Oracle Park tickets & tours | Price comparison

Oracle Park

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Oracle Park, formerly known as AT&T Park and SBC Park, puts you on the San Francisco waterfront at 24 Willie Mays Plaza, with Bay Bridge views and the splash-hit zone at McCovey Cove. Since opening in 2000 AD, it has become one of the city's signature live-sports and behind-the-scenes stops.

Start with a prebooked behind-the-scenes guided tour, because it gives you VIP-style access and usually sells out ahead of weekends and holiday dates.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

San Francisco Giants game tickets

Choose this if your priority is the full game-day atmosphere at Oracle Park, with live baseball, waterfront views, and the energy of a home crowd.
Oracle Park: San Francisco Giants Baseball Game
5.0(1)
 
tiqets.com
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Behind-the-scenes guided tours

Pick this format if you want stadium stories, restricted-access areas, and iconic viewpoints in one structured visit at Oracle Park.
San Francisco: Giants Oracle Park Ballpark Tour
4.8(163)
 
getyourguide.com
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Behind-the-Scenes Ballpark Tour of Oracle Park
4.7(189)
 
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6 tips for visiting the Oracle Park

1
Book your tour early
If your priority is the guided route, book early. Daily tours usually run at 10:30 am and 12:30 pm, with an extra 2:30 pm option on many non-game days, and popular dates sell out fast. Locking your slot first keeps the rest of your day easy to plan.
2
Pick format by your goal
If you want pure atmosphere and crowd energy, choose a San Francisco Giants game ticket. If your goal is restricted-access spaces and stadium context, choose a behind-the-scenes tour. Deciding this upfront avoids overbooking and keeps your visit focused.
3
Use transit on game days
If you want lower arrival stress, use Muni Metro (N Judah, KT Ingleside/Third Street, T Third Street) or Caltrain to 4th and King. On busy game days, this is usually smoother than circling lots near China Basin. That way you save time for the ballpark itself, not for parking roulette.
4
Pack for the bag policy
If you are taking the daily tour, leave backpacks at your hotel. Bags up to 41 x 41 x 20 cm (16 x 16 x 8 in) are generally allowed, but oversized bags are rejected and there is no on-site storage. Packing light prevents a frustrating gate stop.
5
Arrive before gates and check-in
For games, gates typically open 2 hours before game time, and early arrival helps you pass screening with less pressure. For tours, check in at the Juan Marichal Statue near O'Doul Gate on 3rd Street. This keeps your entry smooth, so you can focus on the experience.
6
Add one nearby waterfront stop
After Oracle Park, pick one nearby add-on instead of three. San Francisco Ferry Building works well for a food-focused waterfront walk, while Coit Tower gives you a higher skyline angle; if you want a full island contrast, plan Alcatraz separately. Choosing one clear second stop keeps your day balanced.

How to plan an Oracle Park day on the waterfront

Your smoothest visit here comes from sequence: choose your format first, lock arrival timing early, and add only one nearby stop afterward.

Choose your primary Oracle Park format first

If your goal is pure game-day energy, go with a San Francisco Giants game ticket. If your goal is context plus restricted-access areas, choose the behind-the-scenes tour instead. One clear primary format keeps your timing realistic, and you avoid a rushed split-focus day.

Time your arrival around gates and check-in

Game gates generally open 2 hours before first pitch, and early entry reduces pressure at screening and concessions. For tours, head directly to the Juan Marichal Statue near O'Doul Gate on 3rd Street. A small timing buffer here prevents stress later in the visit.

Use rail and ferry to avoid parking friction

The easiest low-friction arrival usually combines Muni Metro to 2nd and King, Caltrain to 4th and King, or ferry service to the Oracle Park Ferry Terminal. If you drive anyway, treat nearby lots as backup rather than your only plan. That way you spend energy on the ballpark experience, not on pre-game logistics.

Pair one nearby stop, not a full checklist

After Oracle Park, pick one clear add-on: San Francisco Ferry Building for a food-and-waterfront rhythm, Coit Tower for a steep-hill skyline payoff, or Alcatraz for a separate island block. Keeping this to one nearby contrast avoids transfer fatigue and makes the whole day feel lighter.

What makes Oracle Park different

This is not only a baseball venue. Its waterfront siting, name-history arc, and signature cove moments make Oracle Park feel like a San Francisco landmark even outside game time.

From 1997 AD groundbreaking to 2000 AD opening

The ballpark project was announced in 1996 AD, broke ground in 1997 AD, and opened in 2000 AD at 24 Willie Mays Plaza. It was the first privately financed major-league ballpark built without public funds, a decision that still shapes how locals talk about the site. You feel that civic-pride narrative as soon as you enter the bayside concourses.

