The Best Ballparks To Hit Home Runs in the MLB
Some MLB stadiums give hitters a major advantage thanks to unique dimensions and park factors. From Coors Field to Fenway Park, these are the best ballparks in baseball for home runs and offensive fireworks.

The beautiful yet annoying thing about baseball parks is the various dimensions all 30 stadiums have, which is part of what gives MLB its unique culture and identity, much like collaborations such as the MLB x Takashi Murakami Tokyo Series collection. Because of some field’s weird dimensions, they are the best ballparks to hit home runs in the MLB. The park factor determines these rankings, with 100 being the league average.
Citizen Bank Park (Philadelphia Phillies)
With a park factor of 104, Citizen Bank Park is the fifth easiest park to hit a dinger. Since it opened in 2004, the Phillies’ ballpark has been a haven for hitters. Former Phillies MVPs, like Ryan Howard and Jimmy Rollins, appreciated the short right field power alley at 369 feet and 330 feet down the line. Left field is somewhat similar, at 329 down the line and 374 in the gap. With these dimensions, it makes sense why free agents like Bryce Harper, Kyle Schwarber, and Nick Castellanos flocked to Citizen Bank Park to get the most out of their power.
Angel Stadium (Los Angeles Angels)
Another stadium that has an opportunistic right field power alley and a park factor of 104 is Angels Stadium. At 365 feet, Shohei Ohtani and the opponents of the Angels can take advantage of it. Additionally, Angels Stadium is only 396 in center field, where the standard is around 400 feet. It’s also one of the older stadiums in the MLB, so its dimensions may have made sense when they broke ground, but not so much now.
Fenway Park (Boston Red Sox)
Although it may be intimidating to stare at a 37-foot wall in left field, Fenway Park remains a hitter’s haven. With the green monster only 310 feet from home plate, the wall isn’t as concerned, allowing routine fly balls in most ballparks to turn into a round-tripper. Right field also has its charm, with “Pesky’s Pole” being 302 feet away from the right field foul pole. Therefore, Fenway is the only park that could have 320-foot home runs in multiple directions, giving it a park factor of 109.
Great American Ball Park (Cincinnati Reds)
It may have something to do with facing the Cincinnati Reds’ pitching staff, but the Great American Ballpark has the second-highest park factor at 111 and the highest home run factor at an astonishing 150. With figures that high, it’s as if the hitters step to the plate with an aluminum-rolled bat instead of an ordinary wooden one. This explains how someone like Eugenio Suarez has the second most home runs since 2018.
Coors Field (Colorado Rockies)
If a baseball player died and went to heaven, they most certainly want to wake up in Iowa, just like in the Field of Dreams; they would take every at-bat in Coors Field. Thanks to the elevated sea level, the ball flies out of Coors Field with a park factor of 112, making it one of the toughest places for pitchers despite some of the greatest pitching performances in MLB history.
Learning the best ballparks to hit a home run in the MLB alerts you where you should catch a game if you’re in the neighborhood. Going to a game with multiple home runs is exciting, and now you know where most of them are located.
