Seven venues in seven cities, will host the tournament. After meetings in March 2025, the same city and venue as in 2023, the
Palace of Culture and Sports in
Varna, was chosen as Bulgaria's venue. In the same month, the
BTarena in
Cluj-Napoca was announced as the venue for the group in Romania. On 6 June 2025, the
Nokia Arena was announced as Finland's venue. On 19 August 2025,
Naples,
Modena,
Turin and
Milan were announced as Italy's venues. On 14 October it was announced that Bulgaria's capital,
Sofia, would replace Varna as the country's host city with
Arena 8888 as the selected venue. This is due to the country's increased interest in volleyball after their second place finish at the
2025 FIVB Men's Volleyball World Championship.
Sofia is allocating 500,000
Bulgarian lev for the tournament. Prior to the venue change,
Varna MPs
Desislav Taskov and
Kristian Ganchev sent a letter asking for reassurance that Varna would keep the hosting rights after reports of Varna being replaced by Sofia came out. The director of Sports in Varna,
Kristian Dimitrov, was reportedly angry with the venue swap. Varna had previous allocated 420,000
Bulgarian lev for the tournament before the change of venue.
Overview of venues Italy • Four Italian venues will be used during the tournament. The
Piazza del Plebiscito in
Naples will host the opening match at the temporary venue at the square. The rest of the group phase will take place in
Modena at the
PalaPanini, the home for numerous Modena-based clubs. • Italy's round of 16 and quarterfinal matches will be held at
Turin's
Palavela. The venue was built in 1961 but renovated in 2004 for the
2006 Winter Olympics, where it held
figure skating and
short track speed skating events. It has since organised championships in both aforementioned sports, plus
Gymnastics and the
2015 Men's European Volleyball Championship. • The semifinals and final will take place at the newly built
PalaItalia in
Milan. Constructed for the
2026 Winter Olympics and
2026 Winter Paralympics, this will be the venue's first championship of any sport after the games.
Bulgaria • In Bulgaria, the nation's biggest indoor facility,
Arena 8888, would be chosen, replacing the originally chosen
Palace of Culture and Sports in
Varna. The established venue has hosted various competitions, with this being their third major volleyball tournament after the
2015 Men's European Volleyball Championship and
2018 FIVB Men's Volleyball World Championship. The venue has also hosted
Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2015.
Finland • In Finland, the
Nokia Arena would host games. Constructed in time for the
2022 IIHF World Championship, it has since hosted the
2023 IIHF World Championship and
EuroBasket 2025, plus numerous high-profile concerts.
Romania • In Romania, the
BTarena will organise matches. The venue was built in 2014 but expanded in preparation for
EuroBasket 2017. Romania's largest arena would later host the
2021 Women's European Volleyball Championship. Basketball team,
U-BT Cluj-Napoca, plays their home games here.
Group allocation of hosts • As the main organisers,
Italy were seeded into Pool A, • As the secondary venue, the
Bulgaria were positioned in Pool B • As the two countries hosting a single group,
Finland and
Romania are placed into Pool C and D respectively. ==Final draw==