![]() Even more crazily, those figures don’t include any food or beverage – those costs are negotiated separately! Party SuiteĬorporations can also reserve larger executive suites. Reserving one of these suites would cost you ~$15,000 for a pre-season game or ~$25,000 for a regular season game. The smallest party suite can hold up to 20 people and comes with 5 parking passes that usually cost $50 per pass. Pricing for suites is based on what type of game it is – pre-season, regular season or premium (e.g. We had an excellent tour guide called Steve and he shared some figures for how much suites can cost. There’s 21 miles of hot water piped 4 inches below the field, preventing it from freezing over. The field consists of 100% Kentucky blue grass which keeps it green. 100 yards appears to be a much shorter distance in person compared to seeing it on TV. I don’t think any of us had ever seen an NFL game in person, so the first thing we noticed when entering the suite was how small the football field looked. These are only found on levels 2 and 4, with levels 1, 3 and 5 only featuring outdoor seating. Our first stop on the tour was one of the luxury suites. The Hall of Fame is located in the stadium and we had a few minutes to look around before the tour began. As a result, 80% of the proceeds from ticket sales go to local non-profits. The tour itself is run by the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame rather than the Denver Broncos organization. ![]() Denver Broncos Stadium Colorado Sports Hall Of Fame If you ever find yourself in the mile-high city, here’s why you too should go on a Denver Broncos stadium tour. ![]() Even though he’s been a Rams fan for decades, we took him on a Broncos stadium tour as we thought he’d love it anyway. ![]() And despite the Broncos’ recent form, their demand remains robust, with tens of thousands on the waiting list.įor a higher price, the Broncos hope to deliver their loyal customers a better product.Shae’s Dad came to visit us in Denver for the week leading up to Christmas which coincided with his birthday. In the final weeks of the season, the get-in price in some other NFL cities sagged into the single digits. For Week 18 in New Orleans in the climate-controlled Superdome, the price dropped to $9.įor the Broncos game with the lowest secondary demand last season - a Week 15 clash with the Arizona Cardinals, a Brett Rypien-vs.-Colt McCoy starting-QB duel - the get-in price was $20. Denver’s secondary-market ticket value didn’t drop to the same degree as it did in other markets. That happened even though secondary-market demand sagged late in the 5-12 season. On average, Broncos secondary-market seats last year sold for a 40-percent premium over face-value prices. Secondary-market considerations also factored into the Broncos’ ticket plans. Another fan, sitting in a lower-level sideline seat, reported a $19 per-game increase, which came to 10.2 percent. One season-ticket holder in the 100-level end zone said that the cost of their seats - which his family has controlled since 1960 - rose by $20 per game, a 17.2-percent increase. Over 25,000 seats have season-ticket prices below $100 per game. Throughout the general-seating bowl, season-ticket prices increased by 6 to 22 percent. So, a sizable amount of the price increase comes from that alone. Upper-level sideline seats, for example - which were $117.50 per game, on average, in the regular season - cost $52.50 in the preseason. This is because of how the Broncos priced their non-premium seats in 2022.Īt every price level in the general-seating bowls, preseason games were priced 53 to 55 percent below regular-season per-game averages. Having nine regular-season home games is significant, too. ![]() The waiting list for season tickets remains above 50,000, despite the recent on-field downturn. Its season-ticket renewal rates consistently hover in the 98-percent annual range. “We remain focused on offering a variety of pricing options for you based on fair market value while also ensuring we are competitive with other NFL teams,” Leech wrote.Ĭertainly, the market demand offers rationalization for the team’s decision. In a letter sent to season-ticket holders, Broncos president Damani Leech cited a “comprehensive review” with “third-party analysis” of the ticketing landscape, both in the Denver market and league-wide. ![]()
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