- On Sunday, February 9, the Caesars Superdome will host Super Bowl LIX.
- Stadium suites offer ultrarich attendees like Taylor Swift a luxury game day experience.
- They are reported to cost between $750,000 and $2 million.
The ultrawealthy's 2025 social calendar includes various sporting events, and the first one of the year is the Super Bowl.
"The Super Bowl is always a draw," Elisabeth Brown, a client manager at travel and lifestyle concierge company Knightsbridge Circle, told Business Insider ahead of last year's big game. "It's an excuse to see the best of the best in terms of sports, parties, and entertainment."
This year, the world's wealthy will descend on New Orleans on Sunday, February 9, to watch the Kansas City Chiefs take on the Philadelphia Eagles at Caesars Superdome.
Still, what makes their Super Bowl experience special? For many, it's access to a stadium suite. From comfortable seating to curated catering, here's everything you need to know about the ultrarich's ultimate game day status symbol.
This year, suites are reported to cost between $750,000 and $2 million.
Caesars Superdome has 165 privately owned suites throughout the stadium, from the field to the 300 and 400 levels. Suites have capacities between 14 and 40 seats.
What does the suite experience actually include?
Sports Illustrated reported that the Super Bowl LIX suite experience includes amenities like parking passes, private restrooms, and comfortable seating.
Catering is also provided for suite holders by global hospitality company Sodexo Live!, which has served 16 Super Bowls.
Bruce Kraus, the company's regional vice president of operations, told Business Insider that each suite has a full-service bar and its own suite attendant.
Suite holders' food is also delivered on a timed schedule.
Bargisen told BI that the suite menu was handcrafted down to the timing of the service, so that new foods are available at kickoff, halftime, and so on.
"We want the experience in the suites and food and beverage to be the same as the game feels," she said.
In addition to suite-exclusive menu items and timed food service, suite holders have access to other Super Bowl-featured dishes like seafood nachos and alligator sausage and a QR code for more traditional stadium snacks like hand-breaded chicken tenders.
"If they want something and we can make it happen, it's happening," Bargisen said.
At the end of the day, suite holders are just like us.
Bargisen told BI that the "interesting nature" of many suite holders, including billionaires, is that they "still want it to feel like a game."
"As much as it is an exclusive experience, and you know, they want that premium anticipatory service…there are still hot dogs there, right?" she said.