If you are organizing a group trip from Jersey City to Yankee Stadium, the question that actually matters is not whether the Yankees will win — it is where exactly will the bus drop your group, and where does it wait? That single detail is what separates a game day where everyone rolls through the gate together from one where half the crew is still circling the Major Deegan at first pitch.

This guide answers it plainly, pulling from the stadium's own published information and current 2026 logistics, then walks through everything else a group trip from Jersey City needs: which vehicle fits your headcount, what shapes the price, and how a charter bus rental from Jersey City turns the Cross Bronx crawl into someone else's problem. We book this exact trip regularly, so the information below comes from doing it — not from a generic stadium page. For a full look at how Party Bus Jersey City handles sporting event days, call 551-233-0076 any time.

Stadium address

1 East 161st Street, Bronx, NY 10451

Bus parking (Gerard Ave Lot)

1011 Gerard Avenue — $325/bus, advance purchase required

From Jersey City by road

~14 miles · ~27 min off-peak, 60+ min on game day

Subway at the stadium

4, B, D trains — 161st Street–Yankee Stadium station

Drop-off zone

E 161st St & River Ave — arrive 45–60 min early

Yankee Stadium capacity

47,309 — one of MLB's largest venues

Why Rent a Bus to Yankee Stadium Instead of Driving?

Jersey City sits 14 miles from the South Bronx on paper. On a Yankees game day — especially a prime-time home game against the Red Sox, a playoff run, or a concert weekend — that 14 miles turns into a full-on ordeal. The Lincoln Tunnel backs up from Midtown.

The George Washington Bridge stacks up on both decks for miles. The Major Deegan Expressway (I-87) crawls from the interchange all the way to 161st Street, and the Cross Bronx (I-95) is, as New Yorkers say, always under construction and always a nightmare. A drive that takes 27 minutes on a Tuesday afternoon can run well over an hour and a half on a sold-out Saturday night.

A Jersey City charter bus rental changes the math entirely. Your whole group boards once, someone else handles every lane change on the New Jersey Turnpike and every stop-and-go on the Deegan, and the pregame energy builds on the ride instead of dissolving in a parking garage hunt. There is no coordinating who drives, no one drawing straws for the designated-driver job, and no one paying surge pricing for a rideshare home at midnight after extra innings.

One bus, one pickup, one drop at the stadium door, one flat rate split across the group. That is the whole reason a Jersey City party bus rental to Yankee Stadium makes sense the moment your crew hits more than a handful of people.

Charter Bus Drop-Off & Pickup at Yankee Stadium

Here is the part most rental pages either skip or get vague about — so let's get straight to how it actually works.

Charter buses and oversized vehicles dropping groups at Yankee Stadium use East 161st Street and River Avenue as the primary drop-off corridor. That is the stadium's main pedestrian approach — your group steps off the bus and walks straight toward the gates, not across a remote parking structure. For groups arriving from the New Jersey side, the bus typically comes up the Major Deegan (I-87) and exits at 161st Street, pulling up to the curb on the east side of River Avenue near the stadium entrance.

Plan to arrive 45 to 60 minutes before first pitch for a clean drop-off — the closer to game time, the more enforcement and pedestrian congestion around the stadium perimeter.

For post-game pickup, agree on a clear meeting point and time with your group before you ever split up. The stadium empties fast and the streets around 161st Street and River Avenue fill with foot traffic immediately after the final out. A charter bus cannot idle indefinitely at the curb — the group needs a pre-arranged spot (either the Gerard Avenue Lot or a nearby side street) and a specific time so the bus is right there when everyone walks out.

We confirm that pickup plan when you book.

The one-line version: your bus drops the group on East 161st Street near River Avenue — walking distance to every stadium gate — then moves to the Gerard Avenue Lot or waits nearby during the game. That is the difference between arriving together at the door and hunting for each other in a six-deck parking garage.

Yankee Stadium, 1 East 161st Street, Bronx, NY 10451 — drop-off on River Avenue near the main plaza, bus parking in the Gerard Avenue Lot at 1011 Gerard Ave.

Bus Parking at Yankee Stadium: The Gerard Avenue Lot

If the bus is staying on-site during the game — holding tailgate gear, waiting for a post-game pickup, or parking while the group is inside — the official oversized-vehicle lot is the Gerard Avenue Lot at 1011 Gerard Avenue, Bronx, NY 10452. This is the lot the stadium designates for buses and vans, and it sits roughly a 3-minute walk from the stadium gates. The cost is $325 per bus, and it must be purchased in advance through City Parking — there is no buying it at the entrance on game day.

