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How Much Does an NFL Luxury Suite Cost?

Published on | Prices Last Reviewed for Freshness: December 2025
Written by Alec Pow - Economic & Pricing Investigator | Content Reviewed by CFA Alexander Popinker

Educational content; not financial advice. Prices are estimates; confirm current rates, fees, taxes, and terms with providers or official sources.

NFL suites are back in the pop-culture news cycle after Taylor Swift’s high-visibility appearances in private boxes. Around Super Bowl LVIII in Las Vegas on Feb. 11, 2024, Travis Kelce said the suite ran about $3,000,000, a reminder that celebrity demand, matchup heat, and venue cachet can push the very top of the market. Coverage from Vanity Fair and Sports Illustrated captured the sticker shock.

Typical Super Bowl LX suite packages are $600,000–$1,500,000 and usually include catering, according to Suite Experience Group (as of Feb. 2025).

For regular season games, many single-game suites price closer to a small wedding than a night out. The San Francisco 49ers publish a posted range of $10,000–$45,000 per game with tickets, VIP parking, and a food credit (as of Nov. 2025). A league comparison shows season owner packages from roughly $16,000 in small markets to around $75,000 in destination venues, per Covers (as of Jul. 2025). Below are the common price bands, real examples, and the add-ons that turn a quote into a full budget.

TL;DR

  • Regular season single-game suites in big markets often land between $10,000–$45,000 with tickets, VIP parking, and a catering credit.
  • Season owner packages range widely, from about $16,000 in value markets to around $75,000 in top markets.
  • Super Bowl suites typically quote at $600,000–$1,500,000, with reported highs near $3,000,000 for best-in-house views.
  • Plan roughly $100 per guest for classic food and drinks at regular season games unless the package is all-inclusive.
  • To save, pick non-marquee opponents, favor early-season dates, cap the menu, and consider smaller markets over Vegas or the coasts.

One-line anchor: Think $10–45k regular season, $16–75k season owner packages, and $600k–$1.5M+ Super Bowl.

Because suites bundle private space, a fixed ticket allotment, parking, and hospitality, the top line looks steep, yet the per guest math can be efficient when you fill the room and keep the menu focused, especially for corporate hosting or milestone events. Prices move with demand.

Expect wide spreads across markets and events. Single-game suite rentals in high-income metros run materially higher than smaller markets. Postseason nights spike. Super Bowl inventory sits in its own stratosphere. This guide maps the common price bands, shows real cases teams and vendors publish, and calls out the add-ons that turn a quote into a complete budget.

Big money. Big expectations.

How Much Does an NFL Luxury Suite Cost?

For regular season games, a practical starting point is a single-game rental at a team’s official suite site. At Levi’s Stadium, the San Francisco 49ers single-game rentals list at $10,000 to $45,000 depending on opponent and date, with VIP parking passes and a food and beverage credit included (as of Nov. 2025).

Season-long pricing can look modest in smaller markets and very high in glamour venues. A mid-2025 league comparison reported the Jacksonville Jaguars at $16,000 for an owner’s package that accommodates 24 guests and includes 10 parking spots, while the Las Vegas Raiders led the table at $75,000 (as of Jul. 2025). See the Covers league comparison for examples by team.

The ceiling arrives in February. For Super Bowl LX packages in the Bay Area, Suite Experience Group shows typical suite packages at $600,000 to $1,500,000 (as of Feb. 2025). Reporting has described marquee boxes reaching toward $3,000,000 at the very top for the most coveted sightlines (as of Feb. 2025).

Regular season single-game $10–45k. Season owner packages $16–75k. Super Bowl suites $600k–$1.5M+.

See the quick tier table below for common anchors a buyer can reference before requesting quotes.

Tier or event Typical price As of Example source
Regular season, single-game suite $10,000–$45,000 Nov 2025 49ers official suites
Season owner package, smaller market $16,000 Jul 2025 Covers comparison
Season owner package, top market $75,000 Jul 2025 Covers comparison
Super Bowl, typical suite range $600,000–$1,500,000 Feb 2025 Suite Experience Group
Super Bowl, reported highs to ~$3,000,000 Feb 2025 Parade reporting

Real-life cost examples

Case 1, Bay Area single-game rental: A buyer booking a midseason divisional opponent at Levi’s Stadium would see a posted range of $10,000 to $45,000 for a private suite that includes a set number of tickets, VIP parking, and a catering credit. This is a complete premium experience out of the box, though the final total still depends on added menu orders.

Case 2, season package in a value market: Value exists in smaller markets. The Jaguars’ owner’s package at roughly $16,000 with capacity for 24 and 10 parking spots shows how far a budget can stretch in Northeast Florida.

You might also like our articles about the cost of an NFL ticket, NFL RedZone, or NFL Network.

Case 3, season package at the top end: The Raiders’ owner’s suite package at about $75,000 reflects Allegiant Stadium’s draw and Las Vegas hospitality demand. Teams like the Lions, Chargers, and Rams tend to price in the upper tier as well.

Case 4, Super Bowl premium: For Super Bowl LX, typical private suites are quoted at $600,000 to $1,500,000, while marquee boxes can approach $3,000,000 for the best views and inclusions.

All-in check: Big-market single game at $22k base can land near $1.3–1.5k per guest once you fill the seats and keep the menu classic.

