In April 2013, the City of Orlando purchased downtown land for $8.2 million to be used towards the construction of a $110 million MLS soccer stadium. However, in May, the
Florida House of Representatives failed to vote on a bill that had passed the Senate that would have provided up to $30 million in state funds towards the stadium project. Orlando City SC President Phil Rawlins responded by expressing his intent to find alternative funding and keep seeking MLS expansion. The Orlando downtown soccer stadium moved closer to securing funding on August 8, 2013, when Orange County Mayor
Teresa Jacobs and Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer reached an agreement on a deal to provide financial support for a variety of Orlando projects including the new MLS soccer stadium. The last piece in stadium funding was an October 2013 vote on using an existing tourism tax to fund the final quarter of the $80 million stadium project. On October 22, 2013, the Orange County Board of Commissioners voted 5–2 to approve the use of $20 million in tourist development tax funds to build an $84 million multi-purpose soccer stadium in downtown Orlando. The
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) announced on December 11, 2013, that the 2016 and 2017
NCAA Women's College Soccer Championship would be held at the new stadium. On August 4, 2014, the team announced that the stadium location would be moved one block west, to avoid having a delay to the opening day, due to Faith Deliverance Temple fighting the city's eminent-domain claim. The new location resulted in the closure of Parramore Avenue between Church Street and Central Boulevard in February 2015, as the stadium was built right on top of where the road then ran. On January 13, 2016, club president Phil Rawlins announced that construction of the team's stadium was taking four months longer than expected and that the team would remain at the Citrus Bowl (since renamed
Camping World Stadium) for the
2016 season. On March 5, 2017, Orlando City began the
2017 season by hosting
New York City FC in the stadium's inaugural match.
Cyle Larin scored the first goal in stadium history as Orlando won 1–0 in front of a sellout crowd of 25,550. On July 10, 2019, Orlando City progressed to their first
U.S. Open Cup semi-final, defeating
New York City FC on penalties after a 1–1 draw. The game received viral media coverage for what became known as "The Running of The Wall" when NYCFC won the coin toss for the penalty shoot-out and elected to kick the penalties in front of an empty South Stand, the opposite side of the stadium to The Wall where the Orlando City supporters were located. The Orlando supporters took it upon themselves to run en masse down the length of the concourse and fill up the stand directly behind the goal the penalties were being taken.
Adam Grinwis saved two penalties during the shootout win. On May 12, 2021, Orlando City majority owner Flavio Augusto da Silva announced he was in advanced negotiations with
Zygi and
Mark Wilf, owners of the
Minnesota Vikings of the
NFL, for the sale of the club including the stadium and other related soccer assets. The combined value of the deal was estimated at $400–450 million. The sale was completed on July 21, 2021. On October 7, 2025, the
United Football League announced the creation of the
Orlando Storm, which would begin play in the
2026 season. The stadium and league also announced that Orlando Storm's games would be hosted at Inter&Co stadium through a multi-year partnership.
Financing Orlando City SC's owners announced on May 29, 2015, that the stadium would be privately funded by Orlando City SC and not the city. They also announced they would upgrade the stadium's capacity from 19,000 seats, to somewhere between 25,000 and 28,000 seats. The new plan was unveiled on July 31, increasing capacity to 25,500 by adding seats to the south end to maximize seats without major design changes that would set back the project by an additional year. Costs also rose from $110 million to $155 million. As part of the private funding venture for the new stadium, at least $15 million has come from 30 foreign investors in countries such as Brazil and China via the
EB-5 investment program, which grants American visas in exchange for a $500,000 investment in the project. More foreign investors looking to obtain green cards through the EB-5 program are joining this project, which has already created around 1000 jobs and is expected to create around 1000 more in an area that much needed its economic growth.
Design The team released artistic renderings of the stadium on December 11, 2012. On September 30, 2013, the architectural firm
Woods Bagot released their drawings of the stadium on their website. The team announced that these drawings were released without their knowledge or input, and that they had not selected an architect yet. Woods Bagot proceed to remove the images from their website. The design phase began on January 7, 2014, when Mayor
Buddy Dyer and some of the Orlando City SC staff traveled to
Kansas City to begin working with the design firm
Populous. Additional renderings and information about the stadium were released on June 10, 2014. The stadium has an open plaza, where those passing by can see inside, since the field is below street level. It was initially planned to have a seating capacity of 19,500, with the structural ability to expand to 25,000 in the future. This was changed in May 2015 to simply building room for 25,000 in the initial construction, rather than waiting for another construction period. The field is grass, with canopies over fans to protect them from the elements and to increase noise levels. The supporters' section would also have its own "pub-style" area.
Heineken announced a partnership with multiple MLS teams on November 12, 2014, including Orlando City, making Heineken the official beer of the team as well as giving Heineken naming rights to the ground level bar on the south side of the stadium. In addition to the announcement, a new rendering of the south side from inside the stadium was released.
Panasonic was announced as the team's "Official Technology Partner" on December 17, 2014, in exchange for Panasonic providing on-field and fascia LED boards, the main scoreboard on the south end of the field, and dozens of flat panel TV screens throughout the stadium in suites, offices and work areas. In addition, Panasonic provides security cameras, control room and other key components for the new stadium.
Naming rights On June 4, 2019, it was announced that Exploria Resorts (a timeshare entity based in nearby
Clermont) had acquired naming rights to the stadium. On January 18, 2024, Brazilian digital bank
Inter&Co secured the naming rights to the stadium. ==International soccer matches==