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

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Update 5/15/25: Tickets are now available for June and July games! Book them now, as the most in-demand games will be gone soon.

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!

~~~Original Post follows~~~

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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kevin

Tampa Bay Rays in the summer, eh…tix are cheaper on ticketmaster (if you look at the points value)

Chris

Was tracking this very closely and got tickets to three games I was targeting (2 of them for lower-demand teams but 5 rows behind the plate!).

I’m only saying this to highlight that I know what I’m talking about before I make this comment:

The Twins didn’t release a single ticket to any of their June/July home games. That’s peculiar, yes?

Melissa

I looked last night around 11pm eastern when I saw your update and couldn’t find Dodgers away tickets for the June games in my region. There’s nothing, even from Vivid Seats. Would you assume that they got snapped up immediately?

MKS

I would agree, I know that I was in the middle of a conference and as soon as I saw the first comment pop up in my email at 4:08 CT, I excused myself from the conversation and logged in to buy tix. I wanted Cubs/Sox on a Sat night, but could only get it for Friday. Still a great buy for a tough ticket in Chicago even with a weak Sox team. That was about 35 mins later, I would expect if it was really a bot, even those would have been gone…

I also realized how limited the options are. I went out to my friends that are big baseball fans and tried to find games that would work for us to use the Cap1 tickets to go to. Between our schedules, our kids schedules and the home/away schedules of the teams that we were interested in, I could only find this one weekend that worked. I’m even willing to fly out to see my team as these tix are usually behind the visitors dugouts and still no luck.

Same as travel deals, to get the best “value” gotta be flexible with dates and locations (and the quality of the team you want to see). I used these to buy tix for a Cubs game in April. It was 32 degree night game that was probably not 1/3 full. A guy came a sat down in seats next to me in the second inning…he was in town for work, had nothing to do and saw $15 dollar tix 5 rows back from the field and thought why not! Doing the math and realized that these were not the best use of miles, moreso as I couldn’t convince anyone to go with me, so it was 10k for what would have been $15 tix…

PGQ

I was in a meeting until 515pm ET and didn’t check email or CapOne until 552pm… the only Dodgers tickets I saw left were for the June 5 day game versus the Mets. Talked about it with a friend (who accidentally nabbed some tickets versus the White Sox instead) and they were available until 633pm, if not 640pm (when I refreshed that tab), so Nick’s guess is real close.

But the tech bros didn’t want the Giants Hello Kitty jerseys, so all is well for me!

Good to go with these tickets once or twice for other ballparks you want to visit and get the experience, but for your/local-enough team(s) I think the math works out to just watching resellers on dates you can actually get everyone together to go.

yakityyak

Says the guy who has the bots! please share if you have one, seriously.

Cap1 needs an early access program or limit games per account. You snooze, you lose…but some of us have lives to live and can’t check constantly.

Andy

I’m not the spokesperson for people with no lives, but as one of the founding members of the club, I think it’s only fair that we get to see a baseball game every once in a while.

Melissa

Totally understand! I didn’t realize they went up at 5pm unfortunately. But I was looking for AWAY when they’re in the midwest so I was hopeful to grab them. Oh well…

RiskandReward

I was the one that posted the first comment that June/July seats were available. Been watching the Cap1 site the whole week, it was dumb luck that the site had just loaded the tickets and I was able to score seats to 3 prime matchups that I had my eye on, including the July 4 Yanks/Mets matchup (sorry Nick!). I’m a big baseball fan so this worked out really well. I wouldn’t have been able to do this without the information shared here on FM and the Facebook group. Many thanks!

MKS

That went crazy fast. I was able to get Cubs/Sox, but for Friday, by the time I tried Sat night it was gone. I got the email at 4:08, got the confirmation email from Cap1 at 4:49, so max 40 mins before sold out….

That Bryant guy

One thing that was different this time around was that the reseller tickets disappeared from the June and July games several hours before the C1 tickets were loaded, so it was pretty obvious that they were going to drop today and there were probably a lot of people (like me) constantly refreshing during that period.

Kirby

Noticed that too. There was about a 4 hour lag and the drop occurred later in the afternoon than past drops. When I saw that all tickets were pulled for June and July, I changed my plans for the afternoon as I was targeting a specific Cubs home game that I am traveling with my family of 4 to see. Worth the wait.

Mark

Brutal. I was tracking this every 20 minutes the past 2 days, thinking it would drop. Went into a one hour meeting, came out, and all the games I wanted were gone. I’ll get em next time!

Alex

Doubtful lol

Mark

I don’t know. I was able to get tickets to three Dodgers games on the previous drop.

Alex

I’ll be impressed if you can get Mets or Yankees. For Dodgers, I was even able to find the 20K playoff tickets.

Alex

Didn’t realize you could subscribe to comments. Great tip. Thanks Nick!

Emily

How do we subscribe to comments? I’ve also been checking multiple times a day for the past few days and just missed this. Trying to snag TB Rays at Boston and they are long gone.

Gunnar

Thanks guys! Just snagged 2 Braves tix for July 4th weekend. 5cpp value compared to tix in same row!

C2CMom

Dodgers tickets went fast but I did get four tickets for one game and I am happy with that!

Alex

Hardest award in the game. Change my mind.

yakityyak

Hardest was Spain with Chef Jose Andres, but it’s a one off “award” with only 8 tickets available, not repeating like this one.

John

All gone for my city. Was possible last year. Impossible this year.

Jennifer

Still plenty available if you are a Jays fan in Toronto!

Alex

IMPOSSIBLE

Jay

All gone so fast

jake

got an error, does that mean that game is already gone?

Andy

Tickets just dropped 😀

RiskandReward

Seats are now available for June/July!

yakityyak

That sold out fast. What games did you score?

MKS

Any thoughts on when the rest of the season may go on sale? I was expecting it by now, but still not seeing any seats when I just checked for August….

JAMES

Hi Nick, is frequent Miler’s X account going to alert followers? I have been checking everyday as well. I will comment on here when I have found some!

MKS

Thanks! I’ve been checking regularly as well, thanks for doing it daily and keeping us notified!

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.

Grant

Hi Becky, since there are only 4 tickets to each game, I would bet that 99% of all the available tickets for all the available games are gone. Your best bet is to book ASAP when they release the next set of tickets and when FM sends an update out.