Skip to main content

YSTAD ARENA

Ystad Arena is a multi-purpose sports complex in Ystad on Sweden’s south coast, opened in stages between 2014 and 2016 as the largest investment in the municipality’s history. The arena is home to two of Swedish handball’s top-flight clubs, Ystads IF HF and IFK Ystad HK, making their town derby one of the fiercest fixtures in the sport — and the building’s signature event. The main hall holds around 2,700 spectators and was built with broadcast-grade facilities, including a suspended media cube made possible by a ceiling raised to 10 metres at the handball clubs’ request. Beyond elite sport, the complex houses Ystad Arena bad, a 7,800-square-metre public swimming facility with a 25-metre competition pool and adventure pools, along with bowling, a gym and conference spaces — keeping the building in daily use far beyond match days. Sustainability is part of the operation too: 530 square metres of rooftop solar panels generate up to 400 MWh per year. Located on Fridhemsgatan within easy reach of Ystad’s town centre and railway station, with parking at the complex, the arena functions as the natural centre of the town’s sporting life.

Läs mer
Webmaster: Marek Procházka

Last updated 05.06.2026

IconDisclaimer

Where is Ystad Arena located?

Ystad Arena is located at Fridhemsgatan 31 in Ystad, on Sweden’s south coast, a short distance from the town centre and Ystad railway station. The coastal town is known for its half-timbered houses and as the setting of the Wallander novels, making the arena easy to combine with a visit to the town itself. Parking is available at the complex.

How many spectators does Ystad Arena hold?

In full arena mode, Ystad Arena holds approximately 2,700 spectators – 2,313 seated and 480 standing. The secondary B-hall accommodates up to 500 spectators, and the layout of the main hall is designed to give clear sightlines to the court from every section.

Does Ystad Arena have a public swimming pool?

Yes. Ystad Arena bad is a 7,800-square-metre swimming complex that opened in September 2014 as the first stage of the arena project. It includes a 25-metre pool with eight competition lanes, an adventure pool, a 36-degree warm-water pool, a multi-pool with an adjustable floor, and a sauna – making the complex a year-round destination well beyond match days.

Ystad Arena

Founder and key figures

Ystad Arena is owned by Ystad Municipality, which approved the project in January 2012 as the largest single investment in the municipality’s history – 500 million SEK. The sports halls were designed by Uulas arkitekter (Jerker Edfast and Jonas Pivén), the swimming complex by Sweco together with Henning Larsen Architects, and NCC carried out the construction.

History and development

The complex opened in two stages: the swimming facility on 12 September 2014 and the main A-hall on 16 January 2016. It replaced two ageing facilities at once – the demolished Österporthallen sports hall and the old Fritidsbad swimming baths. The project even survived a naming controversy: in February 2014 the municipal executive board proposed calling the venue “Åvalla”, after an old ice rink, but after strong protests from clubs, journalists and residents, the municipality reversed course in June 2014 and settled on Ystad Arena.

Handball shaped the building quite literally: at the urging of the town’s handball clubs, the ceiling height of the main hall was raised from the planned 7 metres to 10 metres – enough to allow a suspended media cube above the court and to meet the requirements for international matches. One long-running local debate was never resolved, however: despite discussions ever since IK Pandora’s ice rink closed in 1977, the complex was built without an ice hall.

Milestone Year
Municipal council approves the project (500 million SEK) January 2012
Ystad Arena bad opens 12 September 2014
A-hall opens – Ystads IF and IFK Ystad move in 16 January 2016
530 m² of solar panels installed on the roof May 2017

Location and accessibility

The arena sits on Fridhemsgatan within easy reach of Ystad’s town centre and railway station, with regional trains connecting Ystad to Malmö and the rest of Skåne. Parking is available at the complex, and the combination of sport, swimming and bowling keeps the building busy throughout the week – not only on match days.

Architecture and facilities

The design brief was a building for both elite sport and everyday public use. The A-hall offers 2,200 square metres of combination-elastic sports flooring that can be divided by a curtain wall into two full match courts for daily training. For broadcasts, the hall is equipped with a four-sided media cube above the court, three fixed robotic cameras, a TV studio and a press room seating 25 – unusually complete media facilities for an arena of this size.

Facility Key figures
A-hall 2,200 m² sports floor · 2,313 seats + 480 standing · media cube · 3 robotic cameras
B-hall 20 × 40 m · up to 500 spectators · 5 badminton courts · climbing wall
Ystad Arena bad 7,800 m² · 25 m pool with 8 lanes · adventure pool · 36°C warm-water pool
Other O’Leary’s bowling · gym · VIP areas · conference rooms for up to 150

Sustainability is built into the operation: in May 2017, Ystad Energi installed 530 square metres of solar panels on the roof, generating between 200 and 400 MWh per year.

Visitor information

Ystad Arena is located at Fridhemsgatan 31, 271 45 Ystad. Tickets for handball matches are sold through the home clubs, Ystads IF HF and IFK Ystad HK, and the swimming complex and bowling alley are open to the public year round. Event information is available through the municipality’s official arena pages.

