| Jordan Hare Stadium | Quick Guide |
|---|---|
| Program | Auburn University – NCAA FBS (SEC); first season in 1892; over 800 all-time wins; 2 National Championships (1957, 2010) |
| Stadium | Jordan–Hare Stadium (Pat Dye Field); opened 1939; capacity 88,043; 12th-largest stadium in college football |
| Head Coach | Hugh Freeze (entering 3rd season in 2025) |
| Heisman Winners | Pat Sullivan (1971), Bo Jackson (1985), Cam Newton (2010) |
| Conference Titles | 16 total (8 SEC titles), 10 division championships |
| Major Rivalry | Alabama (The Iron Bowl) — one of college football’s most iconic rivalries |
| Stadium Atmosphere | Loud, intense environment — Jordan–Hare becomes Alabama’s 5th-largest “city” on gameday |
| Notable Awards | 31 consensus All-Americans; 12 College Football Hall of Fame inductees |
| Gameday Experience | Over 75,000 season tickets sold yearly; A-Day spring game draws massive crowds |

Best Seats at an Auburn Football Game
Jordan-Hare Stadium sits on the Auburn University campus, and gamedays here are pure SEC football — 88k plus fans packed into the stands, the legendary eagle flight before kickoff, and the Tiger Walk where fans line up along the street to cheer the team into the stadium. The atmosphere is loud, passionate, and deeply rooted. People don’t just show up for Auburn football, be ready— they’ve been coming here for generations, and you feel that the moment you walk on campus.
Seating at Jordan-Hare
Jordan-Hare has two main levels wrapping around the field, with club sections on the West side. The stadium runs roughly north-south — the Auburn sideline is on the West (Sections 1–11) and the visitor sideline on the East (Sections 24–34). That orientation matters enormously for afternoon games, and it should drive your seat selection more than almost anything else.
Lower Bowl West Side — Best Non-Premium Seats: Sections 1–11, Rows 25–45 are the best non-premium seats in the building. You’re on the Auburn sideline with an elevated enough perspective to watch plays develop across the entire field. Stay out of the first ten rows — you’ll spend the game staring at the backs of players, coaches, and sideline hydration tents. Rows 25–45 put you above all of that while keeping you close enough to feel the noise. You’re also on the shaded side of the stadium, which for September games is not a small thing.
Lower Bowl Southwest Corner — The Heat Hack: Sections 10–11 in the southwest corner are the first seats to get shade during afternoon games, making them quietly one of the most coveted spots at Jordan-Hare for early-season matchups. You’re positioned just past the end zone with an angled but complete view of the field, and by halftime on a noon kickoff you’re sitting comfortably while the East side bakes in direct sun. The tradeoff is an angled view rather than a straight midfield look — but for a September noon game in Alabama heat, shade wins. The difference in perceived temperature can easily run 15–20 degrees.
Student Section — Atmosphere Over Comfort: The student section in the South end zone (Sections 17–27) delivers the loudest, most intense experience in the stadium. Students stand the entire game, and the energy they generate is a real part of what makes Jordan-Hare difficult for opposing teams. If you’re there for the full college football atmosphere and don’t mind standing, it’s worth experiencing. If you want to sit, watch the game comfortably, and have a cold beer, this is not your section.
Upper Deck West Side — Best Budget Option: The front rows of the West side upper deck (Sections 47–62, Rows 1–10) are the best value in the stadium. You’re elevated enough to see the entire field clearly, you’re on the Auburn sideline, and you’re on the shaded side. For early-season games especially, the West side upper deck dramatically outperforms the East side upper deck on comfort, and you’re paying a fraction of lower bowl pricing.
Seats to Skip
East Side Lower Bowl for Afternoon Games — Sections 28–34 sit in direct sun for most of September afternoon games with no shade relief. Fine for evening games and anything in November. For early-season day games, avoid them unless it’s the only ticket you can get.
Any Seat in the First Ten Rows — Regardless of section or side, below Row 10 your sightline will be blocked by players, coaches, and sideline equipment. This applies everywhere on the lower level.
Upper Deck East Side — Sections 99–114 are the cheapest seats for a reason. You’re high up, far from the field, and staring directly into the setting sun for late afternoon games.
