NFL
Super Bowl Ticket Prices Drop 31% In One Week; New Orleans Hotel Prices Skyrocket

Super Bowl tickets usually garner some of the most expensive get-in prices on the market. However, the upcoming Super Bowl LIX has seen a sharp decrease in ticket prices. One of the reasons for the decline can be attributed to the skyrocketing cost of hotels in New Orleans.
Super Bowl Ticket Prices Drop 31% In One Week
Cheapest Super Bowl ticket sold Monday after matchup was set:
2024 (49ers vs. Chiefs): $8,778
2023 (Eagles vs. Chiefs): $5,271
2022 (Bengals vs. Rams): $5,389
2021(Bucs vs. Chiefs): $8,413
2020 (Chiefs vs. 49ers): $4,418Get-in for Super Bowl LIX: $5,650
— TickPick (@TickPick) January 27, 2025
Last week, the cheapest Super Bowl LIX ticket started at around $5,650.
The tickets ultimately settled in the price range of $4,800. That’s about a 25% decrease from the cheapest get-in price for last year’s Super Bowl.
In one week, those prices have continued to plummet. Some websites, such as Vivid Seats, have tickets for as low as $3,228.
The average for the lowest get-in price between the major ticketing sites is now around $3,330. Compared to last week’s price of $4,800, Super Bowl LIX tickets have already dropped by 31% in one week.
Last year’s cheapest get-in price for Super Bowl 2024. Using today’s current numbers, Super Bowl LIX tickets have decreased by nearly 50% from Super Bowl LVIII.
New Orleans Hotel Prices Are Extremely High
Is the Super Bowl outgrowing New Orleans?
Unprecedented pricing and demand for hotel rooms, in turn driving the ticket market downward, suggest the answer could be yes.
Story ⬇️
— Front Office Sports (@FOS) February 3, 2025
Getting a ticket to the Big Game is only half the battle. Finding lodging for the weekend can be more challenging.
New Orleans is experiencing historically high hotel rates for the upcoming Super Bowl weekend.
Per a report by Front Office Sports, two-star hotels in the New Orleans area are approaching $1,000 per night. Additionally, higher-rated hotels — ones with four and five stars — are nearing $4,000 per night, with some requiring a three-night minimum.
Why is the rate so high? Kyla Moore told Nola.com that Super Bowl LVIII in Las Vegas reset the hotel market.
“Las Vegas became the new benchmark for Super Bowl hotel rates,” said Moore, an analyst at Expedia Group who studies industry trends.
Surge pricing could continue throughout the rest of the week, depending on the ticket prices.
Super Bowl LIX between the Chiefs and Eagles will be played on Feb. 9.