The Bleacher Bound Guide to Dodger Stadium
Visiting the Dodgers in Los Angeles. The park-by-elevation system you need to get right, the value seats and the mountain-and-skyline views, the Dodger Dog, the free Dodger Stadium Express, and the deepest history in the National League.
What this guide is
Dodger Stadium sits in Chavez Ravine, in Elysian Park, just north of Downtown LA. It opened on April 10, 1962, the third-oldest ballpark still standing in the majors and the largest by capacity at a fixed 56,000, and the mid-century design terraced into the hillside is exactly what makes it worth the trip and worth a little planning.
This guide is built for two readers. The first is the Dodgers fan who already knows the place and just wants the sharper calls: which tier is the real value, where the mountain and skyline views actually open up, and whether the Express beats driving on a Giants weekend. The second is the traveling fan planning an LA trip around a game. For that reader, Dodger Stadium is the most car-dependent park in baseball, ringed by parking and cut off from any walkable bar district, with a park-by-elevation quirk that trips up first-timers, so the getting-there and the seat decision earn their place near the top.
We work through it in eight sections. Each one ends with links to the others, so you can follow the planning the way you actually plan it.
Dodger Stadium in 90 seconds
What sets this park apart:
It is the third-oldest park in baseball and the largest, built into a hillside. Dodger Stadium opened in 1962, behind only Fenway and Wrigley in age, and at a fixed 56,000 seats it is the biggest in the majors. The mid-century design is terraced into the Chavez Ravine hillside, with a wave-shaped roofline over the upper deck, wavy sun-shade roofs over the outfield Pavilions, hexagonal scoreboards, and pastel seat tiers. The stacked-tier layout is why a park this large still feels close to the field from the lower levels.
You enter at your level, and the views are the payoff. This is the Dodger Stadium thing to know. The parking lots are terraced by elevation, each tier has its own lots and gates, and you enter the park at the level of your ticket rather than walking up from the bottom. So where you park and which gate you use should match your seat. The reward for the higher tiers is the view: the San Gabriel Mountains beyond the outfield and the downtown LA skyline from spots. It is also mostly a night park, so most visits are comfortable evenings, with the day-game sun as the caveat.
The history is the deepest in the National League. The Dodgers were Brooklyn’s team, the team of Jackie Robinson, before owner Walter O’Malley moved them west for 1958. The land here was the Mexican-American neighborhoods of Palo Verde, La Loma, and Bishop, whose families were displaced through the 1950s, a real and painful chapter the park’s story carries. Then come Koufax and Drysdale, Fernandomania in 1981, Kirk Gibson’s walk-off in the 1988 World Series, 67 seasons of Vin Scully, the titles in 2020 and 2024, the Shohei Ohtani era, and the oldest rivalry in the sport against the Giants.
If it’s your first visit, do these four things
The four-line version of the first-timer guide.
Get there early. Dodger Stadium is car-centric and the lots fill, so leave margin. Use the time to see the statues out front, the retired numbers, and the view from your level before you settle in. The lot itself is part of the pre-game here, with a real tailgating scene.
Park and enter at your level. The lots are terraced by elevation and tied to gates and seating tiers, so park to match your ticket level and use the matching gate. Parking in the wrong tier means a climb or a long walk, and movement between levels has historically been limited. This is the thing that trips up first-timers more than anything else.
Know the clear-bag rule. Bring a clear bag no bigger than 12 by 12 by 6 inches, or a small clutch, or no bag at all. Backpacks, coolers, and large purses are out, and there is no bag check or locker inside, so a banned bag has nowhere to go.
Take the free Dodger Stadium Express or prepay your parking. The Express runs free with a game ticket from Union Station and the South Bay, and it skips the lot crawl. If you drive, buy parking in advance, it is cheaper than the gate and faster to enter. Either way, buy your seat carefully here, because the tier decides your view, your gate, and your walk.
At a glance
| Opened | April 10, 1962 (the third-oldest ballpark in MLB, behind Fenway and Wrigley) |
| Address | 1000 Vin Scully Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90012 (renamed from Elysian Park Avenue to honor Vin Scully in 2016) |
| Capacity | 56,000, the largest in MLB, held fixed by design |
| Tenant | Los Angeles Dodgers (NL West) |
| Signature feature | The mid-century terraced design, the San Gabriel Mountain and skyline views, and the park-by-elevation system (you enter at your ticket’s level) |
| World Series titles | 8 (7 in LA: 1959, 1963, 1965, 1981, 1988, 2020, 2024; plus 1955 in Brooklyn) |
| Neighborhood | Chavez Ravine, in Elysian Park, just north of Downtown LA |
| Alcohol cutoff | End of the 7th inning (max 2 per purchase, 21+) |
| Bag policy | Clear bags up to 12 by 12 by 6 inches, or a small clutch; no backpacks, coolers, or large purses |
| Field name note | The playing field was named “UNIQLO Field at Dodger Stadium” in 2026, the first naming-rights deal in park history; the ballpark name itself is unchanged |
The eight sections
Where to Sit at Dodger Stadium
The stacked tiers cut into the hill (Field, Loge, Reserve, Top Deck) plus the outfield Pavilions, the park-by-elevation system that decides your gate and your walk, the mountain and skyline views that make the upper tiers worth the climb, the day-game sun reality, the rotating-sponsor premium clubs, and the best-value sections (Reserve and Top Deck lead).
