How to Plan a New York Football Game: Giants, Jets, MetLife Stadium & Full Game-Day Tips
Both teams. One stadium. A full day in New Jersey. Here is the complete planning guide — from choosing the game to getting home after it.
Planning a Giants or Jets game is not like planning a Knicks night at MSG, a Rangers game at the Garden, or a concert at Barclays. Both New York football teams play at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey — not in New York City — and the stadium sits at the center of a full-day outing that requires more planning than most events on a New York trip. Transit requires a specific route. Parking requires a decision. Weather shapes every call you make. The return after the game is its own logistical event.
None of this makes a Giants or Jets game difficult. It makes it different — and planning around the difference is what separates a great football day from a frustrating one. This guide walks through the full picture, in the order the decisions actually happen.

Fans walking through the MetLife Stadium parking lot — useful context for planning a New York football game around arrival timing, parking, tailgating, weather, seats, crowds, and the postgame exit. Photo by Deodato Pangandoyon via Wikimedia Commons.
- Choose the game. Giants, Jets, or best available matchup for your group’s priorities.
- Check kickoff time and weather season. Sunday 1 PM in October is a different day than Sunday night in December.
- Decide how you are getting there. Driving with tailgate, driving without, or transit. Solve this before buying tickets.
- Choose seats based on view, weather exposure, comfort, and your group’s needs.
- Plan arrival time. Earlier than feels necessary — MetLife rewards it.
- Solve food before, during, or after — but decide before game day.
- Check bag policy and entry rules. Mobile tickets, bag rules, and gate locations all matter.
- Plan the postgame exit before kickoff. The crowd exits fast. Know your route before the final whistle.
Giants, Jets, or the Best Available Game?
If you already have a team, this decision is made. If you are a neutral visitor, a tourist, or someone planning a group outing without strong allegiance, the team name is usually the wrong place to start.
The Giants carry New York’s more traditional football identity — Super Bowl history, a loyal multi-generational fanbase, and the weight of the franchise name that most casual fans recognize first. The Jets carry a different energy: passionate, occasionally volatile, and capable of generating some of the most charged atmospheres in the stadium when things are going well.
Neither of those descriptions should be the deciding factor for most visitors. The better questions are: Which game has a stronger opponent? Which kickoff time fits the day? Which game has better seat availability at a reasonable price? What is the weather likely to be? For families, tourists, and date-night visitors especially, the matchup, timing, and total cost should drive the decision more than the helmet on the ticket.
See the full Giants vs. Jets comparison for a direct breakdown across atmosphere, crowd, pricing, and what each team’s game-day experience actually delivers. The New York Giants game guide and New York Jets game guide cover each team individually.
The MetLife Stadium Reality
MetLife Stadium is in East Rutherford, New Jersey. That sentence matters more than it sounds. Both teams have “New York” in their names and sell tickets through New York channels, but the stadium is a Meadowlands facility — not a Manhattan venue, not a Brooklyn venue, not even close to the New York venues that most people use when they say “I’m going to a game tonight.”
MSG is directly above Penn Station. Barclays Center has nine subway lines underneath it. Yankee Stadium is a 4/B/D ride from Midtown. Citi Field is a 7 train from Grand Central. All of those venues fit into a normal New York evening with reasonable transit and predictable timing. MetLife is different. Getting there requires either a specific NJ Transit plan, a drive through New Jersey, or a rideshare — and getting back after the game requires patience regardless of which option you chose.
Plan It Like a Day Trip, Not a Night Out
A football game at MetLife is not a two-hour event you fold into an otherwise busy NYC day. It is closer to a half-day or full-day commitment — especially for afternoon games with a tailgate, families with kids, or visitors who are also navigating an unfamiliar transit system. That is not a criticism. The MetLife experience is worth planning around. It just requires actually planning around it.
The full MetLife Stadium guide covers entry, policies, concourse layout, and what the stadium experience looks like. The MetLife seating guide covers sections, views, and where to sit.
Pick the Right Kickoff Time
Kickoff time shapes every other decision in the plan. It determines when you need to leave, when you eat, what the weather feels like, when the return happens, and how much of the day football consumes. It is not a secondary detail — it is the frame the whole day fits inside.
The most forgiving kickoff for first-timers, families, tourists, and anyone who wants clear logistics. Morning departure, afternoon game, home before late evening. Weather usually most manageable. Best combination of experience and ease.
