Palace Theatre Seating Guide: Best Seats, Balcony Warnings & The Lost Boys Tips
The Palace is one of Broadway’s most storied venues — and after its 2024 renovation it is also one of the most accessible. But it is a large, three-level house with specific quirks worth knowing before you book: a Balcony row 1 sightline bar, box seats that consistently disappoint, and an overhang that matters for shows using vertical staging.
The Palace Theatre has been at the center of Broadway’s history since it opened in 1913 as a vaudeville palace. Judy Garland played it. Ethel Merman played it. And in 2024, after being physically lifted 30 feet during the TSX Broadway redevelopment and put back down with a full renovation, it became one of Broadway’s most accessible large houses — with elevator service to the rear Mezzanine and Balcony that most houses its age cannot offer.
Right now it is home to The Lost Boys: A New Musical — the 12-time Tony-nominated rock musical based on the 1987 cult film, starring Shoshana Bean and Ali Louis Bourzgui, directed by two-time Tony winner Michael Arden. It is this season’s most ambitious new Broadway spectacle, and where you sit changes how it lands.

Orchestra Seats — Where Proximity and Performer Detail Live
The Palace Orchestra is the most step-free level in the house and the largest section. From center Orchestra, The Lost Boys delivers its energy, performances, and rock-show atmosphere at closest range. This is where Shoshana Bean’s voice lands at full force, where Ali Louis Bourzgui’s Michael lands as a three-dimensional character, and where the show’s concert-musical intensity is most viscerally felt.
Center Orchestra Rows G–K — The Sweet Spot
Multiple sources — SeatPlan, Headout, and our own synthesis — converge on rows G through K of Center Orchestra as the strongest all-around target. You are close enough to feel the show, far enough to see the full stage picture, and in a central position that avoids both the too-close front-row angle and the overhang risk that begins around row K. The Lost Boys uses wide staging, and center alignment is the most important factor in any row.
Front Orchestra Rows A–F — Maximum Intensity, Some Trade-offs
The very front of the Orchestra is the most immersive, most expensive, and most unforgiving zone. From rows A through D, you are extremely close to the stage — the rock energy, the performances, and the lighting all hit with maximum force. The consideration: at this proximity, some upward staging, vertical effects, and full-width choreographic pictures can be harder to read. For The Lost Boys, which uses a large scenic design across the full stage depth and height, rows E through G tend to offer a better balance than A through C.
Also worth noting: multiple A View From My Seat reviewers flag the top scaffolding on The Lost Boys set as difficult to see from Orchestra rows under the Mezzanine overhang. This is less an issue in front Orchestra (pre-overhang) but worth knowing if vertical staging matters to you.
Rear Orchestra — Value Zone With One Important Caveat
The value zone in Center Orchestra runs from approximately rows K through M — strong sightlines, below premium pricing, and still close enough for performer connection. Beyond row K, the Mezzanine overhang begins to cut into the top-of-stage view. Broadway Scorecard’s data, citing the official seating chart, notes the overhang starting around row K and becoming obvious by rows N–O. However, an A View From My Seat reviewer at row N seat 119 specifically noted that for The Lost Boys, the large set meant they did not miss the action despite being under the overhang. This is show-specific — The Lost Boys’ set is built wide and tall, and some of the vertical staging may still be partially compromised in rear rows. Check the current seat map before booking beyond row M.
Side Orchestra — Center Always Wins, Far Right Especially Risky
Side Orchestra is generally less ideal in any large house. At the Palace, it matters more than usual because of a confirmed show-specific issue: A View From My Seat reviewers report that far-right Orchestra seats can lose the major stage-left staircase used in The Lost Boys. Do not buy extreme-right side Orchestra for The Lost Boys without checking the current partial-view listings on the official seat map.
Mezzanine Seats — The Best Full-Stage View for The Lost Boys
The Palace Mezzanine is where the full scope of The Lost Boys comes into view. This is a show built on visual spectacle — large-scale staging, lighting design, aerial and movement effects, and a rock-concert atmosphere that plays across the full width and height of the stage. From Front Center Mezzanine, all of that resolves as a complete composed picture in a way that even the best Orchestra seats cannot fully deliver.
Front Center Mezzanine Rows A–D — The Recommended Spectacle Seat
Front Center Mezzanine is the best position in the house for seeing The Lost Boys as the large-scale theatrical event it is. SeatPlan identifies rows A and B as premium and rows C through F as strong value within this section. The elevated, centered perspective lets you see the full stage width, the lighting design as a complete picture, the choreography as composed patterns, and — critically — the full vertical dimension of the show’s scaffold-heavy, rock-venue set design.
