Concessions are routinely a costly Super Bowl venture, and this year was no different:
- $17.50 for domestic canned beer and $22.50 for a draught option.
- $19 for imported canned beer
- Cocktails will set folks back $19 for a single and $32 for a double; premium booze will kick those totals up to $23 and $36.
- Non-alcoholic options: Water ($8, Aquafina), souvenir 32-ounce soda ($12), Gatorade ($8.50), and Pepsi products (8.50)
- Hungry? Sausages are going for $15, with the Super-Hot Chinatown Dog special priced at $20. A charcuterie board is going for $16. An all-beef hot, nachos, and pretzel sticks are $10, candy is $8, and a souvenir popcorn is $15.
Levy’s Restaurants, which runs the catering at Levi’s Stadium, has crafted a Bay Area-inspired menu for the Big Game, including Dungeness Crab Potachos, the Impossible Rooftop Cheesesteak and the LX Hammer Burger, a $180, 3.5-pound braised bone-in beef shank with roasted mirepoix demi-glace and Point Reyes blue cheese fondue. The Gilroy Garlic Steak Frites will set eaters back a cool $35.
They’ve loaded up with expectations of selling 10,000 hot dogs, 8,000 margaritas and 5,000 custom fortune cookies, too.
The price points represent a hike in the stadium’s usual cost; an Action Network analysis before the season ranked the 49ers’ home field in the middle of the pack in terms of game-day costs. On a regular season Sunday, four hot dogs cost $26.19 (ninth-lowest in the league), two beers cost $22.26 (19th), and two soft drinks cost $12.73 (16th).
When Super Bowl 50 took place in San Francisco in 2016, a domestic beer cost $13, premium beer $15, a souvenir soft drink $10 and bottled water $7. A hot dog went for $8 a pop while a slice of pizza was $10. Nachos set fans back $8.