Cost breakdown

Base suite fee and ticket allotment. The base price buys the room and a fixed number of tickets. In the 49ers example, single-game rentals include tickets and VIP parking passes, which reduces planning friction and helps benchmark the per-guest math. If you price the middle of the posted range against 16 to 20 seats, the per person base can compare to high-end club seats in the same building.

Catering and beverages. At regular season games, catering is usually optional and billed to order. Typical game-day menus for suites can range from simple snacks to premium carving stations. A working budget many planners use is roughly $100 per guest for classic menus with beer and wine, then scale for premium cocktails or specialty items.

Service, processing, and staff fees. Teams and vendors may charge order fees on catering, plus convenience fees on the suite invoice. These are not headline numbers, yet they appear on finals and can add a few hundred dollars, sometimes more on larger orders.

Security deposits and insurance. Some contracts collect a refundable deposit against damage or require a credit card authorization. Enterprise buyers sometimes add a one-time insurance rider through their broker if compliance requires it.

Parking, drivers, and travel. Many official suite packages include VIP parking passes. If you need additional valet, buses, or rideshare staging, budget separate transport costs. For out-of-market trips to postseason games and the Super Bowl, hotels and airfare often rival the suite’s food budget.

Upgrades and tech. Optional upgrades include expanded guest counts with standing room, in-suite branding or décor, and dedicated attendant staffing. These features increase both the experience and the bill.

Taxes. Local taxes apply to the base fee and some food and beverage and can be material in high-tax jurisdictions.

Worked example: a company books a single-game suite at $22,000. They invite 18 guests, order classic catering at $100 per person and add premium bottles at $500. Fees and taxes land at $1,200. With parking included, the all-in is $25,300, or $1,406 per guest.

Hidden-costs: Plan for service fees, order-minimum rules, and tax. These small lines add up.

Factors influencing the cost

Team, opponent, and market popularity. Big-brand teams, superstar quarterbacks, and rivalry matchups push rates up. New or renovated venues with modern clubs and sightlines do the same. Celebrity interest around particular games can nudge the top end higher still.

Location within the building. Sideline midfield suites and lower-level locations trade at a premium. Elevated angles near the fifty can price above end zone glass boxes with deeper views. Some venues run micro-markets like terrace loges or bunker suites.

Calendar and game stakes. Early season weekdays can be cheaper. Late-season games that decide seeding or the division are usually more expensive. Home playoff dates escalate, and the once-a-year Super Bowl sits far above anything else.

Macro factors and inflation. Corporate entertainment budgets, hospitality inflation, and travel costs move the line. For a market pulse, see Marca’s 2025 coverage on demand shifts and TickPick’s guide for historical context.

Rule of thumb: Opponent, venue, and date do most of the pricing work. Everything else is rounding error.

Comparable hospitality experiences

Premium club seating. Stadium club seats offer wider chairs, lounge access, and curated concessions for less than a private box. You lose the private room, yet keep most of the comfort. For eight to ten guests, a club block often wins on price efficiency.

Shared or partial suites. Marketplaces sometimes match unused boxes with fans and businesses that want privacy without a lease. Inventory is not guaranteed for every date, yet it is a smart trial before a bigger spend.

All-inclusive hospitality packages. For the Super Bowl, official hospitality pairs guaranteed seat locations with club access and add-ons like legend appearances or postgame field time. It reduces planning complexity without buying a room.

Group ticket blocks and event spaces. Many teams rent event rooms on non-game days or sell large contiguous ticket blocks with pregame reception space. The feel is different, but the outcomes for networking or celebration can be similar.

If you do not need a door: Club seats plus a pregame lounge deliver many of the same outcomes for far less money.

Ways to spend less

NFL Luxury SuitePick a non-marquee opponent, ideally early in the season. Choose Sunday afternoon over prime nights. Compare smaller markets to big coasts and Las Vegas. Keep the guest count to the included tickets to avoid higher per-person rates on standing-room add-ons.

Cap the menu and order classics. A common working budget is about $100 per person for food and standard drinks, which covers crowd-pleasers without waste. Consider a shared or marketplace suite for privacy without a lease. For postseason trips, book hotel blocks early.

Savings checklist: Non-marquee game, early season date, tight guest list, classic menu, value market if travel allows.

Answers to Common Questions

How far in advance should I book a suite?
For regular season games, many corporate buyers book one to two months out. For postseason dates, inquire as soon as seeding looks likely. Super Bowl suites sell through specialized providers and often require full prepayment.

Are food and drinks included in the price?
At most regular season games, catering is optional and billed separately. Some teams include a small credit. Super Bowl packages commonly include all food and beverage in the package price.

How many people fit in a typical suite?
Common configurations include 12 to 20 tickets with options for a few standing-room add-ons. Owner’s suites in some markets accommodate up to 24 or more.

Is a suite ever cheaper per person than club seats?
Yes, when you fill the included tickets, keep the menu to classics, and value the private room’s utility for hosting. The per-person base can pencil near high-end club seats, especially for weekday or non-marquee opponents in value markets.

Prices in USD, verified Nov. 10, 2025. Sources: San Francisco 49ers, Suite Experience Group, Covers, Parade, Sports Illustrated, Vanity Fair, TickPick, Marca.

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