NBA Finals Tickets — How to Buy, Prices & When to Watch
NBA Finals tickets are among the most expensive in North American sports — this guide covers pricing, buying strategy, and what home vs away game access looks like.
The NBA Finals are the single most expensive ticket on the North American sports calendar in most years, occasionally eclipsed only by a Super Bowl in a marquee market or a Game 7 World Series. The Finals' combination of factors — best-of-seven format, only two participating teams, indoor capacity caps around 18,000 to 20,000, and a global broadcast audience that creates a "be there in person" premium — pushes face values into the high hundreds and resale into the thousands. This guide walks through how Finals pricing has historically moved, how the bracket and seating allocations actually work, how to access the limited supply of presale inventory, the trade-offs between official resale and third-party marketplaces, what to expect in each modern Finals venue, and what to do when you cannot get tickets but still want to watch like you are there.
NBA Finals ticket pricing — what the numbers actually look like
Face value for an NBA Finals seat typically runs $300 to $400 in the upper bowl on weeknight games, climbs to roughly $800 to $1,200 in the lower bowl for mid-series games, and lands between $2,000 and $3,500 face for premium courtside on closeout games. Those are face numbers — the actual market is set on resale, which has historically run two to five times face for desirable games. Game 1, Game 7, and any potential clinch game in the home market routinely clear $5,000 to $10,000 per seat for lower bowl on the secondary market; courtside on a Game 7 has hit $25,000 to $50,000 per seat in recent series. The 2024 NBA Finals between the Celtics and Mavericks saw Game 1 at TD Garden resale averages near $3,200 in the lower bowl; the 2023 Heat-Nuggets Finals saw Ball Arena Game 5 clinch prices spike past $5,000 in the 200 level. Mid-series weekday games in less-marquee matchups occasionally soften in the 48 hours before tip-off, but the floor under Finals resale almost never drops below 1.5x face for a lower-bowl seat. Add roughly 25 to 30 percent in marketplace fees on top of whatever sticker price you see.
How the series schedule and home/away allocation work
The NBA Finals is a best-of-seven series in a 2-2-1-1-1 format: Games 1, 2, 5 and 7 are played in the higher-seeded team's home arena; Games 3, 4 and 6 are played in the lower-seeded team's home arena. The series schedule is fixed before Game 1 (typically with two days off between Games 2 and 3 and Games 5 and 6, and one day off between most other games), but Games 5, 6 and 7 are "if necessary" — they only happen if the series has not ended. That conditional structure matters for your ticket: if you buy a Game 6 ticket on a hopeful clinch, and the series ends in five, your purchase is automatically refunded by the league or marketplace at the original price. The home team controls roughly 95 percent of inventory in its building. There is no neutral-site Game 7. Visiting-team fans buy through resale only — there is no friendly cross-team allocation.
How presale access actually works
The two reliable presale lanes are Ticketmaster's Verified Fan queue (when the league chooses to run one) and team-specific season-ticket-holder rights. Season-ticket holders for both Finals teams get first crack at their team's home games, and that channel clears the majority of lower-bowl inventory before any public sale opens. The remaining inventory goes to a Verified Fan presale and then a public on-sale, both of which are typically over within minutes. American Express cardmember presales on the league-wide level have been inconsistent in recent Finals — sometimes they run, sometimes the league reserves the inventory for sponsors. For the deeper credit-card and platform-by-platform mechanics that overlap with concert ticket buying, see the Ticketmaster presale guide. If you do not have a season-ticket account or a Verified Fan code, the realistic path to a Finals seat is the resale market, not the official on-sale.
Official resale vs third-party marketplaces
Ticketmaster Fan-to-Fan resale is the league's official secondary market. Inventory there is guaranteed authentic, transfers electronically, and is covered by the standard buyer-protection policy. StubHub and SeatGeek are the main third-party marketplaces; both also offer purchase protection and authentic-ticket guarantees, and both typically list a wider selection than Fan-to-Fan because they aggregate brokers and individual sellers. Vivid Seats and TickPick round out the secondary market — TickPick's flat "no buyer fee" pricing model often clears at a meaningfully lower total than the same listing on a percentage-fee competitor. The practical play is to comparison-shop across all four marketplaces for the exact same section and row, then buy on the lowest total-price platform with buyer protection. Be careful with anything outside that set: Craigslist, Facebook Marketplace, and Reddit private-sale tickets have no buyer protection, and counterfeit barcodes are common around Finals dates.
