A field guide to the price of a cold beer at every Major League Baseball ballpark in America — ranked, rated, and reckoned with for the 2025/26 season.
The chasm between the league's thriftiest pour and its priciest is wider than the gap between most divisional rivals. Here are the five at each extreme — your beer-buying scouting report.
All thirty MLB stadiums on a single bar chart. Toggle between sticker price and price-per-ounce — because a tall pour at Fenway tells a different story than the can at Wrigley.
Search, filter, sort. Tap any card for the full scouting report — including a note on what makes that park's pricing what it is.
An asterisk next to a beer price means the headline number isn't what you'll usually pay. It's a deal — happy hour only, a specific bar inside the venue, certain days of the week, or some other catch.
For example: Coors Field's famous $3.08 beer is only available at the Rooftop bar, only during batting practice, and only until first pitch. Standard concourse beer at Coors Field runs around $7.
$3.08* = read the fine print
Tap any team card on the page to see exactly what the deal is, when it's available, and what the regular concourse price actually looks like.
Stadium beer prices are slippery things. The same venue will charge $5 for a value-menu domestic and $16 for a craft pour two sections over, and concessionaires reshuffle menus mid-season. To make the comparison honest, we anchor on a single benchmark per league: the price of the smallest available domestic draft.
Figures reflect publicly reported pricing through the most recent season. Where multiple credible figures exist for a single venue, we take the median and flag notable promotions in the team's fine-print panel. The asterisk (*) on a price means it's a conditional deal — happy hour, specific stand, certain day of the week — and tapping the team card shows the exact conditions.
Per-ounce numbers normalize for serving size — a vital correction, since a "cheap" $8.50 12-oz beer holds two-thirds of a "pricey" $9 16-oz pour. Price-per-ounce is the closer proxy for actual value at the tap.
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