(BCSNN) -- The NCAA Division I Baseball Championship Subcommittee has announced the 16 regional host sites for the 79th annual NCAA Division I Baseball Championship, officially securing each host’s place in the 64‑team field.

The 16 Regional Host Sites:
Athens, Georgia – Georgia (46-12)
Atlanta, Georgia – Georgia Tech (48-9)
Auburn, Alabama – Auburn (38-19)
Austin, Texas – Texas (40-13)
Chapel Hill, North Carolina – North Carolina (45-11-1)
College Station, Texas – Texas A&M (39-14)
Eugene, Oregon – Oregon (40-16)
Gainesville, Florida – Florida (39-19)
Hattiesburg, Mississippi – Southern Mississippi (43-15) 
Lawrence, Kansas – Kansas (42-16)
Lincoln, Nebraska – Nebraska (42-15)
Los Angeles, California – UCLA (51-6)
Morgantown, West Virginia – West Virginia (39-14)
Starkville, Mississippi – Mississippi State (40-17)
Tallahassee, Florida – Florida State (38-17)
Tuscaloosa, Alabama – Alabama (37-19)

Host Sites By Conference
Southeastern 7 (Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi State, Texas, Texas A&M)
Atlantic Coast 3 (Florida State, Georgia Tech, North Carolina)
Big Ten 3 (Nebraska, Oregon, UCLA)
Big 12 2 (Kansas, West Virginia)
Sun Belt 1 (Southern Mississippi)

Each regional will feature four teams competing in a double‑elimination format, with all 16 regionals scheduled from Friday, May 29 to Monday, June 1, if necessary.

Florida State will host a baseball regional for the 38th time, the most in tournament history, while Texas will host for the 31st time. Kansas will host a regional for the first time ever, and West Virginia will host for only the second time and the first since 2019. Nebraska is hosting for the first time since 2008.

Oregon and Southern Mississippi will each host for the fifth time in program history. Florida State, Georgia and North Carolina are hosting for a third consecutive season, while Auburn, Texas, Oregon, Southern Mississippi and UCLA are hosting in back‑to‑back years.

The full 64‑team field, first‑round regional pairings and site assignments will be revealed at Noon ET on Monday, May 25, during a one‑hour selection show on ESPN2. The committee will set the entire bracket — through super regionals and the opening round of the Men’s College World Series — with no reseeding once play begins.

The eight super regional hosts will be announced on Tuesday, June 2 by 10 a.m. ET on NCAA.com/mcws.

A total of 29 Division I conferences will receive automatic bids, with 35 at‑large selections rounding out the field of 64. The Men’s College World Series begins Friday, June 12 at Charles Schwab Field Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska.