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Buffalo Bills 2026 home-game ticket resale prices are currently insane

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The NFL’s controversial Personal Seat License (PSL) continues shaping the game-day experience.

PORTLAND, OR - APRIL 16: A protester adds wood to a dumpster fire on April 16, 2021 in Portland, Oregon. Protests erupted Friday after Portland Police shot and killed a homeless man in Lents Park. (Photo by Nathan Howard/Getty Images) | Getty Images No kidding, right?

Anyone could have predicted this happening with the new version of Highmark Stadium set to open later this summer just head of the Buffalo Bills’ 2026 season. A big reason for the price spike is due to Personal Seat Licenses (PSLs), which have saddled season-ticket bearers with one-time costs beginning at a few hundred dollars, and ending at a ceiling somewhere in the neighborhood of a really nice, yet overpriced car. What does that make a PSL, then?

Well, truthfully, it makes for sound business by billionaires. A PSL exists to help offset debt incurred during the construction of a new stadium. These are buildings that cost well north of $1 billion dollars to construct.

Despite current events, money doesn’t grow on trees — even for billionaires (I can’t speak adequately to its cultivation offshore). Few of those lucky and wealthy can “afford” giving away a billion bucks to build a new sandbox for their hobby. (It’s not like their current billions will simply continue growing new billions.

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