Culture The city is home to the longest surviving stretch of medieval walls in England, as well as a number of museums such as
Tudor House Museum, reopened on 30 July 2011 after undergoing extensive restoration and improvement;
God's House Tower;, an arts & heritage venue run by 'a space' arts; the
Medieval Merchant's House; and
Solent Sky, which focuses on aviation. The
SeaCity Museum is located in the west wing of the civic centre, formerly occupied by Hampshire Constabulary and the Magistrates' Court, and focuses on Southampton's trading history and on the
Titanic. The museum received half a million pounds from the
National Lottery in addition to interest from numerous private investors and is budgeted at £28 million. The annual
Southampton Boat Show is held in September each year, with over 600 exhibitors present. It runs for just over a week at Mayflower Park on the city's waterfront, where it has been held since 1968. The Boat Show itself is the climax of Sea City, which runs from April to September each year to celebrate Southampton's links with the sea. The largest theatre in the city is the 2,300-capacity
Mayflower Theatre (formerly known as the Gaumont), which, as the largest theatre in
Southern England outside London, has hosted West End shows such as
Les Misérables,
The Rocky Horror Show and
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, as well as regular visits from
Welsh National Opera and
English National Ballet. There is also the Nuffield Theatre based at the University of Southampton's Highfield campus, which is the city's primary producing theatre. It was awarded The Stage Award for Best Regional Theatre in 2015. It also hosts touring companies and local performing societies (such as Southampton Operatic Society, the Maskers and the University Players). There are art galleries in the city. The
Southampton City Art Gallery at the
Civic Centre is one of the best known and as well as a nationally important
Designated Collection, houses several permanent and travelling exhibitions. The Solent Showcase at
Southampton Solent University, the John Hansard Gallery at Southampton University as well as smaller galleries including the Art House in Above Bar Street provide a different view. The city's
Bargate contains an art gallery run by the arts organisation "a space" who also run the Art Vaults project. This uses several of Southampton's medieval vaults, chambers, halls and cellars as venues for contemporary art installations. The city has a Cultural Quarter, with galleries, museums, theatres, restaurants, bars, and cafés. It includes the Southampton O2 Guildhall, MAST (Mayflower Studies), the John Hansard Gallery (Studio 144) and City Eye, an arts centre. It is the location of Southampton Art Gallery which opened in 1939 and holds national and international quality exhibitions ranging from painting, sculpture, and drawing, to photography and film, as well as permanent collection and displays. The gallery has a partnership with the National Gallery in London which, in 2021, was celebrated with an exhibition entitled "Creating a National Collection: The Partnership Between Southampton City Art Gallery and the National Gallery." The city was described in
The Daily Telegraph in 2026 as having "very limited cultural offerings".
Shortlisted bid for UK City of Culture 2025 In October 2021, Southampton was longlisted for the
UK City of Culture 2025.
Music Southampton has two large live music venues, the Mayflower Theatre (formerly the Gaumont Theatre) and the
Guildhall. The Guildhall has seen concerts from a wide range of popular artists, including
Pink Floyd,
David Bowie,
Manic Street Preachers, City of Southampton Orchestra, Southampton Concert Orchestra,
Southampton Philharmonic Choir, Southampton Choral Society, and the City of Southampton (Albion) Band. The city also has several smaller music venues, including the Brook, Engine Rooms, The 1865,
The Joiners, and Turner Sims, as well as smaller "club circuit" venues like Hampton's and Lennon's, and a number of public houses including the Platform tavern, the Dolphin, the Blue Keys and many others. The Joiners has played host to such acts as
Oasis,
Radiohead,
Green Day,
Suede,
PJ Harvey,
the Manic Street Preachers,
Coldplay,
the Verve,
the Libertines, and
Franz Ferdinand, while Hampton's and Lennon's have hosted early appearances by
Kate Nash,
Scouting for Girls, and
Band of Skulls. The city is home or birthplace to a number of contemporary musicians such as popstar
Craig David,
Coldplay drummer
Will Champion,
Alt-J singer Joe Newman, singer-songwriter
Aqualung, former
Holloways singer Rob Skipper, 1980s popstar
Howard Jones, as well as Grammy Award-winning popstar
Foxes. Several active rock and metal bands were formed in Southampton, including
Band of Skulls,
Bury Tomorrow,
Creeper, and
The Delays. Southampton had a prominent
UK Garage scene, championed by the duo
Artful Dodger, who formed in the city in the late 1990s, as well as the UKG, grime and bassline producer,
Royal-T, part of the TQD group formed with
DJ Q and Flava D. Notable bands who are now defunct include
Thomas Tantrum (disbanded 2011),
Kids Can't Fly (disbanded 2014), and
Heart in Hand (disbanded 2015).
Media Local media include the
Southern Daily Echo newspaper based in
Redbridge and
BBC South, which has its regional headquarters in the
city centre opposite the civic centre. From there the BBC broadcasts
South Today, the local television news bulletin and
BBC Radio Solent. The local ITV franchise is
Meridian, which has its headquarters in
Whiteley, around from the city. Until December 2004, the station's studios were located in the
Northam area of the city on land reclaimed from the River Itchen.
