Ford Field Pricing Got You Looking at Road Trips? Same
With the 2026 schedule release behind us, it’s time for the annual tradition of Lions fans everywhere: figuring out which away games we can actually afford to attend. Because yes, it has somehow become cheaper to fly to another city, get a hotel, and watch the Lions play than it is to buy tickets at Ford Field. Let that sink in for a moment.
This is both deeply depressing and oddly brilliant. Ford Field has priced out its own fanbase so effectively that we’ve accidentally become one of the better traveling fanbases in the NFL. Nothing says “Detroit vs. Everybody” quite like having to leave Detroit to afford watching your own team.
The silver lining? Lions fans have gotten really good at turning enemy territory into Honolulu Blue territory. We’ve been showing up in numbers that would make our front office proud, if they weren’t too busy counting ticket revenue to notice.
The Bucket List Stadium Debate
Every Lions fan worth their salt has a mental list of stadiums they want to hit before they die. Some have already made the rounds to places like U.S. Bank Stadium, M&T Bank Stadium, SoFi Stadium, Raymond James Stadium, and Hard Rock Stadium. Good for them. The rest of us are still saving up.
But there’s one stadium that sits at the top of most Lions fans’ bucket lists, and it hurts to admit: Lambeau Field.
Yeah, I said it. The frozen tundra. The cathedral of cheese. The place where Aaron Rodgers spent years making our lives miserable and where Jordan Love is apparently picking up right where he left off.
Why Lambeau Has to Be Done
Look, Lambeau isn’t going to win any architectural awards. It’s old, it’s basic, and it sits in the middle of a residential neighborhood like someone just plopped down an NFL stadium between two houses and called it good. But that’s exactly what makes it special.
The history alone demands respect. This place has been hosting NFL games since the Eisenhower administration. The ghosts of Vince Lombardi and Bart Starr still roam those sidelines. And as much as it kills us to admit, the Packers are our biggest rival. You can’t truly understand this rivalry until you’ve sat in their house and felt what we’re up against.
Plus, there’s something to be said for keeping your enemies close. Know thy enemy and all that.
The other obvious choice would be Soldier Field, but let’s be honest. Soldier Field has all the charm of a concrete bunker with worse sightlines. Lambeau has a reputation. Soldier Field has complaints.
So where’s your dream road trip taking you? Are you brave enough to venture into Lambeau, or do you have your sights set on somewhere warmer where our boys in Honolulu Blue can actually feel their fingers in December?







This is actually wild when you think about it – we’ve got such an amazing traveling fanbase now because our own stadium is out of reach for regular people. But you know what, with Campbell and Holmes running things, I genuinely believe Ford Field will become a place fans want to be again soon. The energy around this team is different and tickets will feel worth it when we’re consistently winning.
Look, I love the optimism about the new era, but let’s be real – the ticket prices aren’t dropping anytime soon no matter how good we get. I’ll still catch games here and there but yeah, I’ve already priced out trips to Buffalo and Jacksonville where I can actually afford to sit down and watch without stress.
You know, I’ve been going to games since way back and I gotta say, what Dan Campbell has done with this team’s culture reminds me of the better days we’ve had. The roster feels different, the direction feels right. Lambeau will always be on the bucket list just for the rivalry history, but I’m starting to actually want to watch more games at home instead of running away from prices.
The whole situation is backwards but also kind of genius for us as fans honestly. We get to travel and represent in places like Tampa and Arizona where it’s actually affordable, and then we’re catching great vibes while our team keeps building something special under Campbell. Road games are the new home games for broke Lions fans like me.