Penn State’s Beaver Stadium may be on track to claim a familiar but still eye-popping title: the largest stadium in college football, at least for a season.
On ESPN’s College GameDay Podcast, Dan Wetzel, Pete Thamel and Pat Forde dug into recent reporting on the projected capacity for the 2026 season, and the number they discussed was staggering - somewhere between 108,000 and 109,000 fans in Matt Campbell’s first season.
If that holds, Beaver Stadium would move past Michigan Stadium, which lists at 107,601, and sit alone at the top of the sport’s attendance heap. Penn State, of course, is scheduled to play at Michigan in October.
The podcast hosts were drawing from reporting by Penn State beat writer Audrey Snyder on her Substack site, Inside the Lions. In that interview, Penn State Athletic Director Pat Kraft said the stadium’s capacity is expected to be around 108,000 this season, while leaving the door open for more.
"We continue to count, but I think we’ll be north of 108,000," Kraft said in the interview with Snyder. "I think we could get to 109,000, but what people don’t understand is there are all these nooks and crannies that we’re using now.”
That uncertainty comes from Phase II of the Beaver Stadium renovation, which is actively reshaping the building’s seating footprint. Penn State recently "topped out" the new West Tower at 195 feet, and beneath it will be a new set of bleacher seats. Those sections are expected to open in stages during the season.
There’s also the possibility of rebuilding the temporary bleachers on the East side, which would push capacity even higher. Last season, Beaver Stadium held 106,304 fans, including roughly 9,000 temporary bleachers on both sides.
With that extra seating in place, the stadium’s effective capacity matched its normal figure of 106,572. Penn State used InProduction to build the temporary seats during the 2025 season.
"[Penn State] came to us and said, 'Where else can we add some more seats?'" Phillip Glaeser, InProduction's director of marketing, said in an interview last year.
"Which is very common. Every stadium has a corner that's maybe underutilized."
Penn State has not yet put a final number on Beaver Stadium’s capacity once the renovation is finished, which is scheduled before the 2027 season. Some recruits have said the school expects the stadium to become the nation’s largest when the project is complete, though that has not been confirmed.
The bigger picture goes beyond bragging rights. Penn State has framed the renovation as part of Beaver Stadium’s future as a year-round entertainment site and revenue source. The school originally said it wanted to keep capacity at least at 100,000, but the finished product could end up even larger, especially if those temporary bleachers on the east side remain part of the mix.
"By making these renovations, Beaver Stadium would be one of the only multi-use entertainment facilities at this scale between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh," Kraft said trustees. "The enhancements to Beaver Stadium will create significant new revenue and increase philanthropy opportunities that will allow us to reinvest funds into all of our student-athletes and allow athletics to continue to be self-supporting.
"Equally as important, by equipping the stadium for these events, we’ll be able to increase the number of visitors to the region, which will help bolster the local economy. ... The opportunity to host non-football activities and large-scale events at Beaver Stadium will bring additional economic growth year-round."
The College GameDay crew congratulated Penn State on the possibility, but Thamel also had a practical note.
"I'd prefer they add two lanes to the road coming in and out so you can actually get to the games, as opposed to building the next iteration so you can watch the game from south Scranton," Thamel said.
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