With Super Bowl LX (Patriots vs. Seahawks) now just one week away at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, this is the point in the resale cycle where the market tends to solidify. The biggest initial swings are mostly behind us, travel plans start to lock in, and both buyers and sellers get more realistic about what “fair value” looks like.
In other words: if you’re still deciding whether you’re making the trip, this is the week to start making your key choices. Inventory is established, pricing tiers are clearer, and you can shop with a more informed sense of what’s a deal (and what’s a premium) based on where seats sit in the stadium.
Snapshot as of Monday 2/2: the current “get-in” price on Ticket Club is about $4,469 per ticket, with a market-wide median around $7,035. Most tickets are clustering in a typical shopping band of roughly $5.1k to $13.6k (10th–90th percentile), with premium club/VIP options stretching far above that.
Shop Super Bowl LX tickets on Ticket Club
What “One Week Out” Usually Means for Pricing
In prior Super Bowl market updates, the pattern is consistent: early on, pricing can be chaotic as sellers test the ceiling and buyers react emotionally to the matchup. But as the game gets close, pricing becomes more practical. Sellers who need to move inventory (or avoid eating costs) start to meet the market, while buyers who are truly going finalize plans and pull the trigger.
That’s why one week out matters: pricing tiers tend to stop drifting and start behaving like real supply-and-demand. You’ll still see daily movement, but it’s usually within defined “bands” by level/area rather than wild swings across the whole stadium.
Where Prices Sit Right Now by Stadium Area
Below is a consumer-friendly breakdown of where the market stands today. “Typical range” reflects the 10th–90th percentile of current listings — a useful way to see what most shoppers will encounter (and where the outliers live).
| Stadium Area (Levi’s Stadium) | Get-In | Typical (Median) | Typical Shopping Range (10–90%) | What It Means for Fans |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upper Deck (400 Level) | $4,469 | $5,517 | $4,687 – $7,140 | Most affordable entry point; best for “be in the building” shoppers. Strong value pockets live in corner/end areas. |
| Upper Bowl (300 Level) | $4,905 | $6,384 | $5,150 – $8,721 | Often the sweet spot for fans who want a better view than the top deck without paying lower-bowl pricing. |
| Middle Bowl (200 Level) | $5,445 | $6,595 | $5,893 – $8,670 | Very competitive vs. lower bowl right now — a compelling “upgrade” tier if you’re hovering near $6–7k. |
| Lower Bowl (100 Level) | $6,137 | $7,528 | $6,521 – $12,269 | Best “game feel” and proximity; pricing widens quickly depending on sideline vs. end zone and how premium the location is. |
| Patio (P Sections) | $7,049 | $7,794 | $7,187 – $8,546 | A more social/unique stadium experience; currently priced closer to lower-bowl territory than upper-bowl value. |
| Club (C Sections) | $10,911 | $17,250 | $12,631 – $24,225 | Premium comfort and amenities; pricing reflects a different buyer pool than most fans. |
| Premium / VIP | $11,385 | $20,447 | $16,136 – $37,138 | Top-end hospitality pricing; ideal for bucket-list or corporate-style purchases, not “value shopping.” |
Where the Best “Value Plays” Are Showing Up
If you’re shopping like a fan (not a hospitality buyer), the value conversation is really about where you can stretch your budget into a better experience:
- Best entry-level value: 400 Level. The current get-in is in the mid-$4k range, and many of the cheapest listings are clustered in the 401–422 section family. If your goal is simply to be in the stadium for the Super Bowl atmosphere, this tier is doing exactly what you want it to do.
- Best “upgrade” value: 200 Level vs. 100 Level. Right now, the median 200-level ticket (~$6.6k) is notably closer to the 300-level median than the 100-level median. If you’re already planning to spend around $6–7k, it’s worth checking 200-level inventory first before committing to lower-bowl end-zone pricing.
- Best “avoid overpaying” zone: lower bowl premiums. The 100-level has the widest spread in the building. That’s a sign that some listings are priced like true sideline/prime inventory, while others are more “I want lower bowl” pricing. If you’re shopping 100-level, compare multiple adjacent sections — you can often find meaningful differences without changing your overall viewpoint much.
Practical Buying Tips for This Week
- Decide your tier first, then hunt sections. The clearest pricing cliffs are by level (400 → 300 → 200 → 100 → club/VIP). Lock your level target, then shop for the best section/row value inside that tier.
- If you’re flexible on location, shop the corners/end areas. That’s where the market usually produces the best “cheapest in the building” options — especially in the 400s.
- Watch the midweek window. Historically, this is when sellers who need liquidity begin to adjust listings more aggressively, while late buyers start to commit. If you see a price that’s clearly below the typical range for that tier, it often doesn’t last long.
- Use total trip math. At one week out, flights and hotels can be the hidden cost center. If you’re debating between “get in the door” and an “upgrade,” factor whether that extra $500–$1,500 per ticket is actually the biggest variable compared to travel.
The Bottom Line
One week out, the Super Bowl resale market looks structured: the lowest-cost entry is living in the upper deck, the 300/200 levels are offering some of the most rational “fan value,” and the lower bowl has a wide spread that rewards careful section-by-section shopping. If you’ve been waiting for the moment when prices stop feeling like guesswork, this is that moment — and it’s a strong week to make your move based on the experience you want in the building.
