How to Buy Baltimore Ravens Tickets for the 2025 Season

The Ravens play 17 regular-season games across fall and winter at M&T Bank Stadium in Downtown Baltimore, with playoff rounds potentially extending into January. This guide covers where tickets sell, realistic price ranges for different seat locations, timing strategies that affect cost, and how the secondary market works in practice for this franchise.

Official Sales and Season Ticket Holders

The Ravens sell primary tickets through their official website and Ticketmaster. Single-game tickets typically go on sale in summer, roughly six to eight weeks before the season opener. Prices start around $65 for upper-deck corners and climb to $400+ for lower-bowl sideline seats near midfield. Premium sightline seats (club level, field level) run $500 to $1,500 per ticket depending on opponent and game timing.

Season ticket holders (approximately 60,000 people) receive first access and often resell unused games on secondary markets. This creates a supply pattern: games release to the general public around mid-July, and prices either hold steady or dip slightly if demand is weak. Playoff tickets, if earned, follow a separate lottery system for non-season-ticket holders; the Ravens notify winners through official channels only.

The Ravens' email list is worth joining even if you don't buy a full season. The team announces flash sales and presales to subscribers before general public availability. Playoff tickets in particular move fast enough that a three-day head start matters.

Secondary Market Reality and Timing

StubHub, SeatGeek, and Ticketmaster's resale platform host Ravens tickets year-round. Prices on these sites fluctuate by opponent, weather forecast, and how recently someone listed them. A game against a division rival in November will cost more than a September matchup against a weak out-of-conference team. A Monday night game draws lower prices than Sunday afternoon. Weather matters too: if a forecast shifts from clear to heavy rain on game day, upper-deck tickets often drop 20 to 40 percent in the final 48 hours.

The practical insight: tickets cheapest immediately after the schedule drops (late spring), when sellers haven't yet assessed division strength, playoff likelihood, or weather. Prices typically rise again by August. If you're flexible on opponent, waiting until Wednesday before a Sunday game often yields better secondary market prices than buying the previous weekend.

Resale platforms charge buyer's fees of 10 to 25 percent on top of ticket price. A $150 ticket becomes $165 to $185 after fees. StubHub and SeatGeek pricing tends to be slightly lower than Ticketmaster resale, though the difference narrows for high-demand games. Checking all three takes five minutes and saves money on premium games.

M&T Bank Stadium Seating and Sightlines

The stadium holds roughly 71,000 people. Lower-bowl seats (sections 101 to 142) run the full perimeter and offer clear sight lines. Sideline lower-bowl (sections 105 to 130) costs most; corner lower-bowl (sections 101 to 104, 133 to 142) drops 15 to 25 percent in price for the same ticket type. Endzone lower-bowl seats have obstructed views during plays near the opposite end; prices reflect this and represent poor value.

Upper deck (sections 201 to 242) provides full-field viewing and sits close enough to see play detail without video boards. Corner sections are cheaper than sideline. The 300-level club seats include access to climate-controlled club areas and premium concessions; these run $40 to $60 more per ticket than standard upper deck.

Accessibility seating is available and should be reserved through the Ravens' ticketing office rather than secondary markets; call ahead to confirm availability for specific games.

The Ravens play home games Sunday at 1 p.m. (fall) or evening slots (winter), occasionally Monday or Thursday. Sunday afternoon games have the strongest attendance; Monday and Thursday primetime games draw local bars and out-of-state viewers but lower stadium attendance, which can mean easier parking and bathroom lines. Weather protection matters: the stadium is open-air, so games in November and December expose fans to cold and wind. Upper deck endzone sections get the least sun protection; plan accordingly.

Practical Buying Strategy

  1. Best timing for primary sales: Sign up for Ravens email alerts by July. Buy single-game tickets within two weeks of public on-sale date if you have flexibility on seat location; prices stabilize quickly after that initial wave.

  2. Cheapest secondary market window: Week of game, Tuesday or Wednesday, for non-division opponents in September or early October.

  3. Avoid these choices: Endzone seats even if cheaper; they're cheaper for reason. Resellers' "best available" packages that bundle playoff-round rights to unused games; you'll lose money if the Ravens miss playoffs.

  4. For division games and playoffs: Buy within 48 hours of on-sale if possible. These sell out secondary market inventory in days.

Parking at M&T Bank Stadium runs $20 to $40 depending on lot proximity; reserve in advance during high-demand games. Public transit via the Light Rail (Green or Red Line to Camden Station, one block south of the stadium) costs $2 and avoids parking hassle, though it's crowded during post-game rush.

Tickets exist and are available for every Ravens regular-season game. The question is always timing and seat preference versus price. A $90 upper-deck corner seat offers the same view of the field as a $200 lower-bowl corner; the choice depends on your budget and willingness to climb stairs.