The lot can be reached at (718) 588-7817, and reservations are available through the official Yankees parking reservation site. Standard car parking in the official lots runs $30 to $49 for self-park depending on the event, which puts the math in clear relief: one bus permit replaces 8 to 10 car passes, keeps the whole group together, and skips the $30-per-car arithmetic entirely.

The city's other official lots — the 161st Street Garage at 20 East 161st Street, the River Avenue Garage at 950 River Avenue, and the Ruppert Plaza Garage at 1 Macombs Dam Park — are all within a 3-minute walk as well, but they do not accommodate oversized vehicles. Plan the Gerard Avenue Lot from the start if the bus is staying. We take care of securing that permit as part of your booking so there is no scramble at a closed entrance.

Confirm the Drop and Lot When You Book — Here's Why

Yankee Stadium's 2026 calendar includes the regular MLB season (April through October), Jay-Z concerts on July 10 and 11 commemorating the 30th anniversary of Reasonable Doubt, the Savannah Bananas on April 25 and 26, and a full slate of promotional nights and special events. The drop-off routes and event-day street closures shift depending on what is happening — a sold-out concert night locks down different blocks than a weekday afternoon game. New York City's general city-wide regulations for oversized vehicles add another layer: certain Manhattan approach streets prohibit buses above a set length, and the route from Jersey City via the Lincoln Tunnel versus the George Washington Bridge involves different parking arrangements on the New York side.

Because these details are event-specific and change with the calendar, our team confirms the exact approach route, drop-off zone, and parking arrangement for your specific date when you reserve. We follow the current NYPD and stadium advisories so you do not have to. We always recommend reviewing the official Yankees transportation and parking page before your game day for any last-minute updates.

Getting to Yankee Stadium from Jersey City: Every Option Compared

Jersey City is actually well-positioned for Yankee Stadium — better than most of the outer boroughs — but "well-positioned" and "easy" are not the same thing on game day. Here is an honest look at all four realistic ways your group gets there.

Option Cost shape Arrive together? Game-day traffic exposure Best group size
Charter bus from Jersey City One flat rate, split by the group Yes — one vehicle, one arrival The route is handled for you 15–56
PATH + D/4 subway ~$4.90 PATH + $2.90 subway per person each way Only if everyone stays together None by car — but crowded platforms, no luggage room Any, but coordination falls apart at scale
NJ Transit to Penn Station + 4/D train $8–$17 NJ Transit + subway per person each way Only if on the same train None by car — packed game-day trains Any, but no group control
Drive + park $30–$49/car + gas per car, GWB/Lincoln tolls No — caravans split up Full exposure — GWB, Cross Bronx, Deegan 1–4 per car
Rideshare (Uber/Lyft) Per car each way + post-game surge No — multiple ETAs, multiple vehicles Surge pricing spikes post-game 1–4 per car

The honest read: for one or two people, the PATH to the D train is genuinely hard to beat — no parking, no tunnel toll, the 161st Street station drops you at the stadium entrance, and the MTA adds extra game-day service on the 4 and D lines. But the moment your party grows past a few people, the coordination cost of transit — everyone needs a MetroCard, groups get separated at packed platforms, there is nowhere to put a cooler, and post-game trains fill in minutes — tips toward one bus. The 161st Street–Yankee Stadium subway station is a 3-minute walk from the gates, but getting 30 people onto a packed D train at the same time after a night game is a project in itself.

The PATH route from Jersey City Journal Square to 33rd Street, connecting to the D at Herald Square, takes about 50 minutes under normal conditions — that estimate evaporates on game day, when every Herald Square platform is standing-room. A private Jersey City party bus rental skips all of it.

What Size Bus Does Your Group Need?

Not every Yankee Stadium run calls for the same vehicle, and we carry a range specifically so you never pay for seats your group does not fill. Here is how the fleet breaks down for a trip from Jersey City.

Vehicle Typical seats Best for Key amenities
14-passenger Sprinter limo / Sprinter van Up to ~14 Small groups, suite holders, corporate clients Premium leather, USB charging at every seat, tinted privacy windows
Party bus (15–50 passengers) ~15–50 Fan groups wanting the pregame on the road Built-in bar, color-changing LED lighting, premium Bluetooth sound, flat-panel TVs
15–35 passenger minibus ~15–35 Mid-size crews, quick pickups across Jersey City or Hoboken Powerful A/C, plush reclining seats, overhead storage
40–56 passenger charter bus Up to 56 Large fan groups, company outings, anniversary celebrations Reclining seats, climate control, WiFi, power outlets, onboard restroom, undercarriage bays

For fan groups who want the party to start the moment the bus leaves Jersey City, our 15- to 50-passenger party buses come with a built-in bar, color-changing LED lighting, and a premium sound system to keep the energy going from pickup to the first pitch. For larger groups — a company outing, a milestone birthday crew, a block-ticket purchase — a full-size charter bus gives you undercarriage bays for coolers and gear, an onboard restroom so no one is hunting for a bathroom on the Cross Bronx, and enough seats to keep 56 people together under one roof. ADA-accessible vehicles are always available; just let us know before your date.

The Jersey City to Yankee Stadium Drive: Routes, Traffic & Timing

The drive is 14 miles. On a normal day, it takes 27 minutes. On a Yankees game day, budget at least double that — and on a premium evening game against a rival like the Red Sox or Mets, potentially triple it.

Here is what actually happens on each route.

Route from Jersey City Approx. mileage Off-peak time Game-day reality
Via Lincoln Tunnel → I-87/Major Deegan ~14–15 miles 30–40 min 60–90+ min — Tunnel approach backs up from Midtown
Via NJ Turnpike → GWB → Cross Bronx (I-95) ~18–20 miles 35–45 min 60–100+ min — GWB upper level stacks for miles on big nights
Via Goethals Bridge → Turnpike → GWB (southern origin) ~22+ miles 45–55 min Longer base mileage but occasionally avoids worst Turnpike tangles

The Cross Bronx Expressway (I-95) is one of the most studied congestion corridors in the country — a 2025 study on game-day traffic at Yankee Stadium found that travel times in the immediate stadium area increase by 17% in the period before games begin, with overall network delays of roughly 6%. On a hot summer night with 47,000 people heading in from all five boroughs and across the river, those percentages translate to real minutes. The George Washington Bridge upper level, which handles most of the New Jersey approach, is routinely the worst single bottleneck on the network.

Your group skips all of that. The route is figured out before anyone boards, the timing accounts for the event, and the bus is set up for a clean post-game exit — while everyone else is still trying to get out of the Gerard Avenue Lot. Plan to depart Jersey City at least two to two and a half hours before first pitch on any premium game day.

We build that window into the booking.

Charter Bus Prices: Jersey City to Yankee Stadium

Party Bus Jersey City provides all-inclusive pricing online in under 30 seconds — you will know the exact number before you ever commit. There is no single sticker price because the quote responds to a handful of real factors:

  • Vehicle size — a 56-passenger charter bus and a 14-passenger Sprinter limo are different rates.
  • Total hours — how long the vehicle is dedicated to your group, including the pregame ride, game time staging, and post-game pickup.
  • Date and event type — a Thursday afternoon game prices differently than a Jay-Z concert night or a playoff game, when demand spikes across the full New York market.
  • Pickup location and mileage — a single Jersey City pickup is a shorter run than multi-stop pickups across Hoboken, Bayonne, and Newark.

For real ranges to anchor your planning: 14-passenger Sprinter limos run $170–$344/hour; 15–20 passenger party buses run $204–$378/hour; 20–30 passenger party buses run $244–$414/hour; 35–50 passenger party buses and minibuses run $294–$490/hour; and 40–56 passenger charter buses run $150–$300/hour or $1,200–$2,500/day. Note that the Gerard Avenue Lot bus parking at $325 is a separate, pre-purchased cost on top of your rental. Weekend rates run 20 to 30% higher than weekday equivalents.

Here is the per-person math worth knowing. A 40-passenger party bus for a 5-hour game day at, say, $1,600 total comes to $40 per person — and that covers the round trip, no parking scramble, and no one sitting out the drinking because they drew the short straw. Compare that to 10 cars each paying a GWB toll ($17 off-peak, more during peak), $49 in lot parking, and whatever the gas costs — plus the designated-driver problem — and the bus is usually both simpler and cheaper once the group grows past a van's worth of people.

Check out our party bus prices page to learn more, or call 551-233-0076 any time for a free, all-inclusive quote at no obligation.

A Real Game-Day Example

To put a real number behind the math: for a sold-out Saturday night game last August, a 35-person crew from the Jersey City Heights booked a 40-passenger party bus. Pickup was at 4:30 PM from a central spot on Palisade Avenue, crossing into Manhattan via the Lincoln Tunnel and arriving at the River Avenue drop-off by 6:15 PM — 45 minutes before first pitch. The party started on the road, the group walked to Gate 4 together, and the bus waited nearby for a 10:45 PM pickup after the game.

The 7-hour all-inclusive rental came to $2,100 — about $60 per person, with the driving, the parking permit, and the post-game rideshare surge all solved in one number.

What's on at Yankee Stadium in 2026

Yankee Stadium's 2026 calendar gives Jersey City groups plenty of reasons to charter a bus. The regular MLB season runs April through October, with the Yankees' home slate drawing the full game-day transportation crunch for every series. Several dates in 2026 are already known demand spikes where booking early is not a suggestion — it is how you get the right vehicle at a workable price.

  • Jay-Z concerts, July 10 & 11, 2026. Two back-to-back stadium-scale shows marking the 30th anniversary of Reasonable Doubt — one of the most-anticipated concert events in the metro area. Post-show rideshare demand around 161st Street and River Avenue will be extreme. Groups that arrive by charter bus set a pickup time before they go in and skip the post-show surge entirely.
  • Savannah Bananas, April 25 & 26, 2026. A family-friendly event series that draws a completely different crowd than the typical Yankees night, with heavy group ticket sales. A minibus rental from Jersey City is the right pick for family groups who want everyone on board without managing a parking structure with kids in tow.
  • Yankees regular season rivalries. Red Sox series, Mets Subway Series, and any Bronx-adjacent divisional matchup push the Lincoln Tunnel and GWB approaches to their worst. For these games, depart Jersey City at least two and a half hours before first pitch.
  • Postseason games. If the Yankees make the ALCS or the World Series, demand for charter buses across the New York metro spikes within hours of the series announcement. There is no waiting-until-closer-to-the-date strategy for a playoff game — lock in as soon as the bracket is known.
  • Promotional and theme nights. Old-Timers' Day, Star Wars Night, bobblehead giveaway games, and Military Appreciation Night all pull well above typical game attendance and make the lots fill faster.

For Jay-Z weekend and the back half of any playoff run, the metro-area vehicle supply goes fast. Call 551-233-0076 as soon as your date is set.

The PATH + Subway Option: When It Makes Sense (and When It Doesn't)

We are a charter bus company, and we will be straight with you: for a group of one or two people, the PATH train from Jersey City Journal Square to 33rd Street and then the D train uptown to 161st Street–Yankee Stadium station is a completely reasonable option. The D train from Herald Square takes roughly 30 minutes to 161st Street with no transfers, the station exits directly to River Avenue at the stadium gate, and the round trip costs about $15 per person all-in. The MTA adds extra frequency on the 4 and D lines for Yankees games, and the 161st Street station is one of the most convenient stadium transit stops in American sports.

But — and this is the part to be honest about — transit for a group of 20 falls apart in predictable ways. Everyone needs a MetroCard or a compatible payment method. The PATH platforms at Journal Square get crowded before big games.

The D train to 161st Street is packed standing-room by the time it reaches Midtown, let alone Jersey City transfers. There is no place for a cooler, a group jersey, or a birthday banner. And when the game ends and 47,000 people head to the same three subway exits at once, the 161st Street platform situation is exactly as chaotic as you are imagining.

A charter bus from Jersey City picks your group up at one door and drops them at another with no transfers, no platform wait, and the group stays together from your block to the stadium gate.

For NJ Transit riders coming from elsewhere in New Jersey, the NJ Transit to Penn Station connection is well-documented — Penn Station to Grand Central on the shuttle, then the 4 train north, or 6th Avenue on the D. The MTA also runs Metro-North Hudson Line trains to the Yankees–East 153rd Street station for select games, directly across the street from the stadium. Confirm the current schedule on the Yankees' official mass transit page before your trip — service levels vary by game importance and day of week.

Tips for Your Yankee Stadium Visit

A few things every first-timer to a big game should know — straight from the stadium's published policies — so nothing surprises your group at the gate.

  • Bag policy: soft-sided only, 16" × 16" × 8". Each fan may bring one soft-sided bag no larger than 16" × 16" × 8", plus one small personal item like a clutch or small tote. Hard-sided bags, coolers, and briefcases are prohibited — no exceptions. Clear factory-sealed plastic water bottles up to 1 liter are permitted. Leave everything else in the bus's undercarriage bays. The full policy is on the official Yankees ballpark guide.
  • Arrive early for big games and events. The stadium fills fast for any marquee matchup. For a night game, aim to be at the gate 45 minutes before first pitch; for a concert event like the Jay-Z shows, plan at least 60 minutes before doors.
  • Gate locations. Yankee Stadium has multiple entry gates around the perimeter. Gate 4 on River Avenue is the main entrance near the River Avenue Garage and the subway station. Gate 8 is on the Jerome Avenue side. Know which gate your tickets correspond to before you leave the bus.
  • No day-of bus parking is available. The Gerard Avenue Lot's $325 bus rate must be reserved in advance. There is no showing up on game day and purchasing a bus space at the entrance.
  • Weather and roof policy. Yankee Stadium is an open-air field with a partially cantilevered roof over the upper decks. In the New York summer, that means rain delays are real, and afternoon heat in July and August calls for light clothing. Check the forecast and build flexibility into your pickup window if there is any weather risk.

Trip Types from Jersey City to Yankee Stadium

Different groups, same destination — and the right vehicle and plan looks different depending on who is going.

  • Fan groups and season-ticket holders. A Jersey City party bus rental that departs your block, parks in the Gerard Avenue Lot for the full game, and returns everyone home after the final out. The pregame drinks happen on the bus, not in a parking lot where everyone has to be back by a certain time.
  • Corporate and client groups. Suite-level tickets with a group of clients or employees who need pickup from a downtown Jersey City office, a smooth arrival at the stadium, and a post-game return without anyone waiting 45 minutes for a rideshare. A minibus or Sprinter handles this cleanly.
  • Birthday and milestone celebrations. A milestone birthday where the guest of honor wants an entrance — party buses with LED lighting and a sound system turn the Lincoln Tunnel crossing into part of the event, not the commute before it.
  • Concert nights. Jay-Z July 10 or 11. Post-show rideshare surge at 161st Street is going to be severe. A pre-arranged charter bus pickup — time and spot confirmed before you go in — is the only way your group gets home at a reasonable hour.
  • Family groups and school trips. Larger family reunions or school group outings where keeping everyone together — kids included — is the whole job. A 56-passenger charter bus with an onboard restroom means no one has to make a pit stop on the Cross Bronx on the way home.

Booking Your Jersey City Bus to Yankee Stadium

The booking process is straightforward, and a little lead time makes everything smoother:

  1. Share your details. Group size, pickup location in Jersey City, game or event date, and how many hours you need the bus (include pregame arrival time and post-game buffer).
  2. We confirm the vehicle and approach plan. We match the right vehicle to your headcount, check the current drop-off zone and parking for your specific event, and build in the right travel buffer from Jersey City given the game-day traffic outlook.
  3. Lock in the bus parking permit. For the Gerard Avenue Lot, advance purchase is required. We take care of securing that permit so there is no scramble on game day.
  4. Set your post-game pickup spot and window. This is the detail that gets you home without standing on a sidewalk for an hour — we confirm the exact meeting spot and time before you ever go inside.

For Jay-Z weekend, playoff games, and any Yankees series against the Red Sox or Mets, book as far out as your date is confirmed. The New York metro vehicle supply for premium events moves quickly. For a regular-season weeknight game, two to three weeks of lead time is workable — but the earlier you call, the more vehicle options you have.

Call 551-233-0076 or use our online quote tool for instant pricing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where does a charter bus drop off at Yankee Stadium?

Charter buses and oversized vehicles drop passengers on the East 161st Street and River Avenue corridor — the stadium's main approach from the west side. Your group steps off within walking distance of the main gates, rather than at a remote lot a significant walk away. The exact curbside positioning shifts slightly by event, which is why we confirm the approach plan for your specific date when you book.

Plan to arrive 45 to 60 minutes before game time for a smooth drop at the curb.

Where do buses park at Yankee Stadium?

The official bus and oversized-vehicle parking at Yankee Stadium is the Gerard Avenue Lot at 1011 Gerard Avenue, Bronx, NY 10452. The rate is $325 per bus, and it must be purchased in advance through City Parking — there is no day-of bus parking sold at the entrance. Reservations can be made at the official Yankees parking reservation site or by calling (718) 588-7817.

How long does the drive from Jersey City to Yankee Stadium take?

Off-peak, about 27 minutes via the Lincoln Tunnel and Major Deegan Expressway (I-87). On a Yankees game day — especially an evening game — budget 60 to 90 minutes or more. The George Washington Bridge approach and the Cross Bronx Expressway are the two most reliable bottlenecks.

We build the right departure buffer into your pickup time based on your event date and start time.

How much does it cost to rent a bus from Jersey City to Yankee Stadium?

Pricing depends on vehicle size, total hours (pickup through post-game return), the date and event type, and mileage. As a guide: 14-passenger Sprinter limos run $170–$344/hour; small party buses (15–20 passengers) run $204–$378/hour; mid-size (20–30) run $244–$414/hour; large party buses and minibuses (35–50) run $294–$490/hour; and full-size charter buses run $150–$300/hour or $1,200–$2,500/day. The Gerard Avenue Lot parking at $325 is separate and pre-purchased.

Call 551-233-0076 for a free all-inclusive quote, or use our online tool for pricing in under 30 seconds.

Is transit a better option from Jersey City?

For one or two people, yes — the PATH to Journal Square, connecting to the D train at Herald Square, drops you at 161st Street–Yankee Stadium station with a 3-minute walk to the gates, for about $15 round trip per person. For groups of 15 or more, the coordination cost of transit — platform congestion, no luggage room, post-game crowding — tips decisively toward one private bus. The charter bus rental is the only option that picks your group up at one door and drops them at another with no transfers.

Does a charter bus need a parking permit at Yankee Stadium?

Yes. Oversized-vehicle parking at the Gerard Avenue Lot requires a pre-purchased permit at $325 per bus — there is no day-of option. We coordinate securing the permit and confirming the lot routing as part of your booking, so there is no discovering it at a closed gate.

Can the bus wait during the game and pick us up after?

Yes. The bus is booked as a block of hours, so it can wait at the Gerard Avenue Lot or a nearby spot during the game and be right there for your post-game pickup at a pre-agreed time and spot. You set that window with our team before you ever go inside — no hunting for the bus in the dark after the final out.

What is the bag policy at Yankee Stadium?

Each guest may bring one soft-sided bag no larger than 16" × 16" × 8", plus one small personal item. Hard-sided bags, coolers, and backpacks that exceed the size limit are prohibited. Clear factory-sealed plastic water bottles up to 1 liter are permitted.

Everything that does not make the cut stays in the bus's undercarriage bays. Full details are on the Yankees ballpark guide page.

When should we book for Jay-Z concerts or playoff games?

As soon as your date is confirmed. Premium event weekends at Yankee Stadium move the New York metro vehicle supply fast — the right-size buses go first, and late-booking pricing reflects that. For the Jay-Z July 10 and 11 shows and any postseason games, early booking is not optional if you want the right vehicle at a reasonable rate.

For regular-season weeknight games, two to three weeks of lead time is workable. Call 551-233-0076 to lock in your date.

Do you have ADA-accessible buses?

Yes — ADA-accessible vehicles are always available. Let us know your group's specific needs before your game day and we will have the right vehicle ready.

Book Your Yankee Stadium Bus from Jersey City Today

The right ride from Jersey City to the Bronx is just a call away. Whether it is a 56-person fan group for a Yankees–Red Sox showdown, a party bus for a milestone birthday that doubles as a game night, or a corporate outing where the suite level needs a polished pickup from downtown, Party Bus Jersey City has access to a fleet of party buses, charter buses, minibuses, Sprinter vans, and Sprinter limos serving Jersey City and all of Hudson County. Your group drops at 161st Street and River Avenue together — while everyone else is circling lots and waiting on surge pricing.

Give us a call any time at 551-233-0076 for an all-inclusive price quote, or use our online tool for instant pricing in under 30 seconds.

Sources & Last Verified

Transportation logistics, parking rates, and event schedules at Yankee Stadium change by season. Key details verified in June 2026; confirm current figures against the official sources below before your trip.