What to Eat at Dodger Stadium
The Dodger Dog and the grilled-versus-steamed debate, the chef-driven lineup that leans into LA’s food range (Korean, Japanese, Mexican, fusion), the All-You-Can-Eat Pavilion in right field, the end-of-the-7th alcohol cutoff, and the family options.
Around Dodger Stadium
The park is isolated in Chavez Ravine with no walkable bar district at the gates, so the scene is the parking-lot tailgating plus the nearby neighborhoods, Echo Park (Lowboy, Thunderbolt, Button Mash, Tsubaki), Chinatown (Homage Brewery), Sunset Boulevard (El Compadre), Silver Lake and Los Feliz, and Downtown LA, with Echo Park Lake as the family pre-game stop.
Getting to Dodger Stadium
The car-dominant reality and the slow post-game exit, rideshare as the easy default, the free Dodger Stadium Express from Union Station and the South Bay, LA Metro to Union Station first, the roughly 16,000 prepaid parking spaces with SpotHero to book ahead, and the park-by-elevation parking logic.
Where to Stay Near Dodger Stadium
No walkable hotel cluster, so the base is Downtown LA via the Express or a short rideshare, with Echo Park as the closest-neighborhood option; an iconic DTLA landmark, boutique picks, mid-range near Union Station, and the no-budget-tier brand standard.
First-Timer’s Guide to Dodger Stadium
The park-by-elevation system that is the single most useful thing to know, the clear-bag rule, gate timing and “closest matching gate first,” the end-of-the-7th alcohol cutoff (separate from the seventh-inning stretch), the day-game sun warning, mobile ticketing, and the things to see (the view, the retired numbers, the statues, the mid-century design).
Why Dodger Stadium Matters
The move from Brooklyn and the Jackie Robinson legacy, the Chavez Ravine displacement handled factually and respectfully, the 1962 opening, Koufax and Drysdale, Fernandomania, Kirk Gibson in 1988, Vin Scully, the 2020 and 2024 titles, the Ohtani era, and the Giants rivalry as the oldest in the sport.
When to Visit Dodger Stadium
LA’s mild dry climate and the June Gloom marine layer, warm comfortable summer nights, the day-versus-night logic, the Giants as the marquee draw with the Yankees and Ohtani-era demand close behind, the league-leading attendance, September called out as not a low-crowd month, and a current-season schedule-highlights block.
Quick answers
What’s the best time to visit Dodger Stadium? Almost any night is comfortable. LA’s climate is mild and dry, and Dodger Stadium is mostly a night-game park, so a summer evening here is about as easy as baseball weather gets. June can start gray with the June Gloom marine layer that usually burns off by midday. July and August bring hot afternoons but mild evenings. September stays warm and dry, the Dodgers are usually in a pennant race, and it is not a low-crowd month, so plan tickets the same way you would in summer. Full month-by-month.
Where are the value seats at Dodger Stadium? The Reserve Level, the upper-middle tier, is the value pick: a full view of the field, the start of the mountain and skyline views, and a real step down in price from the Field and Loge levels. The Top Deck is the cheap seat with the best views, with distance from the field as the trade-off. The Pavilions are the cheap, lively outfield option, including an All-You-Can-Eat ticket in right field. Full seating breakdown.
How does the park-by-elevation system work, and where do I park? The parking lots are terraced by elevation, each tier has its own lots and gates, and you enter the park at the level of your ticket. So park to match your seat: Top Deck seats want the upper lots and the Top Deck entrance, Field Level seats want the lower lots. Parking in the wrong tier means a climb, and movement between levels has historically been limited once you are inside. Get your ticket level straight before you pick a lot or a gate. How it works.
How do I get to Dodger Stadium? There is no rail line to the stadium, so the options are rideshare, the free Dodger Stadium Express, or driving. Rideshare skips the parking math and the lot-exit crawl. The Express runs free with a game ticket from Union Station and five South Bay stops, and Union Station connects to Metro rail. If you drive, buy parking in advance, it is cheaper than the gate, and expect a slow post-game exit. Full transit guide.
What’s the alcohol cutoff at Dodger Stadium? Alcohol is sold from the time gates open through the end of the 7th inning, with a maximum of two drinks per purchase, 21 and over only, and no outside alcohol allowed in. That is a separate thing from the seventh-inning stretch in the middle of the 7th.
What’s the bag policy at Dodger Stadium? Clear bags up to 12 by 12 by 6 inches, or a small non-clear clutch, with exceptions for diaper bags with an infant and medically necessary bags. Backpacks, coolers, beach bags, and large purses are not allowed. There is no bag check or locker inside, so a banned bag has nowhere to go. Factory-sealed water under a liter and outside food in a clear bag are allowed.
What makes Dodger Stadium different from other ballparks? It is the third-oldest park in the majors and the largest, a mid-century design terraced into the Chavez Ravine hillside with the San Gabriel Mountains beyond the outfield. It is the one park where you enter at your ticket’s level, which makes parking and gate choice matter more than almost anywhere else, and it carries the deepest history in the National League, from Brooklyn and Jackie Robinson through Fernandomania to the Ohtani-era titles.
A note on what’s coming
Bleacher Bound launched with Coors Field as the first full ballpark guide, followed by Wrigley Field and Rate Field. Dodger Stadium is part of the phased rollout to the rest of the majors. The eight-section structure is the template every park guide uses.
If you have a Dodger Stadium detail you think we missed, tell us. Local-knowledge tips are how this guide stays sharp.