There’s no place like home. Where do the NBA’s 30 franchises call home? Here’s a look at all 30 arenas – from the oldest to the newest:

Madison Square Garden (New York) – New York Knicks

First season: 1967-68

Capacity: 19,500

Target Center (Minneapolis) – Minnesota Timberwolves

First season: 1990-91

Capacity: 20,000

Delta Center (Salt Lake City) – Utah Jazz

First season: 1991-92

Capacity: 20,000

Footprint Center (Phoenix) – Phoenix Suns

First season: 1992-93

Capacity: 18,422

United Center (Chicago) – Chicago Bulls

First season: 1994-95

Capacity: 23,500

Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse (Cleveland) – Cleveland Cavaliers

First season: 1994-95

Capacity: 19,432

TD Garden (Boston) – Boston Celtics

First season: 1995-96

Capacity: 19,580

Moda Center (Portland, Oregon) – Portland Trail Blazers

First season: 1995-96

Capacity: 20,500

Wells Fargo Center (Philadelphia) – Philadelphia 76ers

First season: 1996-97

Capacity: 21,000

Capital One Arena (Washington) – Washington Wizards

First season: 1997-98

Capacity: 20,356

Scotiabank Arena (Toronto) – Toronto Raptors

First season: 1998-99

Capacity: 19,800

State Farm Arena (Atlanta) – Atlanta Hawks

First season: 1999-2000

Capacity: 16,800

Ball Arena (Denver) – Denver Nuggets

First season: 1999-2000

Capacity: 21,000

Gainbridge Fieldhouse (Indianapolis) – Indiana Pacers

First season: 1999-2000

Capacity: 18,000

Crypto.com Arena (Los Angeles) – Los Angeles Lakers

First season: 1999-2000

Capacity: 19,067

Kaseya Center (Miami) – Miami Heat

First season: 2000-01

Capacity: 19,600

American Airlines Center (Dallas) – Dallas Mavericks

First season: 2001-02

Capacity: 20,000

Smoothie King Center (New Orleans) – New Orleans Pelicans

First season: 2002-03

Capacity: 18,000

Frost Bank Center (San Antonio) – San Antonio Spurs

First season: 2002-03

Capacity: 18,418

Toyota Center (Houston) – Houston Rockets

First season: 2003-04

Capacity: 18,500

FedExForum (Memphis, Tennessee) – Memphis Grizzlies

First season: 2004-05

Capacity: 18,400

Spectrum Center (Charlotte, North Carolina) – Charlotte Hornets

First season: 2005-06

Capacity: 18,500

Paycom Center (Oklahoma City) – Oklahoma City Thunder

First season: 2005-06

Capacity: 18,203

Kia Center (Orlando, Florida) – Orlando Magic

First season: 2010-11

Capacity: 18,500

Barclays Center (Brooklyn, New York) – Brooklyn Nets

First season: 2012-13

Capacity: 17,732

Golden 1 Center (Sacramento, California) – Sacramento Kings

First season: 2016-17

Capacity: 17,608

Little Caesars Arena (Detroit) – Detroit Pistons

First season: 2017-18

Capacity: 20,000

Fiserv Forum (Milwaukee) – Milwaukee Bucks

First season: 2018-19

Capacity: 17,341

Chase Center (San Francisco) – Golden State Warriors

First season: 2019-20

Capacity: 18,064

Intuit Dome (Inglewood, California) – Los Angeles Clippers

First season: 2024-25

Capacity: 18,000

Check out the ESPN NBA hub page for the latest news, features, stats, schedules and more.