One honest caveat: if it’s the Iron Bowl or a major rivalry game, it genuinely doesn’t matter where you sit. Being inside Jordan-Hare on a night like that is the point. Take whatever seat you can get and enjoy it — the sections above are for when you have options to choose from.
Premium Seating Options At Jordan Hare Stadium
Jordan-Hare Stadium offers three main premium tiers—Heisman Club Executive Suites on the east side, Beckwith Club at the 50-yard line, and North/South Club seats extending from the 30-yard lines toward the end zones. The unique aspect: all club seating at Jordan-Hare is handled through Tigers Unlimited annual contributions rather than single-game purchases, meaning premium access requires donor status and availability is extremely limited for non-season ticket holders.
Heisman Club (Executive Suites)
Located on the east side of Jordan-Hare Stadium with ultra-luxurious suites including kitchenette, private restroom, closed-circuit television and video, plus catered food and beverage service for each game.
Price range: $3,725 per seat annually through Tigers Unlimited contribution, currently SOLD OUT with a waitlist. Suites hold 15-20 guests typically with five-star catering available for order.
What’s included: Complimentary season tickets, complimentary in-game food and beverage amenities, opportunity to purchase away game and postseason tickets, reserved parking space for home games (must purchase 2+ seats), invitation to annual Scholarship Donors’ Weekend, Tigers Unlimited membership packet, complimentary media guide and game programs, recognition in game program, and three issues of Tiger Roar Magazine.
The suite itself: These are the top-tier premium spaces with private restrooms (huge for avoiding concourse bathroom lines), kitchenette for food prep, closed-circuit TV for replays and other games, plus climate control that keeps you comfortable during brutal September heat. Catered food and beverage service means you’re not dealing with concession stands—everything comes to your suite. The decor is high-end with comfortable seating and furniture designed for entertaining.
Who this is for: Corporate entertaining, major Auburn donors, alumni groups celebrating reunions, or fans willing to pay premium for the absolute best experience. These are sold primarily to businesses and high-level boosters who use them for client entertainment.
Reality check: You’re paying $3,725 per seat annually ($620 per game for a 6-game home schedule) plus catering costs for the ultimate Auburn gameday experience. The suites are legitimately luxurious with private amenities that justify the cost if you’re entertaining clients or celebrating a major occasion. For regular fans, this is overkill—you’re paying for private restrooms and catering when you could watch the same game from lower bowl seats at one-fifth the cost. Currently sold out with a waitlist, so availability is near-zero.
Beckwith Club (Highest-Tier Club Seating)
Small number of seats at the 50-yard line on the Auburn side (sections 5-7) with chairback seating, full coverage from sun and rain, and midfield positioning.
Price range: $3,725 per seat annually through Tigers Unlimited, same pricing as Heisman Club suites but for individual club seats rather than suite space.
What’s included: All the same benefits as Heisman Club—complimentary season tickets, in-game food and non-alcoholic beverages, reserved parking, postseason ticket opportunities, Tigers Unlimited membership, and donor recognition. Chairback seating with armrests and cup holders, plus covered protection from weather.
The lounge: Beckwith Club members access premium lounge areas with upscale concessions, bars serving beer and cocktails, private restrooms, and TVs showing other games. The food quality is significantly better than general concessions—think restaurant-style options rather than stadium hot dogs. Climate-controlled indoor space lets you escape heat between quarters.
Who this is for: Auburn donors and long-time season ticket holders who want the best seats without committing to a full suite. Perfect for couples or small groups (2-4 people) who want premium comfort at midfield.
Reality check: Same annual contribution as suites ($3,725 per seat) but you’re getting individual seats rather than private suite space. The sightlines are perfect at the 50-yard line, and the covered seating protects you from weather, but you’re sharing lounge spaces with other club members rather than having private amenities. For fans who care about watching football from optimal positioning, this delivers better value than suites. Currently waitlisted.
North and South Club Seats (Secondary Club Option)
Sections 3-9 on west side and 28-31 on east side, positioned between the end zones and 30-yard lines with covered chairback seating.
Price range: $3,000 per seat annually through Tigers Unlimited contribution.