Better atmosphere and a more electric crowd on good-matchup days. Tradeoff: later return, less time for postgame plans, and night-game temperatures even in mild months. Works well for fans without early commitments the next day.
Peak atmosphere but the hardest logistics. Late return for families, tourists, and transit users. Night games in November–January add serious cold. Best for committed fans with no early next-day obligations and a clear transportation plan.
Late-season games — November through January — have their own calculus. Weather is real, nights are cold, and even a 1 PM game can feel like a winter endurance event if the group is not prepared. For the full breakdown see the best time to go to an NYC football game.
Choose Seats Before You Commit to the Game
Football seat choice is fundamentally different from basketball, hockey, or concert seat choice. The field is enormous. Plays develop across its full width. Being very close is not always better. The right seat for a football game depends on what you want to see, how exposed to the weather you want to be, and who is in the group — not just how much you are willing to spend.
A few principles that change how most people think about football seats:
- Sideline seats with some elevation for full-field view
- Corner sections for strong value and decent angle
- Upper sideline for tactical perspective at lower cost
- Any seat where you can read formations and follow the full play
- Lower bowl for immersion when view is secondary to atmosphere
- Closest is not always best — flat field-level rows compress the view
- End zones are atmospheric but lose full-field balance
- Upper sideline often shows more football than pricier lower end zones
- Weather exposure is a seat variable, not just a clothing variable
- Club-area benefits vary — verify before they factor into your price decision
The full seat decision guide is at how to choose NYC football seats. The section-by-section chart breakdown is at the MetLife Stadium seating guide.
Plan Around the Weather
MetLife is a fully outdoor stadium in northern New Jersey. The NFL season starts in September and runs through January. That range covers heat, perfect fall days, cold wind, rain, and potential snow — and no two months of the season feel the same.
September can be hot and sunny for afternoon games. October is usually the most forgiving window — temperatures are reasonable, conditions are stable, and the football being played is often the most competitive of the season. November is when layers become non-negotiable and night games start to feel like a commitment. December and January can be genuinely cold, windy, and miserable in the upper or exposed sections if you are not dressed for it.
Dress for the stadium, not the city. If you are leaving a warm Manhattan hotel for a 1 PM December kickoff, the temperature at MetLife will feel colder than it did at street level in Midtown. Factor in wind, sitting still for three-plus hours, and the later-game temperature drop. When in doubt, add a layer.
Weather also affects the seat decision. Upper-level sections and exposed end zone areas feel the wind more than lower-bowl seats. Late-season games with families or date-night visitors warrant extra attention here — a $30 seat premium for a more sheltered position is often the right call in November or December.
Decide: Parking, Transit, or Tailgate?
The route to MetLife is not a subway swipe. It requires an actual decision, and the right answer varies depending on where you are coming from, whether you want to tailgate, and how much control you want over arrival and exit timing.
Full control over timing. Tailgate-ready. Works well for visitors coming from New Jersey, suburbs, or Long Island. Tradeoff: traffic around the Meadowlands, parking fees, and postgame exit congestion. Book parking in advance for high-demand games. Do not assume walk-up parking is available or reasonably priced for marquee matchups.
Direct service from Penn Station (Midtown Manhattan) to Meadowlands Station on game days — trains run specifically for Giants and Jets games. No parking hassle, no traffic stress on the way in. Tradeoff: postgame trains fill immediately and waits can be long. Build patience into the return plan. Check NJ Transit’s current schedule before game day.
Works for arrival. Postgame surges are real and can be significant — both in price and wait time. If rideshare is the plan, waiting 20–30 minutes after the game ends before requesting a car usually converts a surge fare into a normal one. Not the most reliable postgame option for tight schedules.
Full details on every transit option, including bus routes and LIRR connections, are in the how to get to MetLife Stadium guide. Parking strategy, lot locations, and advance booking advice are in the parking near MetLife Stadium guide.
Tailgating
MetLife has an established tailgate culture — the Meadowlands parking lots are one of the more legitimate tailgating environments in the NFL. If tailgating is part of the plan, arrive at least two to three hours before kickoff, check current MetLife tailgating policies before you arrive (rules on grills, alcohol, and specific lot access can change), and factor the tailgate time into the overall day budget. A 1 PM kickoff with a proper tailgate means leaving by 9 or 9:30 AM from most New York-area starting points.
