Super Bowl LVII tickets skyrocket with cheapest listed at $5,710
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Tickets for Super Bowl LVII are through the roof with CHEAPEST listing at $5,710 in the hours after the Eagles and Chiefs booked their spot…and some lower-tier seats are selling for over $37,000 for the Arizona showdown
After the Kansas City Chiefs and Philadelphia Eagles clinched their spots in Super Bowl LVII, ticket prices for the game have skyrocketed on the secondary market. TickSelect.
As of Sunday night, the cheapest ticket available through TickPick was $5,710.
Of the 2,550 tickets the resale site had for sale, the median price was $9,825, while the most expensive ticket was $37,408.
Tickets offered by the NFL through its official hospitality partner ‘On Location’ were listed at the starting price of $5,867 after including taxes and fees.
The cheapest ticket price available in the high school for the SB LVII TickPick market is $5,710
The Eagles punched their ticket to the Super Bowl by winning the NFC Championship
Packages offered from On Location include access to pregame parties, experiences, and events featuring appearances by NFL legends, the site explains.
Depending on the additions, the packages offered by On Location can amount to more than $30,000.
On Location sells packages of tickets to next year’s Super Bowl in Las Vegas for a similar value for a fully refundable deposit of $5,000.
Fans who chose to deposit the required amount for next year’s tickets will receive early access to exclusive Super Bowl tickets and travel packages through a priority access pre-sale.
The Chiefs will try to secure their third Super Bowl victory in the past three years. Kansas City won the 2019 Super Bowl against the San Francisco 49ers before losing the following year to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2020.
Philadelphia, on the other hand, will try to go 2-2 in Super Bowl appearances over the past 10 years after beating the New England Patriots to lift the Lombardi Trophy in 2017.
The Kansas City Chiefs then went on to win the AFC Championship to advance to the Super Bowl.