What’s included: Complimentary in-game food and non-alcoholic beverage amenities, reserved parking for 2+ seat purchases, opportunity to purchase away game and postseason tickets, Tigers Unlimited membership benefits, and donor recognition. Chairback seating with armrests, covered protection from weather, and access to club lounges.
The lounge: Same premium lounge access as Beckwith Club with upscale food, bars, private restrooms, and climate control. The amenities are identical—the only difference is your seat location within the stadium (between 30-yard lines rather than at the 50).
Who this is for: Auburn fans who want club amenities and weather protection without paying the absolute premium for 50-yard line seats. You’re saving $725 per seat annually compared to Beckwith Club while getting 90% of the same experience.
Why this might be better: For hot September games, being in sections 8-11 (southwest corner) means you get shade earlier than Beckwith Club’s midfield location. You’re saving money while potentially getting better weather comfort depending on kickoff time. The sightlines from the 20-30 yard lines are still excellent, and most fans won’t notice a dramatic difference in viewing quality.
Suites & Group Options
Executive suites hold 15-20 guests with five-star catering available, comfortable seating, and high-end decor. Pricing runs $3,725 per seat annually through Tigers Unlimited with suites currently sold out and waitlisted. These are booked primarily by corporations, major donors, and alumni groups for client entertainment. Contact Auburn Athletics or Tigers Unlimited for availability.
For more information on pricing and availability, it’s recommended to contact the stadium directly or visit their official website.

Jordan-Hare Stadium Seating Chart
The capacity of Jordan-Hare Stadium is 87,450, making it the 10th largest on-campus stadium in the country. Here is an interactive Seating Chart to Jordan-Hare. Check our seating recommendations on the seating map above to get a feel of where to sit and why.
Auburn Football Tickets and How to Get Them
Jordan-Hare sells out for virtually every home game, so waiting until game week for big matchups is a gamble. Here’s how to get in without overpaying or getting burned:
Get Auburn Football Tickets Here — Our preferred way to buy. You’ll find tickets to any Auburn home game, from early-season warmups to the Iron Bowl, all in one place.
Buy early for rivalry games, late for everything else. Iron Bowl tickets routinely start above $250 and climb as the season progresses — buy those as soon as the schedule drops. For non-conference or weaker SEC matchups, prices on the secondary market typically fall in the 48–72 hours before kickoff as sellers get motivated.
Go digital before you leave the hotel. Auburn is fully digital — no print-at-home tickets accepted. Download your tickets to your Apple or Google Wallet while you still have reliable Wi-Fi. Cell service on campus gets congested before kickoff, and trying to pull up a barcode in a crowd is a bad situation.
Know which sections are worth paying up for. The lower bowl between the 20s on the home (west) side is the premium experience. If you’re a visiting fan, the upper east stands are your home — you’ll be surrounded by others in the same boat. Avoid the very top rows of the upper deck if heat is a concern; late-September games in Auburn, Alabama are brutal in direct sun.
Check the Auburn Ticket Office for single-game releases. Auburn Athletics occasionally releases additional single-game tickets closer to the season, particularly for non-conference games. Worth checking the official site before defaulting to the secondary market — face value is always the better deal.

Jordan-Hare Stadium Bag Policy
Only clear plastic bags not exceeding 12″ x 6″ x 12″ are permitted. One-gallon clear resealable plastic storage bags are also allowed. Small clutch purses are permitted regardless of whether they are clear, provided they do not exceed 4.5″ x 6.5″. Non-clear bags of any other kind will not be allowed through security.
Key Policies To Know
Cashless Stadium: Like most stadiums in the SEC these days, all tickets, concessions, and merchandise purchases require a credit or debit card. No cash is accepted anywhere inside Jordan-Hare.
Outside Food and Beverages — Outside food and drinks are not permitted with one important exception: every fan may bring in one factory-sealed water bottle up to one liter, or one empty clear water bottle to use at the complimentary refill stations inside. For early-season games in Alabama heat, take advantage of this — it matters.
Jordan-Hare Stadium has a strict No Re-Entry policy.Once your ticket is scanned and you walk through those gates, you are in for the duration of the game. They do not give out pass-outs for any reason, so if you leave the stadium, the only way back in is to buy a brand new ticket (if they aren’t sold out).

