Dallas Mavericks

AAC renovation timeline: What upgrades are coming to the Mavs and Stars arena

The American Airlines Center opened in 2001 at a cost of $420 million. At 25 years old, it is entering the stage where significant renovations are needed to remain competitive with newer arenas. Here is what we know.

Confirmed upgrades (source: Dallas Morning News, AAC official announcements):

  • New center-hung video board: The current scoreboard is being replaced with a state-of-the-art LED board comparable to what the Clippers have at the Intuit Dome. Expected completion: Fall 2026.
  • Concourse food and beverage overhaul: New vendor partnerships with local DFW restaurants replacing generic Aramark options. Rolling out through 2026-27 season.
  • Wi-Fi infrastructure upgrade: Supporting 20,000+ simultaneous connections for mobile ordering and streaming.

Rumored future upgrades:

  • Club level redesign with premium dining options
  • New VIP entrance on the west side of the building
  • Expanded retail space for team merchandise
  • Enhanced ADA accessibility throughout the arena

The comparison problem: Newer arenas like the Intuit Dome (opened 2024) and the new arenas in Sacramento and Milwaukee have set a new standard for the fan experience. The AAC, while well-maintained, feels dated in comparison.

The renovation vs. new build question: There have been no credible reports of a new arena. The Victory Park location is too valuable and the infrastructure is too good to abandon. Renovations are the path forward.

Cost estimate: Industry experts suggest a comprehensive renovation of a 25-year-old arena costs $250-400M. Source: Sports Business Journal arena renovation survey.

Sources:

  • Dallas Morning News — AAC renovation reporting
  • AAC official press releases
  • Sports Business Journal — arena renovation cost analysis

DFW, what say you?

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 1:27 AM

The new video board alone will transform the in-arena experience. The current one is functional but compared to what the Clippers built at Intuit Dome, it looks like it belongs in 2005.

The Wi-Fi upgrade is quietly important. Trying to use your phone at a sold-out game right now is painful. Mobile ordering only works if the network can handle 18,000 people simultaneously.

Local food vendors replacing Aramark is the best news in this entire list. Imagine getting actual DFW restaurant food instead of generic stadium garbage. That alone justifies the renovation cost.