Super Bowl 50 ticket prices still rising

The lowest price for a Super Bowl 50 ticket: $3,000. 

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(AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
Dolores F. Dibella, NFL Counsel, holds up authentic Super Bowl 50 tickets during a counterfeit merchandise news conference Thursday, Feb. 4, 2016, in San Francisco.

For a mere $3,000, you can attend the Super Bowl.

That's the lowest price of a ticket to the big game on Sunday, according to an executive from the online ticket marketplace StubHub.

Prices are holding steady, said Jason Deppen, StubHub's director of field operations.

"We're seeing prices as low as $3,000 to get in, so we are talking upper corner, upper end zone. Those prices are hovering around $3,000. The average price we're seeing — $4,500, $4,700 — and prices get up to into the tens of thousands depending on suite levels, and lower sidelines of course," Deppen said.

That's higher than last year's Super Bowl (2/1/15 Patriots-Seahawks) average, which was a record: $4,222.

The most expensive ticket sold so far: $27,983 for a seat at the Lower Prime Club, reports NBC Bay Area.

StubHub has already sold nearly 5,000 tickets, and it expects sales to reach 6,000 before kickoff, Deppen said. But historically, StubHub is only responsible for about 5-10 percent of all Super Bowl tickets sold.

"We have not seen a lot of downward trend movement, which we have seen in the past at other Super Bowls. I don't know if I expect it to go too much down on how much inventory is left on game day," Deppen said.

To sweeten the pot, StubHub is offering Fan Fair for buyers shelling out the big bucks. The company rented out the Great America amusement park before the game.

"This is actually a free experience for any StubHub customer, so if you buy your ticket on StubHub for the Super Bowl, this is a gift to you back from us. It's a little surprise and delight, and something we like to do for all of our fans," said Justin Finn, the company's head of event marketing.

Where are most ticket buyers from?

StubHub data shows that 27 percent are from California. The next biggest group of buyers (10 percent) are Panther fans from North Carolina, followed closely by Bronco fans from Colorado (9 percent).

StubHub president Scott Cuttler tells Sports Illustrated:

Cam Newton has already had an impact on ticket sales. We’re seeing Carolina fans buying more Super Bowl tickets than Broncos fans, even though Colorado is closer to California. Chalk that up to the large fan base that Cam’s been building since high school, from Atlanta to Florida, and Texas to Alabama.

Finishing out the Top 5 states for Super Bowl fans: New Yorkers (6 percent) and Texans (5 percent). 

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