Auburn Gameday Insider Tips and Hacks
Auburn is a small east Alabama town of about 80,000 people that transforms into one of the state’s largest gatherings on fall Saturdays, when nearly 88,000 fans pack Jordan-Hare Stadium and thousands more fill the surrounding campus. The entire town reorganizes around football — parking lots become tailgate villages, downtown becomes a walkable block party, and traditions that date back over a century play out in real time. This is SEC football atmosphere at its best, one of my favorites. Here are some tips:
The Essentials
Download your tickets before you leave the hotel. Auburn uses digital-only tickets, and cell service near Jordan-Hare on gameday is unreliable. Download to your phone’s digital wallet while you have a strong connection. Screenshots and printouts won’t work at the gates. Crank your screen brightness up before you get in line, and watch your battery — a dead phone means a real problem at entry.
Get to your seat 30 to 45 minutes before kickoff. The concourse gridlocks as kickoff approaches, and the Eagle Flight — where a live golden eagle is released from one corner of the stadium and circles overhead before landing at midfield — happens roughly 16 to 20 minutes before game time. It’s one of the most iconic pregame moments in college football. If you’re still in the concession line when it happens, you’ll hear the roar and hate yourself.
Early-season heat is significantly worse inside the stadium. Research from Auburn’s own campus found temperatures inside Jordan-Hare can run up to 10 degrees hotter than outside, depending on seat location and time of day. Sections 36 through 45 on the east side get direct sun during afternoon kickoffs with minimal shade. If you have ticket flexibility, prioritize the west side. Auburn has added cooling stations outside the stadium at three locations — use them on hot days.
Know the bag and water bottle rules. One clear bag per person, no larger than 12 by 6 by 12 inches, or a one-gallon Ziploc. No traditional purses or backpacks. You can also bring one factory-sealed clear plastic water bottle up to one liter. On a hot September Saturday, that sealed water bottle is a must.
Alcohol is sold inside Jordan-Hare. Auburn was the last SEC school to add alcohol sales, rolling it out in 2024. Beer, seltzers, and wine are available at most concession stands. Lines at alcohol stands tend to run longer than food lines, especially for big games. WarEagle+ subscribers get discounted pricing on food and non-alcoholic drinks by scanning their digital membership card at checkout.
Use the Fast Flight grab-and-go stands to skip long lines. Over 60 percent of lower-level concession stands are now grab-and-go setups with self-checkout. Look for Fast Flight and Bodda Getta Express locations — they’re significantly faster than traditional counter service. Chick-fil-A has six locations inside the stadium, and Momma Goldberg’s Deli is the local favorite worth seeking out.
Get Toomer’s lemonade before the game. This is non-negotiable. Toomer’s Drugs has been hand-squeezing lemonade at the corner of Magnolia and College since 1896, and it’s been called the number-one thing to taste in Alabama. Stop in on your way to campus, order one with vanilla flavoring if you want the local move, and browse the Auburn gear and memorabilia inside while you’re there. Skipping Toomer’s lemonade on an Auburn gameday is a culinary crime.
Charge your phone and know where backup power is. Between digital tickets, photos, and coordinating with your group in a crowd of 88,000, battery drains fast. Auburn has JUUCE portable charger kiosks inside Gate 1 and in the Nelson Club where you can rent a high-speed portable charger for a few bucks. Worth it by the third quarter.
Grab a shaker at the gate — or buy one Friday as backup. Auburn often hands out free navy and orange shakers at the gates or places them on seats, but it’s not guaranteed for every game or every gate. If you want to be sure you have one, pick up a $3 shaker at the Auburn University Bookstore on Friday. They’re as much a part of the gameday atmosphere as the eagle itself, and you’ll see them tucked into boots and waving everywhere you look.
Pregame Traditions & the Postgame Roll
Tiger Walk is the emotional heartbeat of Auburn gameday — don’t skip it. About two hours before kickoff, line up along Donahue Drive where fans pack both sides of the street to cheer on the players, coaches, cheerleaders, band, and mascot Aubie as they walk from the Athletics Complex to the stadium. It’s close and personal — players are within high-five distance — and it sets the tone for everything that follows. Kids on shoulders, shakers waving, and a genuine sense of community that even visiting fans get swept up in.
