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Super Bowl premium tickets double to $2,600

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  • ASSOCIATED PRESS
    ADVANCE FOR WEEKEND EDITIONS, AUG 24-25 - FILE - In this Feb. 9, 2013, file photo, snow is piled high in a parking lot outside of MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. The NFL never really shuts down. It kept rolling long after the lights came back on after a 37-minute delay at the Super Bowl, right into a new season that will kick off in less than two weeks and end with an outdoor Super Bowl in New Jersey. (AP Photo/Bill Kostroun, File)

NEW YORK >> Super Bowl fans can prepare to pay double for the best seats.

The NFL expects the most expensive tickets for its championship game will be about $2,600 each for 9,000 premium seats for the Feb. 2 game at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J.

That’s more than twice the $1,250 cost for similar tickets at last season’s Super Bowl in New Orleans.

“We are looking to close the gap between the face value of the ticket and its true value as reflected on the secondary market,” NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said Tuesday. “The uniqueness of the Super Bowl in the New York/New Jersey is also driving unprecedented demand and buzz.”

The next tier of seats is expected to go for $1,500 compared to $950 in New Orleans. About 40 percent of general admission seats will be under $1,000, McCarthy said.

The capacity of MetLife Stadium is 82,000, but it will be trimmed by about 5,000 seats to make room for media, cameras and security. The priciest seats will have access to indoor restaurants, where fans can warm up during the outdoor game.

The lowest-priced ticket fell from $650 last year to $500. Some 30,000 fans entered a lottery that closed in June, and 1,000 winners — double from 500 — will be notified this fall.

In an attempt to ensure those fans don’t resell tickets above face value, the NFL for the first time will require ticket holders to go to a gate to pick up those tickets as they enter the stadium. They won’t be allowed to return to the parking lot, McCarthy said.

The Wall Street Journal first reported the increase in ticket prices.

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