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When new Nissan Stadium will be ready, and how expensive it'll be to reserve Titans seats

The Tennessee Builders Alliance has set the goal of completing construction on the new Nissan Stadium by February 2027 or earlier, per Reggie Polk of Pol & Associates Construction of Brentwood.

The Tennessee Titans hosted local media at their just-completed Titans House facility Monday, unveiling an advance peek at a scale model of what Nissan Stadium will look like when completed and walking through a replica of what suites will look like in the new facility. Polk, whose company designed Titans House in addition to being one of four companies in the Tennessee Builders Alliance tasked with constructing the stadium, revealed that projected end date after the tour.

"If you've been by the new stadium you've seen that we're already demoing out the existing parking lot," Polk said. "We're having meetings all day, every day to make sure that our teams are logistically coordinating well and we're communicating that message back to the Titans. But progress is rolling."

Titans House gives fans a glimpse of what the interior of Nissan Stadium will look like once completed, and what some of the pricing options will be to secure season tickets and personal seat licenses. The 6-by-8-foot scale model designed and built by Adam Throgmorton and Shawn Bicker of ModelWorksAJT shows everything from where the entrances and club seats will be to how the outdoor patios and wrap-around scoreboards will look. And once inside the model suite, fans will be able to see a simulation of where their box will be located from anywhere in the stadium using programmed screens for an immersive experience.

Some of the amenities of the new stadium are easy to sell: The 50,000 square feet of scoreboards, the layer of cushioning on every seat in the stadium, double the number of bathroom stalls, four times the number of elevators and escalators, 360-degree access on every level of the stadium to make moving about concourses easier, grab-and-go concessions areas to alleviate congestion and wait times, the new location of the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame, the new community space for events and school field trips, the opportunity to use the lot where the old Nissan Stadium sits to reimagine tailgate experiences to be more like a college atmosphere.

But there are also differences some fans will have to adjust to. The total number of seats in the stadium is decreasing, as is the number of suites available.

Jim Rice, the Titans' vice president for ticket sales, says there are more than 30 price points available to purchase tickets in the new stadium, ranging from $750 to $75,000. For perspective, the lowest listed price for a PSL at Nissan Stadium in 2024 is $250, and the highest price is $12,000. Rice says nearly 40% of PSLs sold at the new stadium will cost less than $3,500; for comparison, no PSLs in the club level, loge level, 300 level or behind the end zones in the lower bowl will cost $3,500 in 2024.

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"It's like comparing your iPhone to the first computer that was ever created," Rice says when asked about price differences. "The experience is just so much different. But that's why we're trying to keep that 40% as low as possible to make sure that we're not pricing anyone out."

Nick Suss is the Titans beat writer for The Tennessean. Contact Nick at nsuss@gannett.com. Follow Nick on X, the platform formerly called Twitter, @nicksuss.

This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: How much reserved seats for Titans will cost at new Nissan Stadium