The Eagle Flight is the moment everyone talks about — time it right. After Tiger Walk, head inside and settle into your seat. The pregame production builds with a hype video on the jumbotron before the golden eagle is released from one of the stadium’s four corners. It circles overhead as nearly 88,000 fans track its path with a sustained “War Eagle” roar, then lands at midfield. The flight happens roughly 16 to 20 minutes before kickoff, but the concourse gridlocks well before that. Be seated early or you’ll hear the roar from the concession line. That moment alone is worth the trip to Auburn.
After a win, go roll Toomer’s Corner — but respect the trees. Fans flood the intersection of Magnolia and College and roll the oak trees with toilet paper. The tradition dates back decades, and the current oaks were transplanted in 2017 after the originals were infamously poisoned. Auburn imposed a six-year rolling ban to let the roots establish, finally lifting it in 2023. These trees are recovering and beloved, so follow the unwritten local rule: remove the cardboard tubes from the center of each roll before throwing. True Auburn fans do this to protect the bark and leaves of the young oaks. It’s a small thing that marks the difference between a visitor and someone who respects the tradition.
Arrive Friday and you get a whole extra day of Auburn traditions. The Southeastern Raptor Center hosts “Football, Fans and Feathers” around 4 p.m., where you can see the eagles and other raptors up close. Jordan-Hare opens Gate 10 from 4 to 6 p.m. for free locker room tours — you’ll see it set up and ready for gameday. And Friday evenings bring “Come Home to the Corner,” when downtown Auburn transforms into a walkable entertainment district with live music, open shops, and cold drinks from 6 to 9 p.m. It’s the perfect way to ease into a gameday weekend.
Getting To Auburn
Auburn swells to several times its normal size on Saturdays. Getting in is manageable if you have a plan — getting in without one is a different experience entirely. Here’s how to do it right.
Take the Free Shuttle — Seriously: The smartest move for most visitors, especially first-timers, is to skip campus parking entirely and use Tiger Transit. Auburn runs free shuttles from large off-campus lots including TigerTown, the Auburn Mall, and the City Softball Complex off I-85 at Exit 51. Shuttles begin four hours before kickoff (three hours for noon games) and run until two hours after the final whistle, with drop-off and pickup along War Eagle Way near the Nichols Center. Download the ETA Spot app to track buses in real time. This is the move locals know and most visitors miss — you park stress-free, ride in, and completely avoid the campus gridlock on the way out.
Driving and Parking Near the Stadium: If you’d rather park close, take I-85 to Exit 57 (Bent Creek Road) and approach on Glenn Avenue to avoid the College Street backup. The Wright Street and Burton Street parking decks downtown are open on gamedays and offer easier exits than most campus lots.
Churches and businesses near downtown sell spots in the $30–$50 range for big games, and many residents rent out driveways — confirm the walk and the price before you commit. For rideshare, the designated Uber and Lyft drop-off point at Duncan Drive and Samford Drive is your best option.
Walking from Downtown: If you’re staying near the Ped Mall or downtown Auburn, Jordan-Hare is a walkable distance and the pregame stroll through campus is genuinely part of the experience. Give yourself 20–25 minutes and enjoy it — the atmosphere building toward the stadium on a gameday morning is one of the better parts of an Auburn football weekend. And keep an ear out on South Donahue Drive heading toward Samford Avenue — the rumble strips are engineered to play the opening notes of the “War Eagle” fight song as you drive over them. It’s the kind of detail that tells you this town lives and breathes Auburn football from the pavement up.
Arrive Earlier Than You Think: The most common mistake is underestimating how quickly things back up. For 11 a.m. kickoffs, aim to arrive by 8 a.m. For afternoon and evening games, three-plus hours early is the standard if you want a parking spot and time to enjoy the pregame scene. Auburn gamedays reward the early arrival and punish the last-minute scramble.