For The Lost Boys specifically: this show uses staging effects, movement, and lighting in ways that are designed to be read from a slight elevation. Front Mezzanine center is where those elements land with the most theatrical clarity. It is not a compromise position — for this production, it is an argument for being the best seat in the house.
The Palace Theatre’s 2024 renovation includes elevator service to the rear Mezzanine and Balcony. This is a genuine accessibility advance for a house built in 1913. However, the elevator reaches the rear Mezzanine — not the front rows. Visitors using the elevator for Mezzanine seating will need to navigate to their specific seats from the rear of the section. If front Mezzanine rows A–D are your target, confirm the walking path with the box office before arriving. Wheelchair seating is in the rear Mezzanine, where elevator access is most direct.
Rear and Side Mezzanine — Center Beats Side Every Time
Rear center Mezzanine offers a more affordable extended view of The Lost Boys — the show’s visual scale holds reasonably well at that distance from center. Side Mezzanine is where caution rises: the horizontal angle at elevation compounds in a large house, and far-side Mezzanine positions lose the full-stage-width advantage that makes this level valuable for a show like The Lost Boys. A rear center Mezzanine seat is almost always a better Lost Boys pick than a close-but-angled side Mezzanine seat.
Balcony Seats — The Budget Level, and Why Row 1 Is a Trap
The Palace Balcony is the house’s budget section — high, farther from the stage, but elevator-accessible and with wheelchair seating available. For The Lost Boys, which is built around visual spectacle and a large set, the Balcony still communicates the show’s broad energy in a way that a more intimate drama would not. If price is the primary constraint, Balcony center rows 2 through 5 are a legitimate way to see this production.
The Palace Theatre Balcony row 1 has a known horizontal sightline bar that may block part of your view. In most theaters, row 1 of the Balcony is the desirable front row — at the Palace, it can be the trap row. Book rows 2 and beyond. Within the first 5 rows of Center Balcony, rows 2 through 5 are consistently the recommended budget picks.
Center Balcony Rows 2–5 — The Budget Sweet Spot
SeatPlan specifically recommends toward the middle within the first five rows of the Balcony. That means center, rows 2 through 5 — avoiding both row 1’s sightline issue and the increased distance of rows 6 and beyond. From these seats, The Lost Boys’ large-scale staging, lighting, and rock-venue design still read as a theatrical event, even if performer detail is reduced. Most Balcony tickets are priced similarly, so there is no price premium for moving from row 1 to row 3 — the seat quality difference is real and the price difference is often nil.
Side and Rear Balcony — Significant Caution
Side Balcony adds horizontal angle to the already elevated distance — for The Lost Boys’ wide staging, far-side Balcony positions may miss significant portions of the show. Rear Balcony adds distance on top of height. The combination of side angle, height, and distance in rear side Balcony positions makes them the most compromised seats in the house. Consider them only when price is an absolute constraint and you accept that you are buying the experience of being in the building more than the experience of seeing the show in detail.
Box Seats — A Consistent Disappointment at This Theater
The Palace has approximately 41 box seats in the Mezzanine and Balcony levels. They look attractive — private, elevated, close-feeling on paper. The reality is that box seats at the Palace consistently disappoint, and the recommendation from multiple independent sources is blunt: avoid them.
Box seats are side-angle positions, and for The Lost Boys specifically, this matters because the show uses the full width of the stage, staging elements on both sides including the stage-left staircase, and full-height vertical scenic effects. A side-angled box position misses the compositional logic of how this production fills the Palace stage.
One A View From My Seat reviewer does note seeing everything in this production from a right-side box — but the weight of guidance across independent sources points consistently toward center Orchestra or center Mezzanine over box seats for any visitor who cares about seeing the full stage. If box seats appeal as a novelty for a repeat visit after seeing the show properly, that is your call. As a first-choice seat, they are not the value or upgrade they appear to be.
Best Seats for The Lost Boys: A New Musical
The Lost Boys: A New Musical is one of Broadway’s most-nominated new musicals of 2026, with 12 nominations including Best Musical. Based on the 1987 cult film, it follows Lucy and her teenage sons as they move to the vampire-infested town of Santa Carla. Music and lyrics by The Rescues, book by David Hornsby and Chris Hoch, directed by Tony winner Michael Arden.
