Seahawks to sell reclaimed, single-game tickets to public; season-ticket prices rise 4 percent
The Seahawks are again offering single-game seats to the public in two different sales this offseason.
For the second consecutive year, the Seahawks have brought back in-house tickets once owned by brokers and the team is reselling those to the general public. They announced Tuesday they are doing that in two ways: First, 2,400 single-game tickets for the 2016 home schedule will be available with dynamic pricing depending on the attractiveness of the game through ticketmaster.com after the league releases its schedule (which is typically in late April); and 3,400 single-game tickets will be sold at $66 each in July at the CenturyLink Field box office to fans waiting in line.
The team also announced Tuesday its season-ticket prices will increase by what it calls a “blended average” of 4 percent – “blended” in that the team is using what it defines as “feature variable ticket pricing to reflect the value and demand for Seahawks tickets. Final pricing for each game will be finalized once the NFL schedule is released.”
The Seahawks have 61,500 season ticket holders, after a team-record 99.6 percent of them renewed last season for the second consecutive year. The team says it has 12,000 paid members on its “Blue Pride” waiting list for season tickets, and more than 58,000 fans on a “Blue Pride notification list.”
Here is the full release from the team:
Here's what #Seahawks released today on season tickets and sales of single-game 2016 tickets to general public pic.twitter.com/WbEtg4aHwI
— Gregg Bell (@gbellseattle) March 8, 2016
This story was originally published March 8, 2016 at 1:19 PM with the headline "Seahawks to sell reclaimed, single-game tickets to public; season-ticket prices rise 4 percent."