Plan your exit before you sit down. Post-game traffic funnels toward just two main arteries — I-85 and Highway 280 — and it’s brutal. Each parking pass now includes a QR code with a prescribed outbound route from your lot. Follow it. If you’re not in a rush, head to Toomer’s Corner or downtown, grab food or a drink, let the surge clear for 45 minutes, then leave. If you are in a rush, park on the north or west periphery for the easiest shot to I-85.

Auburn Gameday: Bars and Restaurants
Downtown Auburn is compact, walkable, and built for gameday. Almost everything worth hitting is clustered around Toomer’s Corner at the intersection of College Street and Magnolia Avenue, which means you can park once (or walk from campus) and bounce between spots without needing a car. On game Saturdays, the sidewalks fill early, patios spill over, and the energy builds steadily from mid-morning through kickoff. After the game — win or lose — the same strip absorbs the crowd again, and it’s one of the best postgame scenes in the SEC because everything is so close together.
The Hound is the best sit-down meal in Auburn on gameday weekend. A hunting lodge vibe with a menu built around bacon and bourbon, this has become the go-to dinner spot for fans who want something a step above typical college-town fare. It books up fast on game weekends, so make a reservation Friday or plan for an early Saturday dinner if you’re going to an evening kickoff. Acre is the other upscale option locals swear by — more refined, great for a Friday night arrival dinner.
Halftime Sports Bar & Grill is the classic pregame sports bar. Right at Toomer’s Corner, it’s where fans pack in for pub food, craft beer, and wall-to-wall game energy. It’s not trying to be fancy — it’s trying to be loud, fun, and full of Auburn fans, and it nails that every Saturday.
The Plains Taproom & Grill is the move if you want to control your own pour. Auburn’s only self-pour taproom with 40 taps of craft beer, wine, and seltzer. The smash burgers are legitimately good, and the self-serve concept means you’re not waiting on a slammed bartender during the pregame rush.
17-16 is the local dive with the best name in town. Named after Auburn’s 17-to-16 upset over Alabama in 1972, it’s the kind of place where you’ll end up talking to strangers about the game for an hour. Drink specials, pool tables, a back patio, and live music on bigger weekends. It’s not polished and that’s the point.
For a nicer cocktail or a rooftop vibe, The Bar at Wittel inside the Collegiate Hotel has a solid craft cocktail menu with porch and rooftop seating that feels a cut above the sports bar scene. Good for a Friday evening drink when you want to ease into the weekend without the full gameday volume.
After the game, the crowd migrates back downtown. Momma Goldberg’s Deli is the late-night staple that locals have been hitting after games for decades. Hamilton’s on Magnolia is a solid postgame dinner option, and if you want to keep the night going past midnight, SkyBar and 17-16 are where the energy tends to land. For craft beer fans, New Realm Brewing and Jack Brown’s Beer & Burger Joint are both worth a stop if you’re making a night of it.
The main thing to know: arrive early. Every one of these spots gets crushed on game Saturdays, and the ones closest to Toomer’s Corner fill first. If you’re planning a pregame meal, get there at least three hours before kickoff or you’ll be waiting. Postgame is slightly more forgiving since the crowd staggers out, but popular spots still pack quickly after the final whistle.
Hotels Near Jordan-Hare Stadium At Auburn
Auburn is a small college town, and that works both for and against you on gameday weekends. The upside is that nearly everything — hotels, bars, restaurants, and the stadium itself — is within a short walk or a quick ride of each other. The downside is that rooms go fast, especially for marquee SEC matchups and the Iron Bowl. Book as early as possible for big games, and if you can’t find anything in Auburn proper, Opelika is just ten minutes east and a legitimate alternative with its own solid options.
Staying Close to Campus
The Hotel at Auburn University — The most established gameday option in town, located steps from Jordan-Hare. Rooms are comfortable, the amenities are solid, and the location is hard to beat if walking to the game is a priority. Expect a premium on gameday weekends — it books out fast.
Graduate by Hilton Auburn — Opened in 2024, the Graduate has quickly become one of the most talked-about places to stay in Auburn. The interiors lean into Tiger traditions and college nostalgia in a way that actually works, the War Eagle Supper Club rooftop bar is a natural pregame stop, and it sits half a mile from Jordan-Hare. A strong first choice for fans who want something newer and more spirited.
