A first draft of the venues was proposed in August 2023. The tournament will be played across four venues in four cities: one in Denmark (
Herning, Groups A and B), one in Norway (
Bærum, Groups C and D), and two in Sweden (
Malmö and
Kristianstad, Groups E and F). The main round will take place in
Herning and
Malmö, with the former organising the final weekend. The following proposed cities in the bid didn't make the final cut:
Aarhus and
Copenhagen in Denmark, and
Bergen,
Stavanger and
Trondheim in Norway. In regards to Norway,
Oslo was chosen over
Trondheim, after negotiations with
Trondheim fell through due to financial reasons. In September 2024, one team per venue was selected.
Denmark will play in
Herning (Group B),
Norway in
Bærum (Group C) and
Sweden in
Malmö (Group E). If they qualify,
Germany will play in Herning (Group A), the
Faroe Islands in Bærum (Group D) and
Iceland in Kristianstad (Group F). The arena in
Kristianstad is renovated with new seats being put in by June 2025.
Overview of venues • The
Jyske Bank Boxen in
Herning is the biggest arena in Denmark, seating 15,000. The venue has hosted several handball championships, including: the
European Men's Handball Championship in
2014,
European Women's Handball Championship in
2010 and
2020,
World Men's Handball Championship in
2019 and
2025 and
World Women's Handball Championship in
2015 and
2023. It has also held the
IIHF World Championship in
2018 and
2025. • The
Malmö Arena and
Malmö was built in 2008. The venue has experience in hosting handball tournaments, previously hosting two
World Men's Handball Championships, in
2011 and
2023. In addition to handball, the arena has hosted the
Eurovision Song Contest twice in
2013 and
2024, as well as the
2024 Men's World Floorball Championships. • The
Unity Arena in
Bærum will host Norway's games for the tournament. It has recently organised the
2025 World Men's Handball Championship as the main host. Outside of sport, it hosted
Eurovision in
2010 and the various concerts. • The
Kristianstad Arena in
Kristianstad is the smallest arena used for the tournament with a capacity of 4,500. The
2011 World Men's Handball Championship and
2023 World Men's Handball Championship have taken place here. ==Draw==