Super Bowl tickets have never been a bargain. At least not for the last LIV years or so.
But for those looking to attend the big game at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles on Sunday, the prices won't be as high as they were only a few weeks ago.
There also were record prices at last year's game in Tampa, Florida, when SeatGeek and StubHub, two of the leading resale services, sold seats at prices above $8,000. The ticket costs were inflated by limited capacity rules imposed because of the pandemic, and also because the Tampa Bay Buccaneers were playing in their own stadium -- a Super Bowl first.
The pre-pandemic record was the 2020 game between Kansas City and San Francisco in Miami, when the average price was between US$6,500 and US$7,200, depending upon the service.
When this year's matchup was set two weeks ago, with the hometown LA Rams set to meet the championship-starved Cincinnati Bengals, record resale prices seemed likely. Prices on all three resale services for a single ticket were around US$10,000. Now it appears the prices won't top the recent records.
But they'll still be costly. In addition to the price of the tickets, parking passes are going for hundreds of dollars, and as much as US$5,700 if you want to park in one of the lots closest to the stadium.
"Parking is always a big deal for Super Bowls," said Brett Goldberg, of TickPick, another resale service. "Already limited parking becomes much more limited because of the space the NFL takes up." Some fans who can't afford tickets to the game may choose to get a parking space so they can tailgate and watch the game on televisions from the lot.
Overall, parking passes, including those at lots fairly far from SoFi Stadium, are going for an average of about US$516 on SeatGeek, with a minimum price of US$275 on StubHub.
For those who actually want to be inside the stadium, the prices might be a fraction of the highs of a few weeks ago, but they're still in the thousands.
On TickPick, the average price of tickets purchased on Friday and early Saturday was about US$5,100, taking the overall average price of tickets purchased on the service down to US$6,500, just about where it was through all of 2020.
"The fan base responded to lower pricing," said Goldberg.
As of Saturday morning the average price of tickets purchased on SeatGeek over the previous 24 hours was $6,414, up from the prior day's average of US$5,143, but still a fraction of where the prices were just after the conference championships.
Ticket sellers often cut prices in the days leading up to the Super Bowl, worried that they'll miss a chance to sell the tickets at all.
"It's an expiring good. They're not really worth anything come Sunday night," said Chris Leyden, director of consumer strategy at SeatGeek.
StubHub said the average price of tickets sold on the site the last 24 hours is down to US$4,100. That's taking the average overall average price of ticket sold since the start of selling to US$6,700, just above its 2020 mark of US$6,500.
With the hometown Rams one of the teams in the Super Bowl, the expectation is that there may be more last minute purchases than a normal Super Bowl, which are typically played in a neutral site that most fans have to travel to.
That could lead to an unusual last minute surge in average ticket prices for fans who missed buying at the bottom of the market, even if the prices remain below the current overall average.
"When the late buying behavior kicks in, as I would expect it to, the prices have nowhere to go but up," said Akshay Khanna, general manager of North American operations for StubHub.