Runtime: about 2 hours 30 minutes including one intermission. Recommended for ages 10 and up. Children under 4 are not admitted. Previews began March 27, 2026; opened April 26, 2026. The show has no announced closing date in this page copy; verify the current performance calendar before publishing. $45 in-person rush tickets are available when the Palace box office opens, subject to availability and possible partial-view locations. Tony Awards ceremony: June 7, 2026 — update this section afterward with any wins.
The Lost Boys is a large-scale rock spectacle built around choreography, a massive scenic design, vertical staging, lighting, and a rock-concert energy that transforms the Palace stage into a version of Santa Carla’s boardwalk. It is not an intimate two-person play. The seat decision should reflect what kind of Lost Boys experience you want to have.
Two positions compete for the recommendation depending on your priorities. Center Orchestra rows G–K gives you the show as a concert — performer detail, energy, cast presence, and rock-musical immediacy. Front Center Mezzanine rows A–D gives you the show as spectacle — the full-stage picture, lighting design, choreography patterns, and the visual world of Santa Carla as a complete theatrical composition. Neither is wrong. Which is right depends on whether your priority is performance up close or The Lost Boys as a staged event.
Best Seats by Visitor Type
See the full scope of how Michael Arden has transformed the Palace stage into Santa Carla. The production design, lighting, and full-stage staging is best read from the elevated center position.
Close enough to feel the performance with maximum presence and read every emotional moment. The rock-musical energy lands most completely from center Orchestra proximity.
The most reliable introduction to what Broadway spectacle feels like. Step-free, centered, and at the right distance to experience The Lost Boys as both concert and theater.
Lost Boys is recommended 10+. For teens who want the rock energy, Orchestra center delivers. For families who want the full visual picture, Front Mezzanine center is the alternative.
Front Mezzanine for the elevated full-stage spectacle of Santa Carla. Center Orchestra for an immersive rock-musical night. Both deliver a strong date-night experience at The Lost Boys.
The Lost Boys’ spectacle holds at Balcony distance better than most Broadway shows. Center rows 2 through 5 are the recommended budget zone. Do not book Balcony row 1.
Orchestra is fully step-free. Elevator reaches rear Mezzanine and Balcony. Wheelchair seating at all three levels. Call 212-730-8200 to arrange. Verify specific seat path before arriving.
The full scope of The Lost Boys’ scenic design, lighting, choreography, and vertical staging reads most completely from an elevated centered position. This is the spectacle seat.
Accessibility at the Palace — Better After 2024 Than Before
Book accessible seating through the box office: call 212-730-8200. Accessible seating is sold on a first-come, first-served basis. Book in advance and inform the box office of your specific mobility needs.
Seats to Avoid — or Approach With Eyes Open
- Do not book Balcony row 1 — known horizontal sightline bar that may block your view. Book rows 2+ instead. Most Balcony tickets are the same price, so there is no reason to accept row 1.
- Do not book box seats expecting a clear, full-stage view — they are consistently rated as poor sightline seats for this theater.
- Do not book far-right Orchestra seats for The Lost Boys without checking the current partial-view listings — the stage-left staircase may be obstructed from this position.
- Do not book rear Orchestra (rows N and beyond) without checking the current seat map for Mezzanine overhang impact — especially relevant for The Lost Boys’ vertical scaffolding staging at the top of the proscenium.
- Do not book side Mezzanine when centered alternatives exist at a comparable price — horizontal angle at elevation is a real trade-off for a wide-stage spectacle show.
- Do not book far-side Balcony — angle plus height plus distance compounds quickly in the upper level of a large house.
- Do not book any seat listed as partial-view or obstructed-view without understanding exactly what is blocked and how much of The Lost Boys’ staging falls in that zone.
- Do not arrive at curtain time — Broadway at 47th Street is one of the most congested blocks in Times Square at curtain time. Plan 20–30 minutes of buffer for navigation, security, and finding your seat.
Seat Comparisons
- Orch center vs. Front Mezz centerChoose Center Orchestra if performer detail, rock energy, and being inside the show matter most. Choose Front Mezzanine center if the full spectacle picture — staging, lighting, effects, choreography — is the priority. For The Lost Boys, this is a genuinely close call; both are strong recommendations for different reasons.
- Front Orch vs. Mid OrchChoose Front Orchestra (rows A–F) for maximum proximity and intensity. Choose mid-Orchestra (rows G–K) for the better full-stage balance and a more comfortable viewing angle for a wide spectacle show.