Venue-by-venue notes for current Finals markets
Chase Center in San Francisco has 18,064 capacity for basketball and a remarkably steep upper bowl — sightlines are strong even in the 200 level, and the building is designed around premium clubs that make floor seats some of the most expensive in the league. TD Garden in Boston is the spiritual home of NBA Finals atmosphere; the upper-bowl loge sections are legendary for crowd noise, and the 100 level corners offer the best Finals value for buyers who want to be in the building without paying lower-bowl center prices. Kaseya Center in Miami has a distinctive bowl geometry where the lower seats wrap unusually tight to the court, making 100 level corner seats feel closer than the same section at most arenas. Ball Arena in Denver sits at 5,280 feet of elevation, which matters for visiting fans more than seat selection. Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles has the deepest celebrity-row floor culture but also the highest courtside pricing in the league. AAC in Dallas, Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, and Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee are the modern Western and Eastern frontier markets — slightly softer Finals pricing, equally electric crowds. For deeper league-wide context, see the NBA section at Catch Movement.
When you cannot get tickets — watching the Finals like you are there
Most NBA fans watch the Finals at home, but a great sports bar can be the next-best thing if your local team is playing. Look for venues with a sound system tied to broadcast audio (not just background music), at least one screen per main viewing area in 4K or better, and a reservation policy — popular bars in Boston, San Francisco, Miami, Dallas, Denver, Los Angeles, Oklahoma City and Milwaukee fill up an hour before tip-off on Finals nights. NBA League Pass gets you every regular-season and early-round playoff game on-demand, but the Finals themselves are blacked out on League Pass and require ABC for the broadcast — plan accordingly. The official NBA app has the best second-screen experience with live stats, alternate camera angles, and condensed-game replays. For neutral-market fans who want to make a trip of it without the ticket cost, traveling to the host city, watching Game 1 at a marquee local bar, and absorbing the city's energy is genuinely worthwhile.
Buying timeline — what to do and when
Once the Conference Finals match-ups are set, mark the calendar: NBA Finals tickets typically go on sale within 24 to 48 hours of the second Conference Finals series ending. Register for any Verified Fan queue the league announces immediately. Set price alerts on Ticketmaster Fan-to-Fan, StubHub, SeatGeek, and TickPick for your target section. Watch the first 72 hours after the on-sale — that is when the most inventory hits the secondary market and prices are still volatile. Mid-series weekday games and any Game 6 in an underdog market are the most likely "soft" windows in the final 24 to 48 hours pre-game. Game 1, Game 7, and any potential clinch game in the home market are the worst windows — those prices essentially never come down, and last-minute supply dries up. For Game 6 and Game 7 tickets, only buy on platforms with a guaranteed refund policy if the game is not played.
What the in-arena experience is actually like
A Finals game inside the building is qualitatively different from a regular-season NBA game or even a Conference Finals game. Security perimeters extend further than usual — most home teams expand the secure zone to include the surrounding plaza, so plan to arrive 90 minutes before tip-off rather than 30. The pre-game introductions are longer and more produced; expect a 10-to-15-minute video package on the home team's playoff run before player introductions, with full arena blackouts and choreographed light shows. National anthems are often performed by major recording artists rather than local choirs. Halftime entertainment for Finals games is closer to All-Star Game caliber than a typical regular-season halftime. Concessions sell out faster than a regular game because the building is at full capacity and the food trucks see fewer no-shows; if you want a non-generic dinner, eat before the building. Most Finals home teams hand out a free promotional item at the gate for Game 1 — t-shirts, towels, and rally rags are standard, and they double as keepsakes.
Watching Game 7 — the format-specific edge
Game 7 of the NBA Finals is its own category. The series-decider format means every possession carries weight that no other basketball game does, and the in-arena energy reflects that. If you can buy a single Finals game on resale and have to choose, Game 7 is the experience to chase — but it is also the most expensive ticket of the season by a wide margin, and the supply is the thinnest because home season-ticket holders almost never resell their Game 7 seats. Game 1 is the second-best in-arena experience for atmosphere, partly because it is everyone's first Finals game of the year and partly because the pre-game production is at its biggest. Mid-series games (3, 4, 5) are the most attainable financially and the easiest to plan travel around because their dates and locations are confirmed before you book.
Final note on broker timing
If you are buying through a broker rather than a direct seller, do not buy a Game 6 or Game 7 ticket before the previous game tips off. Brokers will list speculative inventory for unplayed conditional games at inflated prices on the assumption that the series will reach that game, and if the series ends early, your refund is processed at the original price minus marketplace fees in some cases. Wait until Game 5 or Game 6 ends and the next game is confirmed as needed before you click buy. The exception is if you have flexible travel and can absorb the refund risk — early speculative buying on Game 6 occasionally produces the best price you will see on that game if it does happen.