Last updated: March 2026
Coors Field is not just a parking-price problem. It is a LoDo exit problem. The lot that feels "close" on the way in can be the exact lot that traps you longest when the game ends.
| Option | Price & Location | Reality Check |
|---|---|---|
| Official / close-in lots | Many game-night examples fall around $17 to $35. | Good if bought ahead. Not automatically the fastest escape once LoDo starts emptying out. |
| LoDo garages and surface lots | Private pricing varies by block and demand. | A slightly longer walk can be a better move if it lines up with your route home. |
| 38th & Blake + rail | RTD rail access avoids a lot of downtown parking friction. | This is the local move if you want to skip the LoDo parking gamble entirely. |
| Street parking | Meter and permit rules vary around LoDo and nearby blocks. | Can work if you know the area. Not a great plan to invent on a busy Rockies night. |
If you do not need to park right on top of the ballpark, the local move is to think bigger than Blake Street. 38th & Blake gives you a real rail alternative, and for a lot of fans it is the cleanest way to avoid the LoDo funnel entirely.
Postgame LoDo can be a long, slow crawl. If the streets are frozen, the better move is often to wait it out at McGregor Square or another nearby stop instead of joining the first wave of brake lights.
Compare parking options before you drive into LoDo.
Compare Bookable Parking OptionsIf you are booking both event tickets and parking, check current inventory before rates move closer to start time.
Book Tickets on Vivid SeatsExpect many official and nearby options to land around $17 to $35 on a normal game night.
38th & Blake and the RTD network are strong alternatives if you want to avoid downtown parking entirely.
Picking a lot only for the walk in and ignoring how hard it will be to get out after the game.