenes that everything is on track.
The Red Devils will continue to play at Old Trafford during the construction phase, and then the iconic Theatre of Dreams is set to be demolished once United’s new home is open.
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