
Jan 4, 2026; Inglewood, California, USA; Los Angeles Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford (9) leaves the field following a game against the Arizona Cardinals at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images
Not all NFL stadiums feel the same on game day, and once you bake in what you’re paying, that gap gets pretty obvious.
The Action Network analyzed 30 NFL stadiums using a custom-built Super Bowl Stadium Experience Index, tracking how often fans end up disappointed compared to what they spend to attend a game. Because a “great stadium” hits different when your parking costs more than your seat.
The index blends:
Those two feed into an overall index (0-100), based on the average of the two ranking factors above. Then, the result is a ranking that highlights:
All data was collected from publicly available sources and frozen as of December 2025.
Disappointment Score: 100.0 (worst)
Value Score: 69.21 (most expensive)
Gameday costs:
SoFi finishes dead last overall. The pricing is brutal, and the share of negative fan reviews is the worst in the league, too. When a venue is billed as the modern standard, that combo is going to get noticed.
Disappointment Score: 78.25
Value Score: 45.30
Gameday costs:
This one lands at No. 2 mostly on disappointment. Costs are more “average NFL Sunday” than truly premium, but the fan review mix is rough enough that it still ends up as one of the worst overall value plays.
Disappointment Score: 52.04
Value Score: 47.26
Gameday costs:
The ticket price looks fine until you hit the parking number. Highmark’s parking cost is one of the highest in the league, and when you stack that with weather exposure, older infrastructure, and limited amenities, the disappointment score makes more sense.
Disappointment Score: 38.77
Value Score: 54.31
Gameday costs:
Allegiant charges like a destination stadium, because it is one. However, the fan sentiment here isn’t matching the price tag, and that gap shows up even more for visiting fans who are already paying the Vegas premium to be in town.
Disappointment Score: 26.18
Value Score: 63.96
Gameday costs:
Levi’s gets pulled up the list by cost, plain and simple. Tickets are among the most expensive in the league, while fan sentiment sits more in the middle, which leaves you paying a premium without getting “premium” back.
Hopefully Levi won’t be too disappointing this year, as it’s the battleground of Super Bowl LX featuring the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots—check out the latest Seahawks vs. Patriots predictions for Super Bowl 60.
Disappointment Score: 25.53
Value Score: 60.89
Gameday costs:
The Linc has the atmosphere people expect from Philly, but it’s not cheap. Between the ticket price and concession costs, it still ends up in the top six, even with fans generally enjoying the day.
Disappointment Score: 26.71
Value Score: 44.71
Gameday costs:
Soldier Field’s ranking is more “price and reviews drifting the wrong way” than one single dealbreaker. It’s iconic, but the sentiment data suggests the gameday experience hasn’t kept pace with what fans are paying lately.
Disappointment Score: 23.49
Value Score: 44.33
Gameday costs:
Raymond James makes the top 10 mostly because the costs are climbing. Fan sentiment stays relatively steady, but the total spend is what keeps pushing it into “not great value” territory.
Disappointment Score: 26.43
Value Score: 40.94
Gameday costs:
This is that classic old-stadium tradeoff. The costs aren’t outrageous, but the negative review share is high enough that it still grades out poorly overall, with age and lakefront weather exposure showing up as repeat issues.
Disappointment Score: 25.59
Value Score: 36.94
Gameday costs:
MetLife hosts two teams, but that doesn’t automatically fix the value question. The disappointment score is still high compared to what you’re paying, which is why it finishes inside the 10 weakest overall stadium experiences.
If you’re looking to bet on the Super Bowl this year, you should definitely check out the FanDuel promo code. And if you’re not in a legal sports betting state, the best prediction market apps are a good alternative as they offer trading on event contracts related to the Super Bowl and other markets.
The NFL Stadium Experience Index evaluates the gameday experience at all 30 NFL stadiums using two core measures: Disappointment Score and Value Score. All data was collected from publicly available sources and frozen as of December 2025.
Fan dissatisfaction was measured using TripAdvisor review data collected from each stadium’s official listing, including:
From this, a Negative Review Share was calculated:
After normalization, the star rating was inverted so higher values reflect worse experiences.
The final Disappointment Score is a weighted combination:
Higher scores indicate more disappointing fan experiences.
All metrics were normalized using a min-max (0-100) scale to ensure comparability across variables. Each stadium was ranked separately by Disappointment Score and Value Score, then evaluated across both dimensions to identify:
You can find the full dataset here.
More must-reads:
+
Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!