Fans arriving at Levi’s Stadium quickly realized the biggest shock of the Super Bowl wouldn’t come from the field. It wasn’t a touchdown, a call, or a celebrity cameo. The surprise waited at the concession stands.
After spending months planning and thousands of dollars on tickets, travel, and hotels, fans finally settled in—and then got hungry. Digital menus lit up, and the numbers stopped people cold.
Beer cost $17.50, with premium options reaching $19. Canned wine was $16. Bottled water? Eight dollars. Even seasoned sports fans paused, blinking, wondering if they’d misread the prices.
Social media exploded within minutes. Photos of menus spread fast, paired with jokes and anger. Fans compared buying drinks to taking out loans, while others swore off concessions entirely out of principle.
The frustration wasn’t just about money. Stadium food is expected to be pricey, but many felt this crossed from overpriced into insulting—especially after such an already expensive weekend.
Stories followed: parents putting items back, friends splitting beers, fans debating whether water was worth the cost. Some paid anyway, resigned to the logic of “it’s the Super Bowl.”
The contrast grew sharper when rapper Drake casually placed a $1 million bet on the game. For him, it was entertainment. For fans staring at $19 beers, it felt absurdly disconnected.
In the end, the outrage wasn’t really about drinks. It was about modern sports becoming transactional and exclusive. Yet fans still came, still cheered, and still said it was worth it—because being there still matters.