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Ranking Michigan football's 2024 home games by ticket prices

Anthony Broomeby:Anthony Broome07/05/24

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COLLEGE FOOTBALL: SEP 11 Washington at Michigan
ANN ARBOR, MI - SEPTEMBER 11: General view as the scoreboard urges fans to make noise during a college football game between the Washington Huskies and Michigan Wolverines on Sept. 11, 2021 at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, Mich. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

The Michigan Wolverines enter the 2024 season with one of the most loaded schedules in the country and a ton of hype as last year’s College Football Playoff National Champion.

This year’s slate of home games at the Big House is one of the best in venue history thanks to the expanded Big Ten and a big-time non-conference showdown with Texas.

“We know we’ve got a great schedule, but we’re not going to look ahead and make one bigger,” head coach Sherrone Moore said this summer. “They’re all of equal value. We know the standard of the team we have to beat down south and we always express that and work for that, but every team is — every game is a big game. So we’ll treat every season like that.” 

These 2024 home contests are ranked below by cheapest to most expensive for the remaining games at Michigan Stadiums.

Note: Figures listed are the cheapest ticket to get into Michigan Stadium with fees included (all-in pricing) on Gametime.co.

1. Texas (Sept. 7) – $638

The regular season’s most marquee home game, a noon kickoff on FOX, is also by far the most expensive to get into with Gametime’s All-In Pricing listing the cheapest ticket at $638 in section 8, row 85 in the endzone. Fans will have to pay a premium to see the first matchup between Texas and U-M since the 2005 Rose Bowl and a showdown of College Football Playoff teams from last season.

2. USC (Sept. 21) – $290

Michigan’s first showdown with USC as a Big Ten opponent currently has a $290 all-in price tag in section 11, row 96. Kick time for the matchup with the Trojans is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. ET on CBS.

3. Michigan State (Oct. 26) – $245

No time is currently set for the rivalry tilt with the Spartans, but $245 gets you in the door in section 10, row 57. It will be a new chapter of the rivalry with first-year head coaches at both schools in Moore and MSU’s Jonathan Smith.

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4. Oregon (Nov. 5) – $228

Some might argue Oregon is the favorite to win the Big Ten, which makes this a massive game in the pecking order, especially with the top two teams in the conference heading to Indianapolis now with divisions scrapped. The cheapest all-in ticket is in section 35, row 96 for $228.

5. Minnesota (Sept. 28) – $145

The Battle for the Little Brown Jug, which is sandwiched between the USC game and a road trip to Washington, has an all-in price of 145 in section 38, row 82. Michigan demolished the Golden Gophers last year by a score of 52-10.

6. Fresno State (Aug. 31) – $118

A pair of tickets for Michigan’s season opener under the lights in Ann Arbor will run you around $118 to get in the door with the cheapest listing in section 37, row 90 in the endzone. It should be quite the celebration on Labor Day weekend as the first game of the Moore era and the first contest since U-M’s national title win in January.

7. Arkansas State (Sept. 14) – $81

The non-conference finale will be the cheapest opportunity to see the Wolverines before the weather takes a turn for the brisk. The all-in price is currently set at $81 in section 37, row 92 for the noon kick.

8. Northwestern (Nov. 23) – $64

The week before Ohio State is the cheapest all season with all-in pricing of $64 in section 38, row 95. It likely comes with Michigan fans needing to layer up to account for the temperatures.

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