TL;DR: Only 4 of 12 Cymru Premier grounds currently have naming rights deals, leaving 7-8 stadiums with untapped value worth an estimated £56-200K annually across the league. Naming rights contracts typically span 3-5 years at £8-25K per year, with broadcast visibility via S4C/Sgorio's 80+ matches per season providing sponsor exposure far beyond matchday crowds. As the league expands to 16 clubs in 2026/27 and attendance grows 30-50%, stadium naming rights represent one of the clearest first-mover opportunities in Welsh football.
What Stadium Naming Rights Deliver
Stadium naming rights are among the most powerful sponsorship assets in football. Unlike a shirt logo that appears only during matches, a stadium name is embedded in every piece of communication about the club — fixture lists, broadcast graphics, media reports, social media posts, mapping services, and everyday conversation among supporters.
When S4C broadcasts a Cymru Premier match, the stadium name appears on-screen repeatedly — in pre-match graphics, commentary, half-time analysis, and post-match coverage. A sponsor paying £8-25K per year for naming rights receives brand impressions that extend well beyond the 400-600 matchday attendees.
For context, stadium naming rights in the English Championship sell for £500K-£2M per year. In League Two, they range from £100-300K. The Cymru Premier's pricing of £8-25K represents a fraction of these levels, yet the sponsorship mechanic — brand embedded in every mention of the ground — works identically.
The Current Landscape
Grounds with Naming Rights Deals
| Club | Traditional Name | Current Name | Sponsor | Est. Annual Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Penybont | - | SDM Glass Stadium | SDM Glass | £15-25K |
| Connah's Quay | Deeside Stadium | Deeside Stadium* | - | Partial deal |
| Flint Town | Cae-y-Castell | Essity Stadium | Essity | £8-15K |
| Haverfordwest | Bridge Meadow | Ogi Bridge Meadow | Ogi | £10-20K |
*Connah's Quay's arrangement is a partial commercial relationship rather than a full naming rights deal.
Grounds Without Naming Rights
| Club | Ground Name | Capacity | Avg Attendance | Est. Naming Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TNS | Park Hall | 2,000 | 550 | £15-25K/yr |
| Caernarfon Town | The Oval | 3,000 | 820 | £12-20K/yr |
| Barry Town | Jenner Park | 3,000 | 450 | £10-18K/yr |
| Bala Town | Maes Tegid | 3,000 | 350 | £8-15K/yr |
| Colwyn Bay | Llanelian Road | 2,500 | 380 | £8-15K/yr |
| Cardiff Met | Cyncoed Campus | 1,500 | 200 | £5-10K/yr |
| Aberystwyth | Park Avenue | 3,000 | 250 | £5-10K/yr |
| Newtown | Latham Park | 5,000 | 300 | £8-15K/yr |
Total untapped naming rights value: £71-128K per year.
Over a standard 3-5 year contract term, this represents £213-640K in unrealised revenue across the league. For individual clubs, even the lower-end estimates of £5-10K per year represent meaningful income — equivalent to 50-100 additional season ticket sales.
How Naming Rights Work in Practice
Contract Structure
A typical Cymru Premier naming rights deal includes:
Duration: 3-5 years is standard. Shorter terms (1-2 years) are sometimes offered to first-time sponsors as a trial, but they reduce the sponsor's brand embedding and the club's revenue predictability.
Fee Structure: Annual payments, typically in two instalments (pre-season and mid-season). Some deals include a signing bonus or facility improvement contribution.
Deliverables: The club commits to:
- Using the sponsored name in all official communications
- Updating signage at the ground (often sponsor-funded)
- Using the sponsored name on the club website, social media, and matchday programmes
- Liaising with S4C/Sgorio to use the sponsored name in broadcast coverage
- Providing stadium signage positions for the sponsor beyond the naming itself
Exclusions: The sponsor typically cannot rename the ground in ways that conflict with FAW or UEFA regulations. For European matches, UEFA has its own commercial rules that may limit naming rights visibility — though the club name (which includes the ground name in communications) is generally unaffected.
