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.
Beer prices at MLB ballparks are slippery things. The same stadium 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: the price of the smallest available domestic draft, league-wide.
Figures here reflect 2025 season pricing as compiled by The Action Network, Statista, and team-specific reports through early 2026. The league average ($7.18) is widely cited; outliers like Nationals Park ($15.40) and Coors Field ($3.08) have been independently confirmed. Where multiple credible figures exist for a single park, we take the median and flag notable promotions in the team note.
Per-ounce numbers normalize for serving size — a vital correction, since a "cheap" $8.50 beer at Fenway holds 12 ounces, while a $9 pour elsewhere may hold 16. Price-per-ounce is the closer proxy for actual value at the tap.