Where to Sit at Truist Park
The quick read
Truist Park opened in 2017 and seats about 41,100, which is on the small side for a franchise that draws like this one. The bowl stacks the Field Level (100s), the Lexus Level (200s), and the Upper Level up top (the 300 and 400 sections) under a big canopy. Section numbers run clockwise from the right-field foul pole around toward third base, and row numbers start at the field.
Two things shape the buying decision here more than anything else. First, the sun: Atlanta summer games are hot, the canopy covers a lot of the upper deck, and the first-base side falls into shade while the third-base side stares into the setting sun. Second, the wall: right field carries a 16-foot fence, so the low outfield seats on that side sit behind the tallest wall in the park.
Where the value lands: the Upper Level infield up top gives you canopy cover and a centered view at the lowest seated prices, the Upper Level corners and Lexus Level baselines are the mid-tier step down toward the field, and the general admission block in sections 439 through 444 is the cheapest way through the gates on a sold-heavy weekend.
Verify before you go: tier names, section numbering, and shade reads shift season to season. Confirm specifics against the official Truist Park seating chart on mlb.com/braves within 30 days of your visit.
The seating layout
Field Level (100s). The lowest bowl, foul pole to foul pole plus the outfield sections. The premium sections 1 through 42 ring the infield down front (those are club territory, covered below), and the regular 100s wrap around them from roughly 107 out to 160. The corners and outfield 100s get you close to the field without club pricing. The home dugout sits on the first-base side.
Lexus Level (200s). The mid bowl. Infield 200s sit behind the plate and down the lines with a comfortable height over the field. This level also houses the Xfinity Club sections behind home plate, so the buyable inventory runs the baselines and corners.
Upper Level (300s). The lower rows of the upper deck, sections roughly 312 through 347. Fine big-picture views at a real discount. A few spots behind the plate reportedly catch railing or overhang interference in the front rows, so check the seat view before buying dead-center up here.
Upper Level (400s). The top of the park, roughly 410 through 444, and the canopy earns its keep up here: a big share of these rows sit covered, which matters in July in ways a seat map does not show. Sections 439 through 444 are general admission, first come, first served. That is an official park designation, not a resale quirk.
Best-value sections
No single best seat. A tier of sections that give you more than you pay for, cheapest first:
- General admission, sections 439-444. The cheapest ticket in the park and an actual seat if you show up early enough to claim one. On a big weekend this is the difference between going and not going. Pair it with an early gate time and the Battery scene outside and the day costs less than most concert tickets.
- The Upper Level infield (roughly 410-431). Covered rows, a centered look at the whole field, and the lowest fixed-seat pricing. If you burn easily or the forecast says 92 and humid, the shade up here beats a closer seat in the sun.
- Upper Level corners and Lexus Level baselines. The middle path: meaningfully closer than the top rows without infield-Lexus pricing. Down the first-base line on the Lexus Level you also pick up the shade advantage described below.
- Field Level corners and outfield (roughly 107-110 and 150s-160). The proximity buy. You are low, close, and behind the play or behind the 16-foot right-field wall, and you pay real money for it, just not premium-infield money. Left field puts you under the shorter fence and closer to the retired-numbers side of the park.
For seat-by-seat confirmation before you commit, use the Braves’ own seat-selection view on the official seating chart page rather than eyeballing a static map.
Sun and shade
Atlanta plays most of its summer schedule at night for a reason. When you do land a day game, or an early-evening start in June or July, the sun math is worth a minute.
The park faces so the third-base side looks west. Afternoon sun pours onto the third-base and left-field sections and hangs there until it drops below the roofline. The first-base side shades first and stays more comfortable through a late-afternoon start. The practical picks: upper rows in sections 110 through 122 on the first-base side, rows 3 and up in 215 through 218, and the last few rows of 130 through 145 if you are stuck on the third-base side and want relief. The Upper Level’s canopy coverage is the sure thing.
None of this decides a night game. For a 7:15 start the sun is a first-few-innings problem at worst, and by the middle innings the whole bowl is even. Pick on price and sightline after dark.
The Chop House porch
Out in right field at section 156, the Coors Light Chop House is a bar and casual restaurant built into the stands, and it is open to anyone with a ticket. Bar-stool and table seating, food and drinks at arm’s reach, and a sightline over that 16-foot right-field wall. If you are the kind of fan who watches three innings from a seat and the rest from a rail with a beer, this is your part of the park. It also gives a GA ticket somewhere legitimate to land when the first-come sections fill up.
The Pen, above the Braves bullpen between sections 152 and 155, works the same social angle as a bookable group space with all-you-can-eat ballpark fare. Worth knowing if you are wrangling a birthday crowd rather than buying two seats.
Premium and club seats
The premium names below come from the Braves’ own pages. Resale maps rename these constantly, so trust the team’s wording when you shop.
- Truist Club (sections 1-9). The park’s most exclusive room, directly behind the plate, about 160 seats, all-inclusive food and drink with in-seat service, valet parking, and a private entrance through the 1st Base Premium Lobby.
- Delta SKY360° Club (sections 22-30 and 122-130). The big field-level club behind home plate, renovated recently, all-inclusive, with private entrances at both premium lobbies and direct access to the bowl.
- Xfinity Club (sections 220-231). The climate-controlled club above home plate on the 200 level, the only club space with suites, tables, and individual seats in one room. Air conditioning in July is not a small amenity here.
- Champions Suites. Suite level behind home plate off the main concourse. Both World Series trophies live here, visible through glass from Monument Garden even if you never buy in.
- The Pen (sections 152-155). The right-field group space above the bullpen.
Hospitality decks ring the outfield beyond those: the Hank Aaron Terrace in left (the actual bat and ball from home run 715 are displayed there), the Jim Beam Bourbon Decks behind 142 and 143, the new-for-2026 Launching Pad boxes above 147 and 149, and the Chop House Deck and Rooftop Patios on the right-field side.
No ticket prices here on purpose. Pricing intelligence is what the Bleacher Bound alert is for, covered next.
How to find the right ticket
When the Braves are contending, the market knows it. This park drew 2.9 million fans in a losing season, so demand does not collapse when the team dips, and it spikes hard when a marquee opponent hits the schedule in a contending year. The same seat can move meaningfully in price across a week depending on the matchup and how the resellers are behaving. Most fans do not have time to refresh marketplaces twice a day to catch the drop.
That is the gap Bleacher Bound is building to close. The alerts in the works track price patterns across the major secondary marketplaces and surface the high-value drops on Truist Park tickets that match your saved preferences: sections, dates, opponents, and price ceiling.
- Free subscribers will get the alert with a 24-hour delay. For a trip planned weeks out, the delay rarely matters.
- Paid subscribers will get the alert in real time. For a Dodgers weekend or a September division series with stakes, the head start is the difference between catching the drop and watching it sell out.
Hear first when Truist Park alerts go live
Price alerts are in the works. When they launch, the list hears first. Until then, you get guide updates worth an email and nothing else. No spam, no daily blasts, and we never sell your address.
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A few buying patterns worth knowing:
- National draws (Dodgers, Yankees, Cubs-type series) spike demand most. Set the alert early for those. Division games against the Mets and Phillies carry standings stakes and strong crowds without always carrying the same price spike.
- Weeknight non-marquee games are the value dates, and the 80-minute gate open on weekday day games means less Battery time, which softens demand for those too.
- For a day game, buy shade first. First-base side or covered Upper Level, then let price sort the rest.
If you would rather shop the marketplaces directly:
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