Data insights and popularity

Few towns of Ystad’s size can claim two clubs at the top level of Swedish handball – and that is exactly what gives the arena its profile. Ystads IF HF, one of Sweden’s most tradition-rich handball clubs, and rival IFK Ystad HK both call the arena home, making the local derby one of the fiercest fixtures in Swedish handball and the building’s signature event.

Cultural significance and community impact

Beyond elite handball, the complex functions as the town’s everyday meeting place: public swimming, bowling, a gym, conference facilities and youth sport share the building with Handbollsligan matches. The arena also hosts IK Pandora HF, completing the picture of a building that lives and breathes handball.

Fact section (FAQ style)

  • Capacity: approx. 2,700 in full arena mode (2,313 seated + 480 standing); B-hall up to 500
  • Opened: 12 September 2014 (swimming complex), 16 January 2016 (A-hall)
  • Construction cost: 500 million SEK – the largest investment in the municipality’s history
  • Home teams: Ystads IF HF, IFK Ystad HK and IK Pandora HF
  • Tickets: sold through the home clubs and at the venue
  • Location: Fridhemsgatan 31, Ystad, Sweden

Stadiuminsight rating

4.5 stars. Ystad Arena scores highly on facilities, broadcast standard and everyday accessibility – a complete sports complex that punches well above the town’s size.

Nice to know

  • The ceiling was raised from 7 to 10 metres at the handball clubs’ request – making the media cube and international matches possible
  • The roof carries 530 m² of solar panels, producing 200–400 MWh per year
  • The B-hall includes a climbing wall and five badminton courts
  • The multi-pool has a floor that can be raised and lowered for different activities
  • Ystad still has no ice hall – a local debate that has run ever since IK Pandora’s ice rink closed in 1977

Source references

  • Ystad Municipality – official Ystad Arena pages (incl. “Fakta om Ystad Arena”)
  • Wikipedia (sv) – Ystad Arena
  • NCC project page · Sweco · Henning Larsen Architects (Archello)
  • Ystads IF HF (yif.se) · IFK Ystad HK (ifkystad.se)

Official stadium location

Arenagatan 9, 271 57 Ystad, Sweden

Let's test your general knowledge!

Which of these stadiums has the highest official seating capacity in the world (as of 2025)?
  • Add your answer

Ystad Arena atmosphere

Ystad Arena’s atmosphere is defined by something almost unique in Swedish handball: two top-flight clubs sharing one small town – and one building. When Ystads IF HF and IFK Ystad HK meet, the arena hosts a genuine town derby, with both sets of supporters filling a hall compact enough that 2,700 spectators feel like considerably more. The raised 10-metre ceiling and the media cube above the court give big matches a major-arena feel, while the tight stands keep the noise close to the action.

Derby and match-day culture

The Ystad derby is the fixture that defines the building. Both clubs compete at the top level of Swedish handball, and bragging rights in a town of this size carry real weight – families, workplaces and school classes split between blue and white. On regular match days the arena serves as the gathering point of the town’s sporting life, with the swimming complex, bowling alley and café areas drawing visitors long before throw-off.

Tickets, season cards and member benefits

Tickets and season cards are sold directly through the home clubs, Ystads IF HF and IFK Ystad HK, which also run their own membership programmes with benefits such as priority booking for big matches and the derby. Prices and packages vary by season and club, so the clubs’ official sites are the place to check current offers. For high-demand fixtures – above all the derby – booking early is advisable given the arena’s compact capacity.

Fact overview – good to know

Fact Detail
The derby Ystads IF HF vs IFK Ystad HK – two top-flight clubs, one town, one arena
Signature feature Four-sided media cube above the court – made possible by the raised ceiling
Broadcast standard 3 fixed robotic cameras, TV studio and press room for 25
Beyond handball Public swimming, O’Leary’s bowling, gym and conference facilities in the same complex
Heritage Replaced Österporthallen and the old Fritidsbad – and nearly ended up named “Åvalla”

Community value

Ystad Arena was conceived as more than a handball venue, and that is how the town uses it. The 500 million SEK investment – the largest in the municipality’s history – deliberately combined elite sport with everyday public facilities, so the same building that hosts Handbollsligan on Saturday serves school swimming lessons on Monday morning. That dual role, rather than any single match, is what has made the arena the natural centre of Ystad’s sporting life since 2016.

Source references

  • Ystad Municipality – official Ystad Arena pages
  • Wikipedia (sv) – Ystad Arena
  • Ystads IF HF (yif.se) · IFK Ystad HK (ifkystad.se)

Where is Ystad Arena located?

How many spectators can Ystad Arena accommodate?

Are there public swimming facilities available at Ystad Arena?

What is the history and significance of Ystad Arena?

How can I access Ystad Arena using public transportation?

What types of events are held at Ystad Arena?

What architectural features define Ystad Arena?

How does Ystad Arena contribute to the local community?

What visitor amenities are available at Ystad Arena?

How accessible is Ystad Arena for individuals with disabilities?

Stadiuminsight.com offers objective and independent reviews of sports equipment based on our own research and expertise. We do not receive any commission or compensation for our reviews.

×