[Mar / Apr ’25 added!] Baseball fans: Capital One once again has great seats for 5,000 miles each

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Update 2/28/25: Tickets are available for March and April games (Hat tip to readers in the comments for alerting me!). Remember — there are only 4 cardholder exclusive seats for each game. Many of the highly desirable games will go quickly and then the other tickets are a very poor value. This time around, they are particularly hard to find. You have to know what you’re looking for. See this example from Citi Field where tickets are listed as “$40” in a section where the adjacent sections are going for $100+ per ticket. When you click that section, you’ll see that these are Capital One Cardholder Exclusive tickets available for 5,000 miles each. For reference, all other seats in this section cost more than 20,000 miles per seat in the example below.

There are only 4 cardholder exclusive tickets available for each game. Unfortunately, you’re going to have to know what you’re doing to find them as they appear to be in the same sections as years past, but it isn’t obvious until you see the “Cardholder Exclusive” wording as shown in the box above (and it’s obvious because those seats cost so much less!).

If you click on a section without Cardholder Exclusive tickets, it will say “Powered by VividSeats”. Those tickets are a bad value!

Do not by tickets powered by VividSeats! You’ll only get 0.8c per mile in value and there are added fees at the end that will jack up the price. You want the Cardholder Exclusives!

Find more information in the republished post below.

Update 7/25/2024: August and September games haveUpd been added! Snag your summer games now. H/T to Thomas in the comments.
Update 5/10/24: June and July games have been added!
Update 2/29/24: As pointed out by Chris in the comments, April and May 2024 games are now available.

One of the best uses of Capital One miles is Capital One Cardholder Exclusives Major League Baseball tickets. I put that in bold because only the cardholder exclusives are a good deal. There are only 4 Cardholder Exclusive seats for each Major League Baseball game, but those four seats are typically within 5-15 rows of the field in highly desirable sections (in many cases they are club level sections) and they only cost 5,000 miles or $40 in Capital One cash back per seat. This post explains what these are and where to find them. See this post for some examples from my experience at a New York Mets game and some reader input.
a man taking a selfie in a baseball stadium

Note: Some readers have been a bit confused because Capital One sells cardholder exclusive tickets, which are a great deal and are what this post is mostly about, but when they don’t have the cardholder exclusive tickets available they also sell general secondhand market tickets (which are typically an awful deal). See the heading below “How to find the good Capital One cardholder exclusive tickets” for more.

a group of people in a stadium
Screen shot from SeatGeek.com of the view from Dodger Stadium Field Box 24 — where you can sit for 5,000 miles per ticket.

The Deal

  • Capital One Entertainment is offering cardholder exclusive tickets to baseball games in April and May, with four seats available at 5,000 miles per seat (in excellent locations) for most of the games I checked
  • Direct link to Capital One Entertainment

Quick Thoughts

Capital One sells sporting event tickets through a partnership with VividSeats. Most tickets yield an awful value of 0.6c per mile. However, Capital One has 4 Cardholder Exclusive tickets to every game that are typically a great value. They also sell seats powered by VividSeats that are an awful value. See the next section of this post for how to tell the difference.

The first game I looked up in New York when these seats launched was about $200 a ticket in the cardholder exclusives section. These are seats that I wouldn’t otherwise consider buying, but at 5,000 miles a seat, I enjoyed the great view shown above (and the Delta Club, where concessions had much shorter lines. We even ran into Mr. Met in the club!).

Cardholder Exclusive Seats are located very close to the field, though it varies a bit from one park to another. For example, Philadelphia has seats 5 rows behind the visiting team’s dugout, which my sister-in-law loved for a Phillies/Mets game as she got to sit right behind her beloved Mets.

Again, Capital One has many publicly-available VividSeats options at poorer value — you’re looking for the cardholder exclusive seats.

There were no additional fees for any of the tickets I’ve bought (in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Kansas City) beyond the 10K miles for two tickets or 20K for four tickets, though some parks have a couple of dollars in tax that must be paid with your card.

The tickets at Citi Field (where the Mets play) are in the Delta Club section, so you get access to better concessions and the seats are more padded. That type of thing will vary by park.

Personally, I’m not a huge baseball fan, but I enjoy cool experiences and I wouldn’t be very likely to buy tickets so close to the field otherwise, so bought tickets again this time around because it’s a fun experience for a reasonable price.