MetLife’s tailgating rules, parking lot assignments, and gate procedures can change season to season and game to game. Always verify current policies on the official Giants or Jets website before game day — not from previous-season guides or forum posts.
Food Before, During, and After
MetLife food planning is different from MSG or Barclays because the stadium is not surrounded by a dense restaurant district you can walk into before or after the game. East Rutherford is not a neighborhood. The options closest to the stadium are the tailgate lots, the stadium concessions, and whatever you drove past on the way in.
The practical food plan depends on the group:
- Eat in Manhattan or your hotel before departing — simplest option
- Tailgate in the parking lots — most authentic if you are driving
- Stop on the NJ Transit corridor if you find something en route
- Arrive early and use stadium concessions before the lines hit
- Restaurant options near the stadium are limited — research specifically before relying on them
- Return to Manhattan and eat there — most visitors do this
- Stay near MetLife if you booked a hotel in the area
- Stadium area postgame options are limited
- Build in time — postgame traffic/transit adds real time to dinner plans
- Families should solve the postgame food plan before the game starts
For the best options near the stadium, see restaurants near MetLife Stadium. For overnight stays in the area, see hotels near MetLife Stadium.
Planning by Visitor Type
Choose a manageable game. Sunday 1 PM, mild weather, seats with a clear full-field view, and a simple transit or parking plan. Do not start with the hardest version of the day — a night game in December is not the right first experience. See the first-time visitor guide.
Compare football against your other NYC plans. A MetLife game takes most of a day. That day may be better than Broadway, basketball, baseball, or a museum — or it may not, depending on your itinerary. Choose the game that fits the trip, not the one with the biggest team name. See best NFL game for tourists.
Solve the logistics before the tickets. 1 PM kickoff, mild weather, accessible seats near bathrooms and concessions, a clear food plan for kids, and a return route that doesn’t depend on patience after a long cold afternoon. See best game for families.
Comfort and timing over intensity. A football game works as a date when the logistics are smooth and the experience doesn’t feel like endurance. Choose weather-appropriate timing, decent seats, and a return that still leaves room for dinner afterward. See best game for date night.
Matchup, atmosphere, and seat angle. You already know the team. The decisions are opponent quality, sideline vs. end zone crowd energy, full-game tactical view vs. lower-level immersion, and whether the tailgate is part of the day.
Compare both teams by seat value. A better seat at a regular-season Giants or Jets game often costs less than a mediocre seat at a marquee matchup. The schedule and opponent matter as much as the team name when you are optimizing for value.
Game-Day Timeline: Sunday 1 PM Kickoff
This timeline assumes a 1 PM kickoff, transit or parking from the New York area, and no tailgate. Adjust accordingly — driving with a tailgate adds 60–90 minutes to the morning; night games shift everything later and colder.
- Morning — Wake UpCheck weather, confirm tickets, confirm route. Make sure mobile tickets are downloaded and accessible offline. Check the bag policy if you are bringing anything larger than a small bag. Decide on layers before you get dressed.
- 9:30–10:00 AMLeave earlier than feels necessary. Traffic and transit on game days are not the same as regular New Jersey days. The Meadowlands corridor gets congested well before kickoff. Building a buffer is not overcautious — it is the difference between arriving settled and arriving stressed.
- 10:30–11:15 AMArrive at MetLife Stadium area. Park or complete transit. If tailgating, this is your window. If not, use this time to orient yourself to the gate, use the bathroom before lines build, and locate your section on the concourse map.
- 11:30 AM — Gates OpenEnter the stadium. Gates typically open 90 minutes before kickoff — verify for your specific game. Getting in early means shorter lines for concessions, easier bathroom access, and time to find your seats without the pregame crowd pressure.
- 11:30 AM–12:45 PMSettle in. Grab food and drinks before lines peak. Use restrooms. Watch warmups if you are interested. Families with young kids should use this window to solve everything before kickoff — it is harder to manage during the game.
- 1:00 PM — KickoffThe game. An NFL game runs approximately three to three-and-a-half hours. Budget accordingly.
- Halftime (~2:30 PM)Move strategically. Halftime is peak concession and restroom time. If the group has a non-urgent reason to leave seats, halftime is the time — not the end of a quarter when lines are shorter.
