Super Bowl LX: Tickets reach record prices, up to $52,000 dollars

alofoke
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Miami, USA – A few days before Super Bowl LX, which promises an exciting matchup between the New England Patriots and the Seattle Seahawks, ticket prices reach unprecedented levels in both the official and secondary markets.

The values range from $5,500 to over $52,000, according to the main sales platforms.

The expected meeting will take place on Sunday, February 8th at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California. This stadium, with a capacity for 68,500 spectators, has been the home of the San Francisco 49ers since 2014.

According to the available information, Ticketmaster offers the cheapest ticket for $5,904, for a seat in a corner of the fourth level of the stadium. In contrast, the most expensive seat reaches $52,650, located in a VIP area near the Patriots’ sideline.

StubHub, on the secondary market, lists its cheapest ticket at $6,120, while the maximum price reaches $36,431, also in a preferred sector near the Seahawks area.

TickPick offers tickets from $5,649 in the upper stadium zones, with prices rising to $32,815 in premium locations.

The average ticket price for Super Bowl LX is around $8,200, a figure surpassed only by Super Bowl LVIII in 2024, held in Las Vegas, where the average exceeded $9,000 per ticket.

In comparison, the average for Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans was approximately $8,076.

The constant increase in the cost of tickets reflects the growing popularity of the most-watched sporting event in the United States.

In 1967, the average price of tickets for the first Super Bowl was 12 dollars, a figure that, adjusted for inflation, would exceed 100 dollars today.

The $1,000 per entry threshold was surpassed for the first time at Super Bowl XLIII in 2009, when the Pittsburgh Steelers defeated the Arizona Cardinals. Since then, the increase has been constant, with notable growth in the last decade.

The matchup between the Patriots and Seahawks is a rematch of Super Bowl XLIX from 2015, remembered for Malcolm Butler’s dramatic interception of Russell Wilson on the last play, which secured New England’s victory by 28-24 and is etched in the memory of fans.

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