How to find the good Capital One Cardholder Exclusive tickets

One key thing has changed: In the past, if the cardholder exclusive seats were available, you would only see 4 seats for sale. Now, the cardholder exclusives are mixed in among nosebleed seats that yield terrible value. For instance, see this example from a New York Mets game — you’ll find the cardholder exclusive seats, which are in the Delta Club 11 section right near the field, for 5,000 miles per seat listed alongside seats in the 400’s and 500’s sections. You’ll only get 0.6c per point in value toward seats, but Capital One has those Delta Club 11 seats listed at a value of $40 per seat, which is well below the going price for those seats!

You’ll kind of need to know what you’re looking for — 2 or 4 seats for 5,000 miles per seat that are close to the field. Note that these are initially available for every game, but there are only four seats for each game — expect most of the desirable games to get snatched up quickly. In most parks, the seats cost just the 5,000 miles each with no cash outlay at all (I’ve bought tickets for games at both Yankee Stadium and Citi Field in New York as well as tickets to games in Boston, Philadelphia, and Kansas City and only paid 5,000 miles each in those cases). Some parks seem to have a small fee of a couple of dollars, which I assume is some sort of local tax.

To find tickets, just log in to Capital One Experiences and you’ll find MLB Single Game Tickets under the cardholder exclusives.

a screenshot of a website

This link should take you directly to MLB tickets.

As shown above, Capital One is now mixing the cardholder exclusive seats in with all of the VividSeats tickets. That makes it kind of a pain to find the good seats.

Here’s the simple way to tell the difference: check the sections right next to the field. You’re looking for one that has tickets “From $40” (typically seats in these sections go over over $100 per seat or in cities like New York they would be over $200 per seat). Those cardholder exclusive seats will cost 5,000 miles each and you can only buy in sets of 2 or 4. When you select those seats, you’ll see that they are clearly marked “Cardholder Exclusive Tickets by Capital One” as shown here:

If you select a set of tickets that says “Tickets Powered by VividSeats”, those are not the cardholder exclusives and are offered at poor value! See this example from the next section over from the one shown above — tickets start at $103 and are available for 13,000 miles and are “powered by VividSeats”. Those aren’t the exclusives.

The “value” appears to be the same because Capital One is saying that the cardholder exclusives are “worth” $40 each, but in reality seats in that section would likely sell for north of $100 per ticket just like the nearby sections — Capital One is simply listing a below-face-value price for their cardholder exclusive seats.

When you click through on those seats, you’ll see they are Capital One cardholder exclusives.

a screenshot of a sports ticket

The cardholder exclusive tickets have no additional fees — they are 5K miles per ticket, period. I bought tickets to both a Yankees game and a Phillies game (against the Mets) and paid 10K for two tickets to each game.

Again, Capital One also lists tickets in many different sections, those are not cardholder exclusives but are rather a selection of seats powered by VividSeats. The non-exclusive VividSeats tickets are not a good deal. You’ll only get 0.8c per point toward those tickets and there are a lot of add-on fees during the checkout process. Seats shown here are not cardholder exclusives.

a screenshot of a sports stadium
These are *not* the cardholder exclusive seats I’m talking about and are mostly a poor deal.

Kind of interesting and weird is that Capital One labels the good “exclusive” seats as though they cost $40 even though the exclusives are near the field in otherwise much more expensive sections. Don’t be confused by this — the cardholder exclusives are labeled as $40 tickets, but you can’t actually buy them for $40.

a close-up of a map
Capital One appears to be labeling these are $40 to keep the cents per point consistent even though these tickets ordinarily sell for much more.

In fact, when you’ve got the cardholder exclusive tickets, you don’t even get the option to use money to buy the seats — you couldn’t buy them for $40 each if you wanted to, it’s 5K miles per ticket during checkout with no option to use fewer miles and no additional fees (and you must buy either 2 or 4 tickets). If you are seeing different numbers of miles or additional fees, you’re not looking at the cardholder exclusive seats.

a screenshot of a ticket

Also of note is that if you pick a team that isn’t in your local area, you’ll have to type in the city where you want to see them in the “Near” box. For instance, since I’m in New York State, it searched for Chicago Cubs tickets in New York City. I had to type in Chicago, IL to see games at Wrigley Field.

I was really happy to see that Capital One isn’t tacking any fees on during the checkout process — it’s literally just 5,000 miles per ticket (you have to buy tickets in blocks of 2).

Overall, it’s great to see Capital One offer interesting exclusives to cardholders. While baseball isn’t necessarily a direct path to my heart, I could see tickets to certain sold-out events or in great locations like these baseball tickets being an exciting cardholder perk. I thought the Final Four tickets were a cool idea. Offering something similar for other major events could become both a great use of miles and a great perk of being a cardholder.

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Becky

I tried to find tickets in may. No games for Mets are coming up or dodgers. Are they all gone? I couldn’t even find poor value seats. It just comes up as nothing available right now. Check back later.

Michael

Does anyone know if yankees tickets in yankee stadium were posted? Haven’t seen any.

oscar church

When i looked there were tickets available for the Dodgers game, but I had just used up all points on a 1st class flight to Asia, so i could not get any tickets. Thanks for the post.

usernamechuck

Fwiw at Wrigley they literally only had the 5k box seats available. Also, the ones I got were in May.

Mary

Nick! Thank you for posting! I usually miss this but because I logged in as soon as seeing this – I snagged 2 tickets to Cubs vs Reds at Cincy w/ fireworks for my 27 YO son – my middle child who maintains the absolute minimum amount of phone calls/texting. But when I texted him – “urgent – if you want these tickets – call me ASAP” – he called!! Thanks for making mom look like a hero!

Chauney

Sometimes they charge tax. Looking at four tickets and it’s adding 2240 miles for tax, so it’s 22,240 for four tickets. Anyone else experience that?

Michael

You got yankee tickets this round? I’ve been looking all over for 2 days and haven’t seen any.

Michael

Yup. I was on all day yesterday and today and didn’t see any games posted for yankees. Thanks!

Paula OD

I snagged two tickets Braves vs Dodgers on a Sunday night in May – love this deal! Great seats – we went to two Braves games last year on Cap One and am looking forward to grabbing a couple games this year. Comparable tix for same game were over $300 a pop – so excellent redemption. THANK YOU!

Paula OD

Note – I did get charged 10,600 miles though – 600 add’l miles for TAX, which is a bummer.

[…] can buy lower-level, dugout box seats to select MLB games for just 5,000 Capital One Miles apiece! Frequent Miler just spotted that this deal has returned for another year with tickets available for games in April […]

John

“Bummer. No tickets available. Come back later to check availability.”

That’s the message for every date for all the major cities. Doesn’t even show the VividSeats tickets.

Grant

With only 4 tickets per game, the tickets don’t last long. I’m guessing toward the end of March is when Capital One will release the next round of tickets for (May – June or June – July). Try to figure out which games you are interested in going to and then be ready to go around March 30 – April 1.

King Emil

They release ~2 months at a time around a month in advance. Likely going to be more like end of April

Grant

Got it, that makes sense.

Brent

Yeah, New York is impossible. Royals/Yankees tickets were gone really fast.

sarah

Thanks so much for the update email! I just snagged some SF Giants tix in Section 124, row O for 5000 points each. Based on some quick research I found that row N seats are going for around $150 each!

Dee

Thanks for the alert, Nick. I got two seats for my birthday in May for the Pirates. It a Friday and Fireworks Night. Otherwise it doesn’t make sense. Weekdays, I can buy $10 tickets from a scalper and sit just about anywhere in the ball park. I live across the river from the ballpark, so that’s pretty easy to do.

One restaurant across the street from the ball park is a Bilt neighborhood partner – so 6X points on dinner, too. Sounds like a great “Points & Miles” birthday to me. 😉 If Skenes pitches that night, even better!

Grant

Thanks Nick, got tickets to 3 games. It looks like this deal is good through May 2025 since I was able to get 2 tickets to a game on 5/18.

Bearstein

What team?! I’ve never been able to get more than two games.

Grant

SF Giants – I checked the CapOne app this morning around 6am and the promo pricing wasn’t live yet, so my number 1 game sold out before I saw this FM alert.

Last edited 2 days ago by Grant
Bearstein

Really, it seems like the tickets are released when we aren’t looking.:( Was #1 opening day?

Grant

Actually the day after opening day, it was a Matt Chapman Gold Glove Bobblehead giveaway game that I have had my eye on for the last month or so. Hat tip to whoever beat me to that game 🙂

Troy

Wrigley for 2nd year in a row, thanks Nick!

David Enrique

Tickets are now available! I just got them for the Rockies Opening Day.

Edit: I used cashback from Savor instead of Miles. For whatever reason its cheaper at $40 each instead of 5k miles.

Last edited 2 days ago by David Enrique
that bryant guy

Same! Just scored tickets to a Giants game. Same as last year, they’re mixed in with the rest of the reseller tickets. Had to scroll down quite a bit to find them. Good luck everyone!

Duckduckgoose

Grabbed tickets to a Dodger game. Thanks for the heads up David!

Bearstein

Can’t believe that I missed this drop! 🙁 Thanks for the heads up and good job on getting opening day – that’s my goal for next season. 🙂

Brent

Always has been. Savor has the better entertainment deals.

Michael Minster

Hopefully 2025 will be released soon.