Man Utd hope to have new stadium ready for 2032/33 season

Martin Macdonald
Martin Macdonald
  • 26 Mar 2026 06:30 CDT
  • 5 min read
Sir Jim Ratcliffe, The Glazers, Man Utd
© IMAGO

Manchester United have determined that their brand new stadium should be ready in six years.

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In March of 2025, the Red Devils revealed the design for the 'new' Old Trafford and it was divisive to say the least, with the most eye-catching aspect of the graphic being three sky-scraping canopies.

At the time, INEOS chief Sir Jim Ratcliffe said of the plans:

"Today marks the start of an incredibly exciting journey to the delivery of what will be the world’s greatest football stadium, at the centre of a regenerated Old Trafford.

"Our current stadium has served us brilliantly for the past 115 years, but it has fallen behind the best arenas in world sport. By building next to the existing site, we will be able to preserve the essence of Old Trafford, while creating a truly state-of-the-art stadium that transforms the fan experience only footsteps from our historic home. Just as important is the opportunity for a new stadium to be the catalyst for social and economic renewal of the Old Trafford area, creating jobs and investment not just during the construction phase but on a lasting basis when the stadium district is complete."

The canopy design was scrapped as it would have been too costly, while the reception to it was negative from a lot of Red Devils fans.

It turns out the price of the land in which the new stadium will be built is a lot, a lot, more expensive than previously thought.

The Guardian previously reported that United believed they would have to pay the owners of the land, logistics company Freightliner, around £50 million. However, that number is apparently closer to £400m.

That's the main reason for the ongoing delay as negotiations continue. Collette Roche, chief executive officer of the New Stadium Development project, says the club hopes to submit a planning application in 2027.

"The plan would be that within the next couple of months we should be there or thereabouts on the land assembly which will be an important milestone," Roche explained as quoted by The Mirror.

"We’re spending a lot of time with local council to say what’s your ambition, how many houses, where’s the best place to put them so hopefully by the time we get to the planning application in 12-18 months time we won’t be starting from fresh.

"We are going through a process to make sure we get the best team in place, one that works in the same way we work and is up for the challenge and the ambition. And then we will lock that in. Then we start to build the plans. It starts now."

When will the stadium be ready?

Roche thinks Man Utd supporters will be in the new stadium ready to go ahead of the 2032/33 Premier League campaign.

"I think when we launched the idea of a new stadium 12 months ago, we did say it would take between four and five years for construction and that's right," she recalled.

"But I think people read that as we might have the stadium ready for 2030. But as you know, with a stadium build as complex as the one that we're going to enter into, it does take one or two years to get ready for construction.

"To get the land assembled, to get the funds in place and to get the planning permission. So that's the part that we're doing right now. So we've not named a date for opening, but we are on track within those timescales."

The scrapped design for Man Utd's new stadium
© IMAGO - The scrapped design for Man Utd's new stadium

Stadium will not be taxpayer funded

Roche insisted that no taxpayer money will be used to build the club’s proposed new stadium despite suggestions to the contrary by Ratcliffe.

Ratcliffe had previously stated that the government could contribute towards regeneration plans around the Old Trafford area, having revealed plans to build a new 100,000-seater stadium on the nearby land.

However, Roche, who is leading the project from the club side, calmed the speculation and clarified that any government help would be regarding around logistics rather than finances.

"Absolutely not," Roche told the We Built This City podcast, when asked if public money would be used to build the stadium. “We understand the stadium is our responsibility. We want to provide a great stadium for our fans. We will pay the £2bn, I think it is at the last estimate, to be able to do that.

“But there is no point building the biggest or the best stadium in the UK and it being on an island and you can't get to it because the transport links aren't there or people can't come on non-matchday or local businesses can't be part of it.

"Our ask of the Government is that they support, not the stadium build, but really support the infrastructure and regeneration of the area."

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Read more about: Premier League Man Utd