With more inventory hitting the secondary market in the last few days, prices for Super Bowl 57 are finally dropping. As of Thursday morning, the average list price on the secondary market has dropped 32% since its peak last Wednesday, and the cheapest ticket has also dropped 32% since it peaked on Friday.
On the inventory side, the number of tickets available on the secondary market is up 35%. As of Tuesday morning, there were over 3,250 tickets available. However, quantity is down 5% from its peak on Tuesday.
This game had been sitting as the 2nd-most expensive Super Bowl on record, but following this week’s drop, the average list price on the secondary market is $6,783, making it just the 5th-most expensive Super Bowl we’ve tracked three days before the game.
The least expensive tickets for the game are $4,259, which is the 4th-most expensive we’ve tracked at this point in time.
Super Bowl blog post
Super Bowl page with real-time data
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Flywheel Publishing has partnered with CardRatings for our coverage of credit card products. Flywheel Publishing and CardRatings may receive a commission from card issuers.
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