Future MLB All-Star Game Locations: 2026, 2027 and Beyond
Fansided · July 14, 2026
Key takeaways
- Citizens Bank Park hosts the 2026 MLB All-Star Game, Philadelphia's first at this venue and fifth overall.
- Wrigley Field is officially confirmed to host in 2027, its first Midsummer Classic since 1990.
- Beyond 2027, new ballparks (Las Vegas A's, Tampa Bay Rays) and long-overdue parks (Camden Yards, Yankee Stadium) are strong candidates for future hosting duties.
Philly's Moment in the Sun
The 2026 MLB All-Star Game is underway in Philadelphia, and Citizens Bank Park is having its first-ever turn as host. The timing isn't random — MLB locked this one in back in 2019 specifically to line up with the 250th anniversary of the United States. Philadelphia has hosted the Midsummer Classic five times total, but always at older venues: Shibe Park in 1943 and 1952, then Veterans Stadium in 1976 and 1996. Citizens Bank Park, which opened in 2004, was overdue for its shot, and this week the city delivered, with players like Jordan Walker and Kyle Schwarber headlining Home Run Derby buzz ahead of the main event.
Wrigley Field Gets 2027
Looking ahead, MLB has already confirmed the next stop: Wrigley Field in Chicago will host the 2027 All-Star Game. That's a big deal for Cubs fans — Wrigley last hosted the game in 1990, meaning it will have gone 37 years between appearances. Only Fenway Park rivals Wrigley for sheer nostalgia among active MLB ballparks, so 2027 should be a showcase of old-school charm mixed with modern All-Star spectacle.
What's Likely Beyond 2027
MLB typically announces host cities several years in advance, rotating between American League and National League parks and rewarding either brand-new stadiums or ballparks that haven't hosted in decades. A few strong candidates for the years ahead:
- **New ballparks needing a showcase**: The Athletics' upcoming Las Vegas stadium and the Tampa Bay Rays' new home are exactly the kind of shiny, market-boosting venues MLB loves to debut with an All-Star Game.
- **Long-overdue returns**: Camden Yards in Baltimore (last hosted 1993), Dodger Stadium (2022 doesn't count it out from a repeat down the line), and Yankee Stadium (2008 opening year) are all in the mix given how MLB likes to rotate marquee markets.
- **Milestone markets**: Cities celebrating franchise anniversaries or renovated ballparks — think Kansas City or Cleveland — often get bumped up the list.
None of these are officially confirmed past 2027, but MLB's pattern of using the All-Star Game as a marketing tool for new or newly renovated stadiums makes this list a solid bet.
Why This Rotation Matters
The All-Star Game isn't just an exhibition — it's a multi-day economic and cultural event for the host city, complete with the Home Run Derby, FanFest, and a massive influx of tourism dollars. For fans, tracking future locations means knowing years ahead of time whether your hometown team's park might finally get its moment, or whether it's worth planning a trip to catch history at a place like Wrigley Field in 2027.
Why it matters
Knowing future All-Star Game hosts lets fans plan trips years in advance and understand which ballparks MLB is using to spotlight new stadiums or long-standing baseball history. It's also a signal of which markets MLB is prioritizing for investment and attention.
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