- ~4:15–4:30 PM — Final WhistleKnow your exit before this moment. Decide before kickoff whether you are walking immediately to your car/transit point or waiting 15–20 minutes for the first crowd wave to clear. Both are valid — but deciding in the moment under crowd pressure is not the best version of either choice.
- PostgamePatience is the plan. MetLife exits a large crowd into a constrained infrastructure. NJ Transit game-day trains fill immediately. Parking lot exits can take 30–60 minutes for the first wave. Rideshare prices surge. Waiting 20–30 minutes inside the stadium before leaving usually converts all of those problems into manageable ones.
Planning If You Are Staying in Manhattan
Manhattan-based visitors have the most options — and the most decisions. Penn Station is the most convenient departure point for NJ Transit game-day service, which makes Midtown hotels the most logistically straightforward base for a football day. If you are staying elsewhere in Manhattan or in Brooklyn, factor in travel time to Penn Station before the game and from Penn Station after — it adds up.
The key Manhattan planning reality: a football game at MetLife is likely to consume the afternoon and early evening of whatever day you go. A Sunday afternoon 1 PM game means leaving around 10 AM and returning by 6–7 PM at the earliest. That structure tends to work well when football is the main plan for the day and dinner afterward in Manhattan is the natural cap. It works less well when football is squeezed between morning sightseeing and an 8 PM dinner reservation.
Night games are harder to combine with other plans. A Sunday night kickoff at 8:20 PM means late arrival back in the city, which affects Monday morning, dinner options, and anyone with a flight the next day. These are worth solving before the tickets are bought rather than after.
Planning If You Are Staying Near MetLife
Staying near MetLife — in the Meadowlands corridor or nearby New Jersey towns — simplifies the game-day logistics significantly. Driving to the stadium is trivial, tailgating is practical, and the postgame return is a short trip rather than a transit event. For groups making football the primary focus of a trip, particularly families and tailgate-oriented fans, a nearby hotel eliminates the biggest friction points in the day.
The tradeoff is distance from New York City itself. Staying near MetLife for a Giants or Jets game works well when the trip is built around the game. It works less well when the game is one part of a larger New York sightseeing trip where hotel location matters for everything else on the itinerary. See hotels near MetLife Stadium for the best-positioned options.
Pre-Game Checklist
Check everything below before leaving for the stadium. The things that catch people off-guard are almost always on this list.
- Mobile tickets downloaded and accessible offline
- Bag policy checked — correct bag size confirmed
- Weather checked — layers planned
- Kickoff time confirmed
- Gate and entry details verified
- Parking lot or NJ Transit plan confirmed
- Tailgating rules checked if applicable
- Food plan decided — before, during, or after
- Seat location reviewed on the chart
- Postgame exit route planned
- Any schedule or time change notifications checked
- Kids’ snacks and logistics solved if applicable
- Current stadium policies verified on official site
- Return transportation confirmed — not assumed
MetLife Stadium’s bag policy, mobile ticketing requirements, entry gate assignments, parking procedures, and tailgating rules can change from season to season and game to game. Always verify current policies on the official Giants or Jets website — not from a third-party source that may be outdated.
Common Football Game-Day Mistakes
- Buying tickets before solving transportation. For MetLife, the route is part of the ticket decision. Buying first and figuring out the return later is how a great game turns into a frustrating evening.
- Forgetting MetLife is in New Jersey. The “New York” in Giants and Jets is a brand, not an address. The stadium is in East Rutherford, NJ, and getting there and back requires real planning.
- Treating it like a quick Manhattan night out. Football at MetLife takes most of a day. Planning around anything less than that creates a schedule that doesn’t fit.
- Choosing the cheapest seats without checking comfort and view. The cheapest ticket is not always the best value when it is in a deep end zone in December with poor sightlines.
- Ignoring weather. MetLife is outdoors. October and December are different planets. Dress for the stadium — not the city you left to get there.
- Bringing families to a night game in November without a plan. Night games in late season are long, cold, and a lot to ask of kids. A 1 PM early-season game is a fundamentally different experience.
- Assuming tailgating is simple without checking the current rules. Tailgate rules at MetLife have specific requirements. Checking them before the morning of the game is the right time — not after you have already set up.
- Waiting until halftime for food and bathrooms. Halftime is peak line time. The window just before kickoff and midway through a quarter is almost always shorter.