The Laurel Hotel & Spa — Auburn’s only true luxury property and the first ultra-luxury hotel in the state of Alabama. Just 26 rooms and suites, a rooftop pool, an on-site restaurant, and a full spa. This is the pick if you’re making a weekend of it and want something well beyond a standard gameday stay. Book this one well in advance — it fills quickly.
The Collegiate Hotel — A boutique option near downtown Auburn with a rooftop lounge and a more intimate atmosphere than the larger properties. Good for fans who want to stay close to the action without the convention hotel feel.
A Short Drive Away
Auburn Marriott Opelika at Grand National — Located about ten minutes east in Opelika, this is the best nearby option when Auburn hotels are sold out. Spacious rooms, a golf course, and solid amenities make it a comfortable base for the weekend. Easy drive to the stadium and less chaotic than staying in town on game night.
TownePlace Suites by Marriott Auburn — A reliable extended-stay style hotel about a mile and a half from Jordan-Hare. Rated consistently well and a good option for families or groups who want more space without paying boutique hotel prices.
Budget Picks
Tru by Hilton Auburn — A clean, modern budget option a few miles from campus with consistently strong reviews. No frills, but well-run and a good value when you’d rather spend money at the tailgate.
Hampton Inn Auburn — A dependable choice in the South College Street corridor. Nothing surprising here, but reliable quality, reasonable pricing, and a short drive from Jordan-Hare.

Fun Things To Do in Auburn
If you’re in town for a long weekend, here are a few things to check out in the area.
Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art: The Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art is a cultural gem in Auburn. It showcases a diverse collection of American and European art, spanning various periods and artistic styles. Visitors can immerse themselves in the world of art by exploring the museum’s galleries, which house paintings, sculptures, ceramics, and other art forms. The museum often hosts special exhibitions that highlight specific artists or art movements, providing a unique and ever-changing experience for visitors.
Chewacla State Park: A scenic outdoor destination located in Auburn, Alabama. It offers a range of activities for nature enthusiasts and outdoor lovers. The park features beautiful hiking trails that wind through forests and along the shores of a picturesque lake. Visitors can explore the trails, taking in the natural beauty and spotting wildlife along the way. The park also offers swimming areas where visitors can cool off on hot days. Additionally, camping facilities are available, allowing visitors to spend the night and enjoy a peaceful getaway in nature.
Jay and Susie Gogue Performing Arts Center: The Gogue Performing Arts Center in Auburn is a top cultural venue that holds many different performances throughout the year. They have music concerts, plays, dance shows, and lectures. The center offers a variety of artistic and cultural events. By going to a performance at the Gogue Performing Arts Center, you can support local and international artists while also getting to experience the amazing impact that art can have.
Kiesel Park: A stunning park in Auburn where you can unwind and find tranquility. It offers well-maintained paths that wind through lush vegetation, providing picturesque views. The park is an excellent option for leisurely walks, jogging, or cycling. Families and pet owners feel especially welcomed here with amenities like children’s playgrounds and a designated dog park. Whether you desire a serene stroll or quality family time, Kiesel Park is the perfect destination
Donald E. Davis Arboretum: A tranquil oasis located on the campus of Auburn University. It serves as a living laboratory and educational resource for visitors interested in learning about native Alabama plants and ecosystems. The arboretum features a diverse collection of trees, shrubs, and wildflowers, showcasing the region’s natural beauty. Visitors can stroll along the peaceful pathways, enjoy the beauty of the flora, and learn about the importance of conservation and environmental stewardship.

Why You Should Go
Jordan-Hare is one of those stadiums where the pageantry actually lives up to the reputation — the eagle flight, the Tiger Walk, 87,000 people who have been doing this their whole lives. It’s a true college football town where the game is the entire identity of the place, not just a weekend event. If you’ve never experienced an SEC gameday in the Deep South, Auburn is as good a place as any to do it for the first time.
Written by Brad Richards, Founder of Gameday Guides. This guide includes insights from personal visits as well as updated info from team sources, fan forums, and stadium policies. We aim to help you plan with confidence — enjoy your gameday. If you see anything incorrect, or have any suggestions shoot us an email.

