Mercedes-Benz Stadium Seating Guide for the World Cup (100s, 200s, 300s)
Mercedes-Benz Stadium seats about 71,000 for soccer, stacked in three main tiers. For the World Cup, picking the right level is the biggest lever on what you pay. Here's the honest trade-off.
100 level — Lower bowl
The closest seats to the pitch. You feel the speed of the game and the atmosphere is electric, especially in the corners and along the sidelines. It's also the priciest tier — often the most expensive get-in for a match. Worth it if proximity matters more than budget.
200 level — Club / mezzanine
The middle tier, including premium club areas. You get an elevated, tactical view that's great for reading the shape of the game, usually for meaningfully less than the 100s. For many fans this is the sweet spot of price and sightline.
300 level — Upper deck
The top tier and almost always the cheapest way in. Yes, you're far from the action, but Mercedes-Benz Stadium's steep upper bowl and the giant 360° halo board mean you still follow everything clearly. If your goal is being there for a World Cup match without overpaying, the 300s are it — frequently hundreds of dollars below the 100-level get-in.
How to decide
| Priority | Buy | |---|---| | Closest view, atmosphere | 100s | | Best value + tactical view | 200s | | Cheapest get-in | 300s |
Our tracker shows the 3 lowest seats per level for every Atlanta match, so you can compare 100 vs 200 vs 300 side by side and see exactly what each tier costs right now.
Next steps
Independent service — not affiliated with FIFA, the FIFA World Cup, or Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Prices shown are from the third-party secondary market and change constantly.
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