What the Sponsor Gets
The return on a naming rights deal extends across multiple channels:
| Channel | Frequency | Reach | Estimated Annual Impressions |
|---|---|---|---|
| S4C/Sgorio broadcasts | 4-8 home matches broadcast/season | 15,000-30,000 per match | 60,000-240,000 |
| Fixture lists (all platforms) | Year-round | All fans, media, opponents | 50,000-100,000 |
| Matchday attendance | 12-15 home matches | 400-820 per match | 5,000-12,000 |
| Google Maps / Waze | Year-round | All users searching area | 20,000-100,000 |
| Media coverage | Year-round | BBC Wales, local press | 30,000-80,000 |
| Social media posts | Year-round | Club followers | 40,000-100,000 |
| Total estimated impressions | 205,000-632,000 |
At a naming rights fee of £10K per year, this translates to a cost-per-thousand impressions (CPM) of £15-49 — competitive with local radio advertising (£10-30 CPM) and significantly cheaper than local newspaper display advertising (£30-80 CPM), while carrying the emotional engagement of football association.
Valuation Methodology
Naming rights should be priced based on three factors:
1. Broadcast Value
The single largest driver of naming rights value at Cymru Premier level is S4C/Sgorio broadcast coverage. The stadium name appears in:
- Pre-match graphics (2-3 mentions)
- Commentary (5-15 mentions per match)
- Half-time summary (1-2 mentions)
- Post-match coverage (1-2 mentions)
A conservatively estimated 8 mentions per broadcast, across 4-8 home matches per season, at 20,000 average viewers, generates 640,000-1,280,000 brand impressions from broadcast alone. Using a standard broadcast advertising CPM of £8-15, the broadcast component of naming rights is worth £5,120-19,200 per year — which for most clubs equals or exceeds the total naming rights fee.
Clubs with more frequent broadcast appearances (TNS, Connah's Quay) can justify higher pricing. Clubs that rarely appear on S4C should price accordingly. For more on broadcast sponsorship, see S4C/Sgorio Broadcast Sponsorship.
2. Matchday Value
Physical signage at the ground provides local brand presence. The value depends on:
- Average attendance (400-820 in the Cymru Premier)
- Number of home matches (12-15 per season in league only, plus cups)
- Quality of signage (entrance, stands, scoreboard)
3. Digital and Media Value
The stadium name appears in:
- All fixtures on the club website, FAW website, and third-party platforms (BBC Sport, Flashscore, etc.)
- Google Maps and Waze navigation (driving directions to the ground include the stadium name)
- All media coverage — journalists use the official ground name in reports
- Social media posts — every matchday post references the venue
This creates a persistent, year-round brand presence that extends well beyond the football season.
Comparative Pricing
How does Cymru Premier naming rights pricing compare to peer leagues?
| League | Typical Naming Rights Fee | Avg Attendance | Fee per Attendee |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cymru Premier | £8-25K/yr | 400-600 | £16-50 |
| English National League | £30-100K/yr | 1,000-3,000 | £30-33 |
| English League Two | £100-300K/yr | 4,000-8,000 | £25-38 |
| English Championship | £500K-£2M/yr | 15,000-25,000 | £33-80 |
| Scottish Premiership | £200K-£1M/yr | 5,000-15,000 | £40-67 |
The fee-per-attendee metric shows that Cymru Premier naming rights are priced comparably to English non-league levels on a per-fan basis. However, the broadcast multiplier (S4C coverage) means the total audience reached is significantly larger than matchday attendance alone, making the effective cost-per-impression lower than the headline comparison suggests.
Case Studies
Penybont: SDM Glass Stadium
Penybont's naming rights deal with SDM Glass is the most visible in the Cymru Premier. The SDM Glass Stadium name appears in all S4C broadcasts, FAW fixture lists, and media coverage. SDM Glass, a local glazing company, gains brand recognition across south Wales — far beyond what equivalent spending on traditional advertising could achieve.
Key lessons from the Penybont deal:
- Local businesses are the most natural naming rights partners — community credibility matters
- The deal was reportedly structured as a multi-year agreement with facility improvement contributions
- S4C broadcasts consistently use the sponsored name, ensuring broadcast ROI
Flint Town: Essity Stadium
Essity, the global hygiene and health company with a manufacturing presence in Flint, sponsors Flint Town's ground. This deal demonstrates that naming rights are not exclusively a local-business play — national and international companies with local operations also see value. Essity's Flint factory employs hundreds of local residents, making the sponsorship both a commercial and community engagement tool.
English Non-League Benchmark: Sutton United
Sutton United's VBS Community Stadium deal (English National League, average attendance ~2,000) provides a useful benchmark. The deal is reportedly worth £50-80K per year — generating significant brand awareness for VBS, a local building services company. The deal includes physical signage, broadcast mentions, and community naming. Scaling this to Cymru Premier attendance levels suggests Welsh clubs are pricing at the correct order of magnitude but may be leaving value on the table by not capturing the full broadcast premium.
