Texas A&M getting home field advantage against the Miami Hurricanes is a huge piece of the puzzle in Saturday's playoff matchup between these two teams. The Aggies' advantage in Kyle Field is one of the best in the nation, with Texas A&M sitting at a nice 13-2 in College Station in the Mike Elko era, including 2 wins over top-10 opponents.
This is going to be one of the best environments we've ever seen in Kyle Field given the stakes, and Aggie fans everywhere are going to want to get in however possible. It's looking like that's more achievable than ever at this point, as ticket prices are all of a sudden trending in a positive way for A&M fans looking to get in the door.
Ticket prices for Texas A&M vs. Miami trending in a positive direction for Aggie fans
The price point to get into Kyle Field for this matchup is still considerably higher than regular-season matchups, but it's trending to a point where Aggie fans looking to see this historic game can make things work. Prices were exorbitant for this one, but now all of a sudden things look a lot more doable.
The cheapest tickets for Miami at Texas A&M have fallen below $300 for the first time. If you’ve been waiting to see if prices would drop, your patience may be paying off. pic.twitter.com/i673NXuAD4
— Robert Behrens (@rcb05) December 17, 2025
Aggie fans wanting to catch this matchup should move quickly here if they want to get in— these secondary market tickets are likely the result of scalpers attempting to adjust after initially setting extremely high prices, so they may start going quickly.
This is obviously not due to a lack of demand, given the high price point these tickets still sit at— even though the Aggies are playing early in the day and have the largest stadium capacity of anyone in the first round, they still have the highest ticket price by far, and, as Robert Behrens pointed out, the cheapest ticket here is still 2.5x as expensive as a comparable first-round game last year.
Miami fans are trying to make something out of this in an attempt to speak a subdued Kyle Field crowd into existence, but that kind of thing is to be expected out of a fanbase like this. This will be an environment unlike anything any of the Hurricanes have experienced (save those who made the trip in 2022) thus far, so they had better come prepared.
