Which Costs More: A Super Bowl Ticket or Your Mortgage?

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Which Costs More: A Super Bowl Ticket or Your Mortgage?

It is expected that more than 100 million people will be posted in the Super Bowl on Sunday when the Philadelphia Eagles will take over the Kansas City Chiefs. It will only be a happy about 76,000 or so in the stadium. Tickets for the game in Caesar's superdome in New Orleans are so expensive that, according to a report by Zillow, your mortgage probably costs less.

The researchers compared the typical monthly mortgage payments in the country's 50 largest metropolises with the cheapest nosebleed, which they could find on the resale market on January 22nd: 4,800 US dollars on Stubhub. In order to determine the monthly mortgage payment in every subway, typical house values ​​were drawn from the Zillow House value index, with a down payment of 20 percent and a 30-year fixed mortgage of 6.715 percent, the national average in December 2024 loud a survey by Freddie Mac. (Insurance and taxes were not included.)

Between the home cities of the two teams, the typical monthly mortgage payment in Kansas City, Mo., was lower at $ 1,544. This means that a fan of the hometown of Chiefs in the hope of leading Patrick Mahomes (or maybe taking a look at Taylor Swift). In Philadelphia, the typical mortgage payment was $ 1,871, which corresponds to a ticket of $ 4,800 to 2.6 house payments.

If the other football team from Pennsylvania, the Pittsburgh Steelers, were to compete for the Lombardi Trophy this year, the local fans would experience even more sticker shock. With a typical monthly mortgage payment of $ 1,075 (the lowest among the 50 metros), a homeowner in Pittsburgh would have to spend the equivalent of around four and a half mortgage numbers.

Among all 50 metros only four monthly mortgage amounts had higher than the price of a ticket of $ 4,800, and according to Zillow, everyone was in California. In San Jose it was 8,205 US dollars, almost twice as high as a ticket. San Francisco (5,858 USD) was next, followed by Los Angeles ($ 4,911) and San Diego ($ 4,835).

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