TOPEKA, Kan. -- The Kansas City Chiefs announced Monday that they will leave their longtime home at Arrowhead Stadium for a new, $3 billion domed stadium that will be built across the Kansas-Missouri state line and be ready for the start of the 2031 season.
The announcement came shortly after a council of Kansas lawmakers voted unanimously inside a packed room at the state Capitol to allow for STAR bonds to be issued to cover up to 70% of the cost of the stadium and accompanying mixed-use district.
The bonds will be paid off with state sales and liquor tax revenues generated in a defined area around it.
"The location of Chiefs games will change," Chiefs owner Clark Hunt said, "but some things won't change. Our fans will still be the loudest in the NFL, our games will still be the best place in the world to tailgate, and our players and coaches will be ready to compete for championships, because on the field or off the field, we are big dreamers, and we're ready for the next chapter."
The Chiefs intend to build their new stadium in Kansas City, Kansas, near the Kansas Speedway and a retail and entertainment district known as The Legends. The area is also home to Children's Mercy Park, the home of MLS club Sporting Kansas City.
The team will build a new $300 million practice facility, too, in the Kansas City suburb of Olathe, Kansas.
"Today's announcement is truly historic. Actually, it's a little surreal," Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly said. "Today's announcement will touch the lives of Kansans for generations to come. Today's announcement is a total game-changer for our state.
"We have always been Chiefs fans," Kelly said. "Now we are Chiefs family."
The move by the Chiefs is a massive blow to Missouri lawmakers and Gov. Mike Kehoe, who had been working on their own funding package to prevent a third NFL franchise and the second in a decade from leaving its borders. The Rams left St. Louis for Los Angeles in part due to their inability to secure funding to help replace The Dome at America's Center.
Kehoe had backed a special legislative session in June to authorize bonds covering up to 50% of the cost of new or renovated stadiums, plus up to $50 million of tax credits for each stadium and unspecified aid from local governments.
"For more than 50 years, we've had tremendous partnerships in Jefferson City, Jackson County and Kansas City, Missouri," Hunt said. "That partnership is not over, and we look forward to working together in the years ahead."
The Chiefs originally planned an $800 million renovation of Arrowhead Stadium in a joint effort with the Royals, who are similarly planning to build a new facility to replace Kauffman Stadium. The facilities sit a couple of hundred yards across the parking lot from each other, and both teams have leases with Jackson County, Missouri, that expire in January 2031.
Last year, Jackson County voters soundly defeated a local sales tax extension that would have helped to pay for those renovations to the football stadium while also helping to fund a new ballpark for the Royals in downtown Kansas City, Missouri.
"While the Chiefs aren't going far away and aren't gone yet, today is a setback as a Kansas Citian, a former Chiefs season ticketholder and lifelong Chiefs fan," said Quinton Lucas, the mayor of Kansas City, Missouri. "Business decisions are a reality, and we all understand that, but Arrowhead Stadium is more -- it's family, tradition and a part of Kansas City we will never leave."
Hunt has long said his preference was to renovate Arrowhead Stadium, which was beloved by his father and team founder, Lamar Hunt until his death in 2006. It is considered one of the jewels of the NFL, alongside Lambeau Field in Green Bay, and is revered for its tailgating scene and home-field advantage; it currently holds the mark recognized by the Guinness World Records for the loudest stadium roar.
This summer, Arrowhead Stadium will host six World Cup matches, including matches in the round of 32 and quarterfinals.
Lamar Hunt established the Chiefs on August 14, 1959. The team was originally based in Dallas and known as the Texans, but Hunt was convinced by then-Kansas City Mayor H. Roe Bartle to relocate the team to Missouri with promises of tripling the team's season-ticket sales and expanding the seating capacity of Municipal Stadium.
In 1972, the team moved into Arrowhead Stadium at the Truman Sports Complex just east of downtown Kansas City.
The stadium has undergone numerous renovations through the years, allowing it to stay relevant in a changing sports landscape. But there has been little economic development around the stadium; the facility itself is starting to show wear and tear; and there is a limit to the number of luxury suites and amenities the franchise can use to help drive revenue.
While the Hunt family has long loved Arrowhead Stadium, it has warmed in recent years to the idea of a replacement.
Not only would a new facility solve many of the shortcomings of the Chiefs' longtime home but one with a fixed or retractable roof would allow them to use it year-round. That would mean the potential for hosting more concerts and events, college football bowl games, the Final Four and perhaps one of Lamar Hunt's long-held dreams: a Super Bowl.
"Chiefs fans on both sides of the state line can tell you that the success we've enjoyed together has elevated the profile of the entire region," Clark Hunt said. "Sports are woven into the fabric of this community. If you travel and go to New York or Los Angeles or Europe or South America, you don't have to tell people which side of the state line you're from. You tell them you're from Kansas City, and there's a pretty good chance their response might have something to do with the Chiefs."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
