The Super Bowl is a bucket list luxury — and it’s priced like it. The biggest football game of the year hasn’t been cheap since it was a grand experiment taking place at Tulane Stadium.
Now, two tickets to the game could buy you a moderately used mid-tier sedan.
The Super Bowl’s cheapest tickets broached the four-figure mark sometime in the early 2000s and have risen from there. Fortunately, 2025’s market has cooled if you’re interested in watching the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl 59. Whether a product of Patrick Mahomes fatigue or the fact we saw this same came two years ago, this year’s Superdome Super Bowl prices look downright reasonable after last year’s get-in price in Las Vegas ranged from $6,000 to $8,000.
Here’s what some of the nation’s largest ticket resale sites are charging in 2025 before various fees and taxes threaten to add another car payment’s worth of cash to the total:
That’s about half the 2024 get-in price — and a relative bargain if you’ve got $8,000 to burn for you and a guest.