Toronto Baseball Insider has no direct affiliation to the Toronto Blue Jays or MLB

Toronto Blue Jays fans are furious with ticket prices as single game tickets go on sale


Victor William
Jan 22, 2026  (2:18 PM)
Oct 13, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Fans watch batting practice prior to game two of the ALCS round between the Toronto Blue Jays and Seattle Mariners for the 2025 MLB playoffs at Rogers Centre.
Photo credit: Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images

Toronto Blue Jays single game tickets went live Thursday, and Rogers Centre prices and sellouts set off instant backlash.

The club pushed the «wait is over» message and pointed fans straight to the on-sale window for 2026. The official ticket page also confirms Thursday as the on-sale day for single games.
The wait is over

Single Game Tickets are on sale NOW:
What fans ran into, though, was the familiar modern ticket mess, the biggest dates felt gone in a blink. Even on the team site, Opening Night and Canada Day are framed as something you «unlock» through a Flex Pack, which reads like a closed door to a lot of people.

Toronto Blue Jays tickets meet Rogers Centre sticker shock

what in the world?!? no more tickets for Opening Day? and the ones left are $500/seat.
The price conversation gets uglier once you land in resale land, because resale tickets are set by sellers, not the team, and they can jump fast when demand spikes.
Can someone please explain why the home opener tickets for the 500 Level is $187 PER ticket. And of course it drops in price the very next game. Tickets for the home opener last year in the 500 Level were $50
Ticket platforms even spell out that resale can differ from original pricing, and that gap is where fans feel fleeced.
This frustration is also still raw in Toronto, because the city just lived through a postseason ticket scramble that sold out quickly and sent resale prices into another universe. When that memory is fresh, any «sold out» feeling in January turns into a full-volume argument.
From the Blue Jays side, the explanation is simple even if it is unsatisfying, season-ticket members, presales, and packaged products eat the best inventory first. From the fan side, it still feels like the public on-sale is a finish line with no tape.
My opinion is the team has to treat this like a baseball problem, not just a revenue problem, because empty goodwill can cost you later. Hold back more low-cost inventory for the true public drop, and communicate what is actually available before fans waste an hour clicking.
At the end of the day, baseball is supposed to be the affordable summer plan, not a luxury purchase you justify to yourself. The next milestone is whether Toronto responds with more accessible ticket drops before Opening Day buzz turns sour.
POLL
JANVIER 22   |   348 ANSWERS
Toronto Blue Jays fans are furious with ticket prices as single game tickets go on sale

Are Toronto Blue Jays single game tickets getting too expensive for the average fan?


TORONTO BASEBALL INSIDER
COPYRIGHT @2026 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
TERMS OF SERVICE - PRIVACY POLICY - COOKIE POLICY
RSS FEED - SITEMAP - ROBOTS.TXT