- Balcony row 1 vs. rows 2–5Always rows 2–5. Row 1 has a horizontal sightline bar that may block your view. The price difference is typically nil. There is no upside to booking row 1.
- Box seats vs. Center OrchestraCenter Orchestra wins without question. Boxes may feel special but consistently disappoint in sightlines for this theater. For The Lost Boys especially, the full-stage staging makes a centered position essential.
- Rear Orch center vs. Front Mezz centerIf stairs or elevator access is not an issue, front Mezzanine center usually beats rear Orchestra center for The Lost Boys — better elevation, cleaner full-stage view, and no overhang concern. Rear Orchestra if step-free access is needed.
- Best for first-timerCenter Orchestra rows G–K. Step-free, centered, in the show’s sweet zone, and the most reliable introduction to Broadway spectacle at the Palace.
Planning Your Palace Theatre Night
The Palace sits at Broadway and 47th Street — the heart of Times Square, which means the energy is electric and the crowds are real. This is one of Broadway’s most tourist-trafficked corners. Budget 20–30 minutes of arrival buffer over a normal Broadway house. The subway drops you right there: 1/2/3 and N/Q/R/W to Times Square–42nd Street, walk north; or N/R/W to 49th Street and walk south. Either puts you within a block or two.
For dinner, Hell’s Kitchen to the west and the Theater District cluster near 45th Street both offer strong pre-show options within walking distance. Avoid the tourist-trap restaurants directly on Broadway at Times Square — there are much better options one or two blocks in either direction. If you are staying near Times Square, you have the shortest possible post-show walk.
The Palace vs Other Large Broadway Houses
The Palace is distinctive among Broadway’s large houses in several ways. Its renovation gives it better accessibility than most houses its age — the elevator to upper levels is something many older houses cannot match. Its vertical three-level structure with Balcony, Mezzanine, and Orchestra makes it more layered than the more horizontal Minskoff. Compared with the Lyric — Broadway’s biggest house — the Palace is slightly more intimate with a more pronounced vertical dimension. The Balcony row 1 sightline bar is a Palace-specific quirk you will not encounter at the New Amsterdam or Marquis.
FAQ — Palace Theatre Seating
Center Orchestra rows G through K for the best all-around experience — immersive, step-free, and at the right distance for The Lost Boys’ balance of performer detail and full-stage picture. Front Center Mezzanine rows A through D for the best spectacle and full-stage view. Both are strong; the choice depends on whether you prioritize performer closeness (Orchestra) or staged visual composition (Mezzanine).
For The Lost Boys specifically, both are excellent for different reasons. Orchestra is better for performer detail, rock energy, and being inside the show. Front Mezzanine center is better for seeing the full-stage spectacle — lighting, choreography, scenic design, and aerial effects — as a complete composed picture. For most first-time visitors, Center Orchestra rows G–K is the safer starting recommendation. For spectacle-first buyers, Front Mezzanine center is the argument.
Front Center Mezzanine rows A–D for the full spectacle view of the show. Center Orchestra rows G–K for the best balance of energy and full-stage picture. Center Orchestra rows A–F for maximum performer proximity. Avoid: far-right Orchestra if the stage-left staircase is blocked, Balcony row 1 (sightline bar), box seats (poor angle), and rear Orchestra beyond row N without checking the overhang map.
Center Balcony rows 2 through 5 are the legitimate budget option — The Lost Boys’ large-scale staging and spectacle holds reasonably well from center positions. The Balcony is high and farther from the stage, and performer detail diminishes at this distance, but the show’s rock-concert visual energy still communicates. Avoid row 1 (sightline bar), side Balcony, and rear Balcony.
Yes. Balcony row 1 at the Palace Theatre has a known horizontal sightline bar that may block part of your view. This is a Palace-specific quirk. In most theaters, row 1 of the Balcony is desirable; at the Palace, it can be a poor choice. Book rows 2 through 5 of Center Balcony instead. Most Balcony tickets are similarly priced, so there is little benefit to row 1.
No. Box seats at the Palace Theatre are consistently treated as poor sightline positions. For The Lost Boys, which uses wide staging, a stage-left staircase, and full-height scenic effects, a side-angled box position misses the fundamental visual logic of the show. Choose center Orchestra or center Mezzanine instead.