Potential Sponsors by Club
Based on local business landscape, industry presence, and community dynamics, here are natural naming rights targets for unnamed Cymru Premier grounds:
| Club | Ground | Natural Sponsor Types | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| TNS | Park Hall | National brand, Welsh tech firm | Highest broadcast frequency, European exposure |
| Caernarfon | The Oval | Tourism operator, Welsh-language brand | Highest attendance, strong Welsh identity |
| Barry Town | Jenner Park | South Wales employer, retail brand | Large town, Vale of Glamorgan catchment |
| Bala Town | Maes Tegid | Tourism/outdoor brand, energy company | Tourism economy, rural setting |
| Colwyn Bay | Llanelian Road | North Wales employer, construction firm | Community-owned club, strong local ties |
| Cardiff Met | Cyncoed Campus | University partner, tech firm | Academic setting, innovation narrative |
| Aberystwyth | Park Avenue | University-linked brand, tourism | Student population, west Wales hub |
| Newtown | Latham Park | Mid Wales employer, agricultural firm | Market town, large capacity |
How to Negotiate a Naming Rights Deal
For Clubs
- Prepare a valuation document showing broadcast, matchday, and digital impression data
- Create a tiered proposal — offer 3-year and 5-year options with different pricing
- Include facility improvements — offer the sponsor the option to fund signage or ground improvements as part of the deal, creating tangible brand presence
- Approach 3-5 potential sponsors simultaneously to create competitive tension
- Use our Sponsorship Inventory Audit Template to ensure naming rights are packaged alongside other assets
For Sponsors
- Verify broadcast data — how many S4C matches feature this club's ground?
- Check Google Maps — is the ground correctly listed? Will the name update appear in navigation?
- Assess community fit — does your brand align with the club's community identity?
- Negotiate multi-year terms — 3-5 years at a fixed price protects against demand-driven increases as the league expands
- Include measurement clauses — require the club to report on broadcast mentions, social media references, and matchday attendance
The 2026/27 Expansion Impact
The Cymru Premier's expansion from 12 to 16 clubs creates four additional unnamed grounds entering the top flight. These promoted clubs will be eager to secure commercial partnerships to fund their transition to top-level football. For sponsors, this means:
- Four new naming rights opportunities at potentially lower prices (promoted clubs have less pricing power)
- Increased league fixtures — more matches means more broadcast coverage and more naming rights impressions
- "Founding sponsor" narrative — being the first naming rights partner at a newly promoted club carries a unique brand story
The Expansion 2027 Guide and Club Investment Profiles provide details on the clubs expected to be promoted.
European Competition Premium
Clubs that qualify for UEFA competition take their stadium name into European contexts. When TNS plays a Conference League qualifier, "Park Hall" appears on UEFA's match centre, in broadcasting graphics across Europe, and in international media reports. If Park Hall had a naming rights sponsor, that brand would receive international exposure — hundreds of thousands of impressions across multiple European markets.
This European premium makes naming rights at clubs with regular European qualification (TNS, Connah's Quay, Haverfordwest) worth significantly more than the base pricing model suggests. See European Qualification for the financial mechanics.
Integration with Other Sponsorship Assets
Naming rights should not be sold in isolation. The most effective deals bundle naming rights with:
- Perimeter board sponsorship — physical presence inside the ground reinforces the naming association
- Digital package — the sponsor's name appears on the website alongside the ground name
- Matchday hospitality — corporate lounge or box within "their" stadium
- Community programme — "the [Sponsor] Community Programme at the [Sponsor] Stadium" creates a double brand impression
For the full range of bundling options, see our Sponsor Categories Overview and Complete Brand Guide.
Conclusion
Stadium naming rights in the Cymru Premier represent one of the clearest, most quantifiable sponsorship opportunities in Welsh football. The combination of low pricing (£8-25K per year), high broadcast visibility (80+ S4C matches per season), and growing attendance (30-50% uplift from the Wrexham effect) creates a value proposition that few comparable UK leagues can match.
With 7-8 unnamed grounds in the current 12-team league and four more arriving through expansion, the total addressable market for naming rights is significant. Sponsors who move first secure the strongest positions and the lowest pricing. The clubs that package and sell these rights effectively will add a predictable, multi-year revenue stream that transforms their financial planning.
Analysis based on Cymru Connect research, Companies House filings, S4C broadcast data, and English non-league benchmarking, March 2026. Naming rights valuations are estimates based on comparable deals and audience data. Individual club pricing will vary based on broadcast frequency, attendance, and market conditions. Contact clubs directly or use our Club Investment Profiles as a starting point.




