how big is a rugby pitch
A full-size rugby union pitch is roughly 100 m long and 70 m wide, with a total playing area (including in‑goal zones) of about 106–144 m by 68–70 m.
Standard size in simple terms
- Field of play (try line to try line): 94–100 m long.
- In‑goal areas: 6–22 m deep at each end.
- Total length including in‑goal: about 106–144 m.
- Width: 68–70 m.
- Total area: roughly 7,200–10,000 m².
As a mental picture, that’s a bit wider and usually somewhat longer than a typical football (soccer) pitch.
Mini breakdown: union vs league
| Type | Typical length | Typical width | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rugby union | 106–144 m incl. in‑goal | [9][3][1]68–70 m | [7][3][9][1]Some variation allowed by World Rugby. | [7][9]
| Rugby league | 112–122 m incl. in‑goal | [5]Always 68 m | [5]More tightly standardised width. | [5]
Quick storytelling angle
Imagine walking the length of a rugby pitch: by the time you’ve gone from one dead‑ball line to the other, you’ve covered more than a city block, with another two‑thirds of a block in width.
That huge canvas is what gives modern rugby its sweeping kicks, wide attacking shapes, and those dramatic touchline tackles you see in highlight reels.
TL;DR: A rugby pitch is about 100 m by 70 m, with the full playable length (including in‑goal areas) ranging from roughly 106 m up to about 144 m.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.