2025 Super Bowl ticket prices keep dropping. Why is demand lower for Chiefs vs. Eagles?
The 2025 Super Bowl between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Philadelphia Eagles is just days away, and prices for the big game are dropping.
The lowest-priced single ticket is available for $2,578 and the highest-priced is going for $23,212, according to resale ticket site Gametime. Prices have dropped since Jan. 27, where the lowest ticket was $4,571 and the highest-priced was going for $31,761.
You won’t be able to find any face-value tickets anywhere, as those are offered to NFL players on the Super Bowl teams and across the league, along with season ticket holders. Face value tickets for Eagles season ticket holders range from $800 to $1,500, according to Rochester, New York-based news outlet Democrat & Chronicle.
How much do Super Bowl LIX tickets cost on resale sites? Here’s the latest data as of Friday, Feb. 7, and how it compares to The Star’s last price check Jan. 27.
Super Bowl ticket prices
While prices have dropped, no ticket to the big game is cheap on resale sites.
The lowest-priced seat on Ticketmaster, which sells face-value tickets for the NFL throughout the regular season and playoffs, is $3,000 before fees in section 610. Any ticket on sale by Ticketmaster is verified resale. A seat in section 337C costs $8,726, almost 50% off the Jan. 27 price of $14,995. This seat is located in the luxury suite section.
VividSeat’s lowest price for a single ticket is $2,582 before fees in section 649, $2,000 less than what a ticket had cost in the upper level on Jan. 27. The closer you get to the field, the more a ticket costs; a ticket in section 116 now costs $5,818.
Prices are similar on StubHub, as the cheapest ticket available costs $2,731 before fees in section 612. The previous lowest ticket price was $4,704 before fees in section 630. A seat at the 50-yard line in section 142 will now set you back $23,822, a slight increase from the previous price of $22,975, while a seat behind the uprights in section 128 costs $4,550.
A seat in section 620 costs $3,286 before fees on SeatGeek, which is the cheapest ticket available. It’ll now cost you $15,598 to sit in section 223, the club level inside the Superdome. Previous prices listed tickets in this section at $25,993.
Overland Park-based Tickets For Less also has Super Bowl tickets available for resale with no fees attached, but they are still expensive. The lowest available is $3,499 in section 651. A seat in club level section 346 now costs $5,561, $4,000 less than the price on Jan. 27. Tickets cost $5,249 in section 104, which is also $4,000 less than the previous price.
Why are Super Bowl ticket prices dropping?
Could it be fatigue from seeing the Chiefs in the big game every season? Is it because it’s a rematch from Super Bowl LVII two years ago?
There are a lot of reasons as to why prices are low compared to previous years. One big reason? The location, according to ticket resale site TickPick.
“Location is becoming a major factor in Super Bowl demand,” Brett Goldberg, co-CEO of TickPick, said in a statement to CNN. “Last year’s Super Bowl in Vegas stood out not only for its accommodations but also for the extra attractions, offering fans more than just the game. As fans seek more value, Vegas set the bar.”
The larger capacity inside Caesar’s Superdome may also play a role. The site of the 2025 Super Bowl has a capacity of 74,295 fans, while Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas hosts 65,000. GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium can host more than both of these stadiums with a capacity of 76,416.
A rematch is appealing, but not if the rematch was two years ago, according to TickPick. Goldberg said football fans are bored by the Chiefs’ third straight Super Bowl bid, and the resale website is “seeing less interest from fans looking to attend.”
“Had the Detroit Lions, Washington Commanders or Buffalo Bills made it this far, it’d be a much different story as it relates to current prices,” Goldberg said.
This story was originally published February 7, 2025 at 12:50 PM.