Ottawa Senators Tickets 2026 — NHL Schedule, Cheapest Listed & Best Seats
Live Ticketmaster prices for every confirmed Ottawa Senators home game, sorted cheapest first. Atlantic Division pricing context, presale timing, and buying advice tailored to the NHL calendar. For venue-specific guidance (parking, transit, hotels), see the Ottawa cheap-tickets page.
Atlantic Division ticket pricing context
Atlantic Division pricing skews higher than the league average — Original Six markets and Florida's recent dynasty push centre-ice lower-bowl seats into the $250+ range on weekend dates.
- Lower bowl typical range: $120–$280 per seat for regular-season home games
- Upper bowl typical range: $40–$95 per seat
- Rivalry weeks & weekends: add 30–80% to the bands above, especially against Senators's divisional rivals
- Stanley Cup playoff rounds: single-game pricing typically 2–4× regular-season equivalents
No Senators home games currently listed
Ticketmaster hasn't returned upcoming Ottawa Senators home dates at this refresh. New listings typically appear in late August once the league's regular-season schedule is released, with playoff rounds added 24 hours after each clinch.
When to buy — the NHL pricing calendar
- Late August / early September: regular-season single-game on-sale opens. Best selection, worst average price.
- October–November: first-month inventory often softens as casual fans wait. Watch Tuesday and Wednesday home games for the deepest discounts.
- December holidays: demand spikes hard. Avoid the December 26–January 2 window if budget is the priority.
- January–February: the deepest discount window for non-rivalry games. Trade-deadline rumours can swing prices both ways.
- March–April playoff race: divisional matchups get expensive fast as seeding tightens. Conference matchups against teams already eliminated are the best value.
- Stanley Cup Playoffs: round-by-round on-sale within 24 hours of each clinch. First-round tickets are usually cheaper than the following rounds.
Best seats for an NHL game (general)
NHL rinks have a consistent geometry, so the same general seating logic applies across the league:
- Lower bowl behind the nets (sections 100s): shooting-twice views, best for fans who like watching plays develop end-to-end.
- Lower bowl centre ice (200s in some buildings): wider sightlines, premium price.
- Upper bowl corner (300s): best value seat in the building — full ice view, often half the price of equivalent lower-bowl seats.
- Glass seats (rows A–C in the lower bowl): closest to the action but sightlines are blocked by the dasher when the puck is in the near zone.
- Club / loge / suite levels: premium pricing for in-seat service, lounge access, and shorter concession lines.
Section numbers, seat finishes, and accessibility options vary by arena. For section-by-section guidance at Canadian Tire Centre, see the arena seating chart.