When two clubs call the same ground home, there’s always a story.

Across England and Wales, these sixteen grounds host more than one team, creating partnerships where clubs with their own histories and ambitions share the same stretch of turf. Sometimes they’re allies, sometimes rivals — but always bound by the same patch of grass.
Ground sharing has long been part of non-league life — born from practicality, shaped by community. It keeps clubs alive when budgets are tight, links unlikely neighbours, and fills quiet terraces with twice the noise. These grounds may host different colours on alternate weekends, but the commitment beneath the floodlights is always the same.
Some grounds become legends twice over.