Discount Mid-Season Tickets!

Discount Mid-Season Tickets! ⋆

Upcoming Events

  • Home Season, Game 5

    Saturday, Jan 31, 2026
    Doors open at 4 p.m.
    Game starts at 5 p.m.

    Devils Night Dames vs.
    D-Funk AllStars

  • MCDL Tryouts!

    Join our Travel C Team!
    Sign up deadline: Feb 1
    Tryouts: Feb 2

    Transfers welcome!
    Dual membership allowed

  • Derby Prom 2026

    Wheel you go to prom with us?!

    Prom attire encouraged. Prizes for best prom-posal, and cutest couples.

    Don't skate for Detroit? You're invited!
    Don't play derby? You're invited!

  • Detroit Roller Derby Speed Class

    Come join Detroit Roller Derby for Speed class at the Detroit Masonic Temple most Sundays at 10am.

    Sun Jan 25 from 10 am-12 pm
    Sun Feb 1 from 10 am-12 pm
    Sun Feb 8 from 10 am-12 pm
    Sun Feb 15 from 10 am-12 pm
    Sun Feb 22 from 10 am-12 pm 

WE ARE DETROIT ROLLER DERBY

Detroit Roller Derby is the premier roller derby league in Michigan, offering a fun, exciting, well-organized and meaningful sporting experience for fans and league participants, while supporting, educating and developing league participants for national and international competition in the sport of roller derby. We practice at venues in Detroit/Metro Detroit and we play our games at the Masonic Temple, 500 Temple Street, Detroit, MI.

DRD is comprised of 4 home teams, 3 travel teams, a rec league, junior roller derby & OUR amazing officials and staff.

Detroit Roller Derby is proud to be a member of The Women's Flat Track Roller Derby Association (WFTDA).

Land Acknowledgement

Detroit Roller Derby acknowledges that we stand on the lands of the traditional territory of the Anishinaabe, the “Three Fires” people, including the Odawa, Ojibwe, and Bodewadmi. We make this acknowledgment to honor the legacy of those who have been stewards to this land since time immemorial. In honor and celebration of the present, past, and future descendants of these Indigenous people, we acknowledge that the original name of this region is Waawiyatanong. Prior to European colonization, Waawiyatanong was a rich and nurturing landscape that served as a meeting place for many Great Lakes’ Indigenous peoples. The process of change that led to our current landscape has been unkind to the history and culture of Indigenous people. It is our responsibility to learn about this history, to seek to understand its impact on communities of Indigenous people, and to engage in practices that foster the preservation of the language, culture, and land of the Anishinaabe. 


We encourage our community to learn more about the Anishinaabe at: https://www.anishinabek.ca/

We are proudly sponsored by