The naming timeline mirrors modern San Francisco

The venue opened as Pacific Bell Park, became SBC Park in 2004 AD, switched to AT&T Park in 2006 AD, and has carried the Oracle Park name since 2019 AD. If you hear locals alternate between old and new names, that is normal. Knowing the timeline helps you decode directions, stories, and older travel references.

McCovey Cove is the signature on-site moment

The right-field edge at McCovey Cove, framed by the Bay Bridge skyline, gives this ballpark its unmistakable visual identity. Even if you are not a hardcore baseball fan, this waterfront geometry makes the visit feel distinctly San Francisco. It is the kind of place where a short walk outside the seating bowl becomes part of the highlight.

Ticket types at Oracle Park

Mapped offers split into two clear families: game-day tickets and behind-the-scenes guided tours. Decide by visit intent first, then lock your date.

San Francisco Giants game tickets

Best for visitors who want crowd energy, live baseball rhythm, and the full stadium atmosphere in one block. Choose this when your day already includes city sightseeing and you want one headline sports moment at Oracle Park. Book now.

Behind-the-scenes guided tours

Choose this if your priority is stories, architecture context, and restricted-access areas usually reserved for players or staff. This format works especially well on first visits, because it gives structure without needing deep baseball knowledge. Book now.

High-demand dates and booking timing

Great when your priority is availability control: daily tours can sell out, especially around weekends and holiday windows. If your schedule is fixed, lock the slot first and build the rest of your route around it. Book now.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should I plan for an Oracle Park tour?

The daily public tour lasts about 1.5 hours. Add extra buffer if you want photos around McCovey Cove or the outer promenade after the guided route.
Read more.

Are tours offered every day?

Yes. Daily public tours are listed every day at 10:30 am and 12:30 pm, with many non-game days also offering 2:30 pm.
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Where does the tour start?

Daily tours check in at the Juan Marichal Statue, next to O'Doul Gate on 3rd Street. Heading there directly avoids last-minute confusion.
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When should I arrive for a Giants game?

Gates typically open 2 hours before game time. If you want less queue pressure at security and concessions, arriving soon after gate opening is usually the easiest move.
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Can I bring a backpack into Oracle Park?

For daily tours, no. Backpacks are not permitted, and there is no on-site storage for bags that do not meet policy. Small compliant bags are usually accepted.
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Is Oracle Park wheelchair accessible?

Yes. All gates are accessible, dedicated elevators serve all levels, and wheelchair-accessible seating is available throughout the ballpark.
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Which transit options are easiest for Oracle Park?

The most practical options are usually Muni Metro lines to 2nd and King, Caltrain to 4th and King, or the ferry to the Oracle Park Ferry Terminal.
Read more.

What nearby attractions pair well with Oracle Park?

A practical pairing set is San Francisco Ferry Building, Coit Tower, and Alcatraz. If you want a shopping-and-city-center contrast, add Union Square.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Oracle Park daily public tours are listed at 10:30 am and 12:30 pm every day, with an added 2:30 pm tour on many non-game days. On game days, gates typically open 2 hours before game time. Tour and event schedules change with the baseball calendar, so check the latest listing before you go.

tickets

As listed for the 2026 season, daily public tour prices start around $35 (youth and senior), with adults at $45; children age 2 and under are free. Tours run rain or shine, and buying ahead is strongly recommended because popular dates sell out. If your priority is live baseball, book a separate San Francisco Giants game ticket.

address

Oracle Park
24 Willie Mays Plaza
San Francisco, CA 94107
United States

how to get there

Public transit options include Muni Metro lines N Judah, KT Ingleside/Third Street, and T Third Street to the 2nd and King area, plus Muni buses 10, 30, and 45. Caltrain arrives at nearby 4th and King, and ferries also serve the Oracle Park Ferry Terminal. If you drive, nearby lots are available, but game-day demand is usually high.

accessibility

Oracle Park is listed as fully accessible, with all entry gates accessible and dedicated elevators to every level. Wheelchair-accessible seating is available throughout the ballpark, and assistive listening devices can be requested at guest services. Planning support early helps you move through the venue with less friction.

security

For daily tours, backpacks (including clear backpacks) are not permitted. Other bags up to 41 x 41 x 20 cm (16 x 16 x 8 in) are generally allowed, and there is no on-site storage for non-compliant bags. On game days, security screening is standard at entry gates, so arriving early reduces stress.
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