That's Solent is a local television channel that began broadcasting in November 2014, which will be based in and serve Southampton and Portsmouth. Southampton also has four community FM radio stations, the Queens Award-winning Unity 101 Community Radio, broadcasting full-time on 101.1MHz since 2006 to the Asian and ethnic communities, and
Voice FM, located in St Mary's, which has been broadcasting full-time on 103.9MHz since September 2011. A third station, Awaaz FM, broadcasts on DAB digital to South Hampshire and on FM to Southampton. It caters for the Asian and ethnic community. The fourth community station is Fiesta FM and broadcasts on 95MHz. , the most popular commercial radio station is the
adult contemporary regional radio station
Wave 105 (13.7%), followed by the
hit music station
Capital South (2.4%) a networked station from London with local breakfast and drive shows. Other stations include
Heart South (6.8%),
Nation Radio South Coast (2.0%) and
Easy Radio South Coast (0.3%). In addition, Southampton University has a radio station called
SURGE, broadcasting on AM band as well as through the web.
Sport Southampton is home to
Southampton Football Club, nicknamed "The Saints" since 1885; the club currently plays in the
EFL Championship at
St Mary's Stadium, having relocated in 2001 from their 103-year-old former stadium, "
The Dell". They reached the top flight of English football (
First Division) for the first time in 1966, staying there for eight years. They lifted the
FA Cup with a shock victory over
Manchester United in 1976, returned to the top flight two years later, and stayed there for 27 years (becoming founder members of the
Premier League in 1992) before they were relegated in 2005. The club was promoted back to the Premier League in 2012 following a brief spell in the third tier and severe financial difficulties. In 2015, "The Saints" finished 7th in the Premier League, their highest league finish in 30 years, after a remarkable season under new manager
Ronald Koeman. Their highest league position came in 1984 when they were runners-up in the old First Division. They were also runners-up in the 1979
Football League Cup final and 2003
FA Cup final. Notable former managers include
Ted Bates,
Lawrie McMenemy,
Chris Nicholl,
Ian Branfoot and
Gordon Strachan. There is a strong rivalry with
Portsmouth F.C. ("
South Coast derby") which is located only about away.
Southampton Women's F.C. won the inaugural
Women's FA Cup in
1971 when they beat
Stewarton Thistle 4–1 at
Crystal Palace National Sports Centre. In total they won the tournament eight times between 1971 and 1981. A separate club called
Red Star Southampton reached the final in
1992, losing 4–0 to
Doncaster Belles, and their successors Southampton Saints lost the
1999 final to
Arsenal before dissolving in 2019. The current team
Southampton F.C. Women play in the
Women's Championship as of the 2024–25 season. The two local Sunday Leagues in the Southampton area are the City of Southampton Sunday Football League and the Southampton and District Sunday Football League.
Hampshire County Cricket Club play close to the city, at the
Utilita Bowl in
West End, after previously playing at the
County Cricket Ground and the
Antelope Ground, both near the city centre. The
Southern Brave team of
The Hundred also play at the Ageas Bowl, being the inaugural winners in the men's competition, and two-time finalists in the women's. The city also has a semi-professional basketball club, the
Solent Kestrels. Founded in 1998 the team currently plays at the Solent Sports Complex, on the Solent University campus. They currently play in the
NBL Division 1. The city hockey club, Southampton Hockey Club, founded in 1938, is now one of the largest and highly regarded clubs in Hampshire, fielding 7 senior men's and 5 senior women's teams on a weekly basis along with boys' and girls' teams from 6 upwards. The city is also well provided for in amateur men's and women's rugby with a number of teams in and around the city, the oldest of which is Trojans RFC, which was promoted to London South West 2 division in 2008/9. A notable former player is
Anthony Allen, who played with Leicester Tigers as a centre. Tottonians are also in London South West division 2 and Southampton RFC are in Hampshire division 1 in 2009/10, alongside Millbrook RFC and Eastleigh RFC. Many of the sides run mini and midi teams from under sevens up to under sixteens for both boys and girls. The city provides for
yachting and water sports, with a number of marinas. From 1977 to 2001 the Whitbread Around the World Yacht Race, now the
Volvo Ocean Race, was based in Southampton's
Ocean Village marina. Southampton Sports Centre is the focal point for the public's sporting and outdoor activities and includes an alpine centre with a dry ski slope, a theme park, and an athletics centre which is used by professional athletes Along with 11 other leisure venues which were formerly operated by the council leisure services, the operating rights have been sold to Park Wood Leisure. Southampton was named "fittest city in the UK" in 2006 by ''
Men's Fitness'' magazine. The results were based on the incidence of heart disease, the amount of junk food and alcohol consumed, and the level of gym membership. In 2007, it had slipped one place behind London, but was still ranked first when it came to the parks and green spaces available for exercise and the amount of television watched by Sotonians was the lowest in the country. Thousands enter and run the Southampton Marathon in April every year. Speedway and racing took place at
Banister Court Stadium in the pre-war era. It returned in the 1940s after WW2 and the Saints operated until the stadium closed down at the end of 1963. A training track operated in the 1950s in the Hamble area.
Greyhound racing was also held at the stadium from 1928 to 1963. Southampton is also home to two
American football teams, the Solent Thrashers, who play at the Test Park Sports Ground, and the Southampton Stags, who play at the Wide Lane Sports Facility in
Eastleigh. The world's oldest surviving bowling green is the
Southampton Old Bowling Green, which was first used in 1299. The city is home to two
Octopush (also known as underwater hockey) clubs. Bournemouth and Southampton Octopush Club and Totton Octopush Club. Both clubs train at Totton Leisure Centre (with Bournemouth and Southampton OC also training in
Ringwood). In the 2023 Nautilus Tournament, Bournemouth and Southampton OC finished 7th (out of 7) in Division 2 with Totton finishing 7th in Division 6. ==Emergency services==