Spurs-Knicks Finals ticket prices soar after Thunder eliminated in Game 7
A Spurs-Knicks Finals rematch has four-figure entry prices from the start, with listed seats ranging from $1,231 in San Antonio to $5,073 in New York.
Four-figure entry prices have turned the Spurs-Knicks NBA Finals into a luxury purchase before the first tipoff, with the lowest listed seats starting at $1,231 for Game 1 in San Antonio and climbing to $5,073 for a potential Game 6 at Madison Square Garden.
The price ladder stretches across the full series. Listed tickets show $1,280 for Game 2 in San Antonio, $4,465 for Game 3 in New York, $3,828 for Game 4 in New York, $1,531 for Game 5 back in San Antonio if the series goes that far, and $4,111 for Game 7 in San Antonio if necessary. Even the cheapest get-in price places the league’s biggest stage well beyond ordinary game-night spending for most fans.

The schedule was locked in after the San Antonio Spurs beat the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder 111-103 in Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals on Saturday night. The NBA Finals are set to begin Wednesday, June 3, 2026, with every game listed for 8:30 p.m. ET on ABC. San Antonio earned home-court advantage by finishing the regular season 62-20, ahead of New York’s 53-29 record.
The matchup carries rare historical weight. It is a rematch of the 1999 NBA Finals, when the Spurs beat the Knicks in five games, and also a rematch of the 2025-26 NBA Cup championship, which New York won 124-113 over San Antonio on December 16, 2025, in Las Vegas. The Knicks are back in the Finals for the first time since 1999 and are chasing their first championship in 53 years, while the Spurs are returning for the sixth time.

Victor Wembanyama stands at the center of San Antonio’s push, a matchup storyline that has only sharpened as the Finals approached. New York enters on an 11-game playoff winning streak, and Mitchell Robinson reportedly has a broken right pinkie finger but plans to play. The ingredients are familiar, the stakes are enormous, and the price tag now matches the pressure of a championship stage that has become more premium product than public event.
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