Yes, and better than before the 2024 renovation. The Orchestra is fully step-free with wheelchair seating in rear rows Q–W area. Elevator access reaches the rear Mezzanine and Balcony, both of which also have wheelchair seating. Aisle transfer seats are available in Orchestra and at select Mezzanine and Balcony positions. Call 212-730-8200 to arrange accessible seating before purchasing. Even with elevator access, verify your specific seat’s accessible path with the box office.
Yes — added as part of the 2024 renovation. The elevator goes to the rear Mezzanine and Balcony. The Orchestra is step-free and does not require an elevator. This makes the Palace meaningfully more accessible than most Broadway houses of its 1913 vintage. Note: the elevator reaches the rear of the Mezzanine; walking to front Mezzanine rows from the elevator requires navigating forward through the section.
The Lost Boys is recommended for ages 10 and up. Children under 4 are not admitted. For families, Center Orchestra rows E through L gives a strong Lost Boys experience — close enough for the rock energy and character engagement, far enough for the full stage picture. Front Mezzanine center is the alternative if seeing the full show as a staged spectacle is the priority. Avoid side Orchestra and Balcony row 1.
Avoid: Balcony row 1 (horizontal sightline bar), box seats (poor angle/sightlines), far-right Orchestra for The Lost Boys if the stage-left staircase is blocked, rear Orchestra rows N and beyond without checking overhang impact, side Mezzanine and side Balcony, and any partial-view or obstructed-view listings. Center alignment is the most important single factor in any section.
Yes — it is one of Broadway’s most storied houses, and The Lost Boys is an accessible, high-energy first Broadway experience for anyone 10 and older. Book Center Orchestra rows G–K for the most reliable first visit. Arrive 20–30 minutes early to account for Times Square crowds and find your seat without rushing.
Plan to be in your seat 20–30 minutes before curtain. The Palace is at Broadway and 47th Street — the heart of Times Square — and the surrounding foot traffic at curtain time is among the heaviest of any Broadway theater. The extra buffer also gives you time to explore the renovated lobby.
Choose Your Way Into Santa Carla
For The Lost Boys at the Palace, the seat shapes whether you experience it as a rock concert or a theatrical spectacle. Use the official seat map to compare your options — and book front Mezzanine center if the full visual world is what you want.
Pick the Vampire View — Then Plan the Whole Night
The Palace is a renovated Times Square landmark, but seat choice still matters. For The Lost Boys, the smartest buy depends on whether you want performer detail, full-stage spectacle, aerial movement, lighting, or the best price without landing in a rough sightline.
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Plan the Palace Theatre Night
Dinner · Hotels · TransitRestaurants Near Broadway
Use the broader Broadway dining guide when you want an easier pre-show meal before heading into the top of Times Square.
Restaurants Near Times Square
Useful for Palace nights when you want to stay close to Broadway, 47th Street, and the busiest Midtown transit blocks.
Pre-Show Dining Guide
Plan reservation timing, walking buffer, arrival, intermission expectations, and post-show movement around a Times Square theater.
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Compare Theater District, Times Square, Midtown West, and Hell’s Kitchen hotel zones for a Broadway-centered trip.
Hotels Near Times Square
Best for visitors who want short walks, easy subway access, and simple post-show return logistics after a Palace show.
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Subway, walking, rideshare, and arrival timing for Theater District shows, including the Palace’s 47th Street / Times Square corner.
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Use subway, walking, Port Authority, or Midtown arrival routes without getting swallowed by the busiest blocks.
Subway to Broadway
Pick the right subway approach for Times Square, 47th Street, Broadway, 7th Avenue, and post-show exits.
Parking Near Times Square
When driving makes sense, when it does not, and how to avoid turning a Palace night into a Midtown garage problem.
Nearby Neighborhood & Theater Guides
Times Square · Theater District · Nearby HousesTimes Square
The practical guide to the Palace’s immediate zone: crowds, hotels, restaurants, subway access, and first-time visitor logistics.
Theater District
Use the broader Theater District guide to connect the Palace with nearby shows, hotels, restaurants, and Broadway planning.
Hell’s Kitchen
A strong pre- and post-show dining base west of the Palace, especially if you want less Times Square noise.
Lyric Theatre Guide
A nearby 42nd Street house useful for comparing big-room spectacle seating, Times Square crowds, and arrival strategy.
Minskoff Theatre Guide
A major Times Square musical house useful for comparing big-room Broadway views, family logistics, and show-night planning.
Marquis Theatre Guide
A nearby Times Square theater useful for comparing modern Broadway room design, hotel access, and crowd flow.
