A Magic game is a fun, easy night out. What makes this ticket option smart is the budget-friendly price plus the Kia Center game-day setup with interactive fan areas and plenty to do between quarters. I like that you’re not guessing where to eat or what to fill the time with once you’re inside.
The biggest win for me is value: for about 3 hours, you get the game ticket along with access to a busy arena scene (think interactive areas and a lot of on-site food choices). One thing to consider: seats are assigned for you, so you won’t be choosing a specific section or seat zone.
In This Review
- Key Things to Know Before You Go
- What $31 Gets You at the Kia Center
- Redeeming Paper Tickets: The Box Office Game Plan
- Pre-Game Energy: Fan Areas, Food Options, and How the Night Flows
- Finding Your Seat: Assigned Ticket Zones and Real Sightlines
- Choosing the Right Opponent: Orlando Magic Home Games (Oct–Apr)
- Food, Drinks, and Merchandise: What’s Included vs. What Costs Extra
- Getting There Without Parking Stress
- Best For: Who Should Book This Magic Game Ticket
- Should You Book This Orlando Magic Game Ticket?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- Where do I pick up or redeem the paper ticket?
- How long is the Orlando Magic game ticket experience?
- What dates and opponents are available?
- Are food and drinks included with the ticket?
- Can I choose my seat or seat zone?
- Do I need to print anything for ticket redemption?
- Is parking included?
- Can kids enter without a ticket?
- Is there free cancellation?
- Are service animals allowed?
