I noticed in one of the Jets playoff ticket ads today (https://twitter.com/NHLJets/status/1759971255824859603) a link to next year’s season ticket pricing, and it looks like prices have gone down for next year. To my eyes there’s an approx 10% reduction for most ticket prices listed in the new page.
Some examples (full season pricing):
| Area | 2023-2024 | 2024-2025 | Difference | Difference % |
|—————————-|———–|———–|————|————–|
| 200 Center Ice (LB1) | 8002 | 7181 | -821 | -10.26% |
| Blueline 100 defend (LB3) | 7483 | 6618 | -865 | -11.56% |
| Corners 200 Defend (LB10) | 5709 | 5061 | -648 | -11.35% |
| Center Ice 300 Lower (UB1) | 4284 | 4023 | -261 | -6.09% |
| Ends 300 mid (UB8) | 2856 | 2510 | -346 | -12.11% |
Definitely possible that this is missing something in the comparison, but that’s a positive for next year if it’s right.
Sources:
– 2024-2025 pricing: https://www.nhl.com/jets/tickets/deposit-pricing
– 2023-2024 pricing: https://media.d3.nhle.com/image/private/t_document/prd/l559sliwru8rrtosb9g6.pdf
by trill13
3 Comments
It makes sense.
Increase prices until you see a decline in sales, then do the math to find the optimal price to maximize revenue.
Doesn’t generate you much goodwill, but with an in-demand product like the Jets, that doesn’t really matter.
Lmao I was a nerd that used calculus to maximize profits in my EANHL franchises like this. Granted it was easier because the curve was predetermined, but still. More money at like 90% full at a higher price than filling the barn at a lower price.
Is that price after the $250 deposit? Or is the $250 come off that price?
My seats were $3715 (+taxes) in 22-23, and according to this, would be $3460… which is almost exactly the deposit difference ($3460 + $250 = $3710)? I’d be kind of surprised if they shaved that much off the price to be honest.
This is welcoming news.