- Planning postgame dinner like it is MSG. MSG postgame dinner is a Times Square decision. MetLife postgame dinner usually means returning to Manhattan first — and that return takes time.
- Ignoring the exit crowd. Both teams play in the same stadium. When the game ends, a stadium of 80,000 people exits at once. Having a plan before the final whistle is not overcautious — it is the only sensible approach.
- Choosing a team by name instead of the better game. A Giants ticket to a strong matchup in good weather is a better day than a Jets ticket to the same matchup with a difficult return. Compare the actual game, not just the logo.
- Not comparing kickoff times. 1 PM and 8:20 PM are different days. Choosing a night game without understanding what that means for a family, a tourist, or a transit user is avoidable.
Planning Matrix by Visitor Type
| If you are… | Best approach |
|---|---|
| First-time visitor | Sunday 1 PM, mild weather, clear route, readable sideline or corner seats |
| Tourist | Compare football against other NYC plans — it takes a full day; make sure it’s the right day to spend it |
| Family with kids | 1 PM kickoff, early-mid season, accessible seats, food and bathroom plan before kickoff |
| Date night | Comfort, weather awareness, clear return plan — a good seat at a lower-key game often beats a bad seat at a marquee one |
| Hardcore fan | Matchup quality, crowd energy, sideline elevation for tactical view, or end zone for atmosphere — you already know the tradeoffs |
| Budget visitor | Compare both Giants and Jets by seat value and matchup quality; corner sections over cheap end zones |
| Weather-sensitive | Avoid exposed late-season night games; October 1 PM is the sweet spot |
| Driving from NJ/suburbs | Confirm parking and tailgate rules before game day; book parking in advance for marquee matchups |
| Taking NJ Transit | Penn Station departure, check current game-day schedule, plan postgame patience — do not count on a fast return |
| Staying in Manhattan | Solve the return before buying; factor Penn Station transit time into every other plan on the trip |
| Staying near MetLife | Decide whether the hotel helps game-day logistics more than it limits the broader NYC itinerary |
Continue Into the Football Planning Cluster
This page covers the full game-day picture. Each guide below goes deeper on one piece of it.
New York Football Game — Planning FAQ
Start with the game choice — Giants or Jets, opponent quality, and kickoff time. Then solve transportation before buying tickets: driving and parking, NJ Transit from Penn Station, or rideshare. Choose seats based on view, weather, and who is in the group. Plan arrival 90 minutes before kickoff. Decide on food before the day of the game. And plan the postgame exit before the final whistle — not after it.
Both the New York Giants and New York Jets play at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey. The stadium is in the Meadowlands sports complex, approximately 8 miles west of Midtown Manhattan — a 20–30 minute drive without game-day traffic, or a direct NJ Transit train from Penn Station on game days.
No. MetLife Stadium is in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Both teams use “New York” in their names, but the stadium is across the state line. Getting there requires either NJ Transit from Penn Station, driving through New Jersey, or a rideshare — not a standard New York City subway ride.
If you have a team, the choice is made. If you are neutral — a tourist, a first-timer, or a group without strong loyalty — compare the actual game rather than the team name. Look at the opponent, the kickoff time, the seat availability at your budget, and the weather for that date. The better matchup at the more manageable time with better seat options usually produces a better day than the more famous team on a harder night.
For most visitors, Sunday 1 PM is the best kickoff time. It allows a reasonable morning departure, an afternoon game, and a return to the city by early evening. The 4:25 PM window is good for fans without evening constraints. Sunday night, Monday night, and Thursday night games offer peak atmosphere but require more planning and result in later returns — harder for families, tourists, and visitors on tighter schedules.
Plan to be in the stadium area at least 90 minutes before kickoff — more if you are tailgating. Gates typically open 90 minutes before kickoff, and arriving early means shorter concession lines, easier bathroom access, and no sprint to your seats through a filling concourse. For a 1 PM kickoff, leaving by 9:30–10:00 AM from most New York-area starting points is the right frame.
It depends on where you are coming from and whether you want to tailgate. NJ Transit game-day service from Penn Station is the most practical option for Manhattan visitors — direct, no parking hassle, and straightforward on the way in. The tradeoff is postgame — trains fill immediately and waits can be long. Driving works well for visitors from New Jersey and the suburbs, tailgating groups, and families with gear. Rideshare works for arrival; postgame surges make it less reliable for the return.
Yes. MetLife has an established tailgate culture in the surrounding parking lots — one of the more authentic tailgate environments in the NFL. Rules around grills, alcohol, and lot access can change, so verify current tailgating policies on the official Giants or Jets website before game day. Arrive at least two to three hours before kickoff to get full value from the experience.
Sideline seats with some elevation above field level are the best all-around choice for most visitors — balanced full-field view, good for following play development, and comfortable for a three-hour game. Corner sections offer strong value at a lower price than midfield. End zone seats bring energy but trade off full-field balance. Upper-level sideline seats often show more football than lower-level end zone seats at similar or lower prices. See the full football seats guide.
Budget the full afternoon for a 1 PM kickoff — leaving around 9:30–10:00 AM and returning to the city around 6:00–7:00 PM, assuming a normal-length game and no significant postgame transit delays. A tailgate adds 60–90 minutes to the morning. Night games push the return to 11 PM or later. Football at MetLife is not a two-hour event.
Yes, with the right planning. An NFL game at MetLife is a genuinely impressive experience — the stadium, the crowd, and the atmosphere are worth it. The key is treating it as the main event of the day rather than something to fit between other plans. Choose a Sunday 1 PM game in good weather, get a seat with a clear view, solve the transit before buying, and plan dinner in Manhattan afterward. See the tourist football guide for more.
It can be excellent, but the details matter more than for other visitor types. A 1 PM kickoff in September or October, accessible seats near bathrooms and concessions, a clear food plan before the kids get hungry, and a transit or driving plan that doesn’t rely on postgame patience makes for a strong family day. Night games in late November through January are a much harder ask. See the family football guide.
Football works well as a date when the logistics are smooth and the experience is comfortable for both people. Choose a game in good weather, pick seats with a decent view and manageable exposure, and have a return plan that still allows for dinner in the city afterward. The games that work least well for date night are the cold late-season night games in exposed upper sections with unpredictable transit home. See the date night football guide.
Dress for the stadium, not the city you departed from. In September, heat and sun are the factors — light layers and sun protection. October is usually the most forgiving weather window — dress comfortably for outdoor sitting. November means real layers: thermal base, mid layer, and a proper outer layer. December and January games require genuine cold-weather gear — the wind at an outdoor stadium in New Jersey in January is not a suggestion. Check the specific forecast before game day and add one more layer than feels necessary.
Before leaving: confirm mobile tickets are downloaded, check the bag policy and confirm your bag meets the size requirement, verify the current weather and dress accordingly, confirm your parking or transit plan, check any gate-specific entry details, verify tailgating rules if applicable, and make sure you have a postgame exit plan in place. Check all policies on the official Giants or Jets website — not from third-party sources that may reflect older rules.
The Football Day That Actually Works
A well-planned Giants or Jets game at MetLife Stadium is one of the best sports experiences the New York area offers — a genuine NFL atmosphere in a proper outdoor stadium with real crowd energy and football that fills the whole field. The reason some people have a great day and others have a frustrating one usually has nothing to do with the game itself and everything to do with the plan around it.
Get the route right before buying the tickets. Choose a kickoff time that fits the group. Pick seats based on view and weather, not just price. Build the arrival buffer, solve the food before you are hungry, and know the exit before the final whistle. The game takes care of itself. The day is what you build around it.
More New York Football Planning Guides
The full MetLife game day starts with a decision and ends with a plan. Every guide below plugs into a step in that sequence — team, seats, stadium, transit, food, and who you’re taking.
Giants vs Jets — Which Game Should You Choose?
For neutral visitors, this is the first call. Compare teams, matchups, crowd energy, and ticket value side by side.
Compare Teams →How to Choose NYC Football Seats
Sideline vs end zone, lower vs upper, sightlines, weather exposure, and what to prioritize as a first-timer at MetLife.
Choose Your Seats →MetLife Stadium — Complete Venue Guide
Layout, entry gates, concessions, tailgate lots, policies, and what the stadium experience actually looks and feels like.
Explore MetLife →MetLife Stadium Seating Guide
Section-by-section breakdown — every level, sightline, and weather exposure zone — before you commit to a purchase.
Read the Guide →First-Time Visitor Guide to NYC Football
What first-timers get wrong, what to expect on arrival, and how to set up the day so nothing catches you off guard.
Read the Guide →