Tony Khan Confirms Ring of Honor’s New Home with Regular Studio Tapings in Jacksonville, FL

Ring of Honor appears to have finally found a consistent home base under Tony Khan’s ownership.

What initially began as a rumored experiment has quickly turned into a long-term plan. After ROH held a television taping at WJCT Studios in Jacksonville, Florida, speculation surfaced that the venue could become the promotion’s regular headquarters. Reports suggested the taping was essentially a trial run to gauge whether the studio setting would work for the brand.

It didn’t take long for Khan to make up his mind.

According to a fan in attendance, Khan addressed the crowd toward the end of Sunday’s tapings and officially announced that Jacksonville is now the home of Ring of Honor. He also confirmed that ROH will return to WJCT Studios on March 22 for its next round of television tapings.

The move marks the first time since 2023 that ROH has operated out of a consistent venue. When Khan first launched the “ROH on HonorClub” era, the promotion held its initial tapings at Universal Studios in Orlando. Since then, ROH TV matches have largely been filmed around AEW events — either before or after episodes of Dynamite and Collision — with only occasional standalone tapings.

Establishing a dedicated studio location signals a potential shift in strategy. A centralized taping model offers production consistency, branding opportunities, and the ability to shape ROH’s identity separately from AEW programming. However, Khan did not address whether the move is tied to any potential new television or streaming deal, something fans have speculated about in recent months.

As for content volume, Sunday’s taping was ambitious. ROH reportedly filmed 34 matches in a single session. With another taping scheduled just three weeks later, that strongly suggests the company plans to record multiple weeks of programming at once — possibly producing three episodes per taping cycle moving forward.

While the episodes have yet to air on HonorClub, the numbers indicate ROH is gearing up for a steady, studio-based format. For a brand that has been searching for stability in the Khan era, this could be a major step toward carving out a clearer identity and consistent presentation.

If the Jacksonville experiment continues to deliver, Ring of Honor may finally have the foundation it’s been missing.

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