About Parking for Savannah Bananas
How much are Savannah Bananas tickets?
Savannah Bananas tickets average $528 on the secondary market across the 2026 World Tour, with get-in prices starting at $134 in Tallahassee. Prices vary significantly by venue and market: landmark MLB ballpark stops like Cincinnati ($805–$1,013 average), Boston ($907 average), and St. Louis ($755 average) command the highest prices, while accessible touring markets like Portland ($147 get-in), San Diego ($151 get-in), and New Orleans ($212 average) offer the tour's most affordable entry points. Grayson Stadium home dates in Savannah are priced at a fixed $515 floor regardless of opponent or date.
Why are Savannah Bananas tickets so expensive?
The Savannah Bananas are a scarcity product. Unlike major professional leagues, the Bananas play a limited number of shows per market — often just one or two dates per city per year — which means secondary market demand concentrates around each appearance rather than spreading across a season. Fans in Cincinnati, Boston, or Chicago may have a single two-show window to see the Bananas in 2026. That scarcity, combined with the novelty premium of a show that has no direct substitute in live entertainment, produces prices that exceed standard live sports benchmarks. Cincinnati's best date averages $1,013 — more than a typical NBA Finals ticket. Even the most affordable tour markets clear $212 average, above most regular-season MLB games.
What is the cheapest Savannah Bananas show?
The most affordable entry points on the 2026 tour are Tallahassee ($134 get-in at Doak Campbell Stadium, February 28), Portland ($147 get-in at Autzen Stadium, June 28–29), and San Diego ($151 get-in at PETCO Park, March 22–23). New Orleans at Caesars Superdome ($212 average) and Denver at Coors Field ($229 average) also represent accessible markets relative to the tour average. These shows carry the same product as premium-priced dates — the variance reflects market demand and venue profile, not a reduced experience.
How do Savannah Bananas prices compare by city?
Pricing varies dramatically across the 2026 tour. Boston leads at $907 average (Gillette Stadium, August 28–29), followed by Cincinnati at $805 average (Great American Ball Park), St. Louis at $755 average (Busch Stadium), and Knoxville at $747 (Neyland Stadium). New York's Yankee Stadium dates average $695, Wrigley Field in Chicago averages $618, and Kansas City's Kauffman Stadium averages $608. At the other end, Portland averages $237, San Diego $233, and New Orleans $212. Gametime's secondary market tracking shows a $694 spread between the most and least expensive metro markets on the tour — the widest pricing range of any comparable touring entertainment product tracked in 2026.
Should I buy Savannah Bananas tickets now or wait?
For high-demand stops — Boston, Cincinnati, St. Louis, New York, and Chicago — buy immediately. These markets have limited show counts (one to three dates), iconic venue settings that amplify demand, and no historical pattern of price relief closer to showtime. Inventory in these markets has contracted sharply as dates approach. For more accessible markets like Dallas, Atlanta touring dates, or Minneapolis, prices are more stable and modest drops are possible in the two to three weeks before the show, particularly for weeknight dates. For Grayson Stadium home games in Savannah, fixed pricing means timing has no impact — the $515 floor does not fluctuate regardless of how early or late you buy.
Are Savannah Bananas tickets worth it?
At $528 average across 56 shows, Savannah Bananas tickets are priced at the premium tier of live entertainment — comparable to top-tier concert tours, not regular-season sports. The value question depends on where and when you buy. In Portland at $147 get-in or San Diego at $151, the price-to-experience ratio is strong by any measure. At Cincinnati or Boston, where averages push past $800–$1,000, you are paying a scarcity premium for a show that may not return to your market for another year or more. Gametime secondary market data consistently shows the Bananas hold or increase in value as show dates approach in premium markets, which is the behavioral signal of a product where demand has outpaced available inventory.
Content notes: All price figures reflect Gametime secondary market data for the 2026 World Tour as of current tracking. Prices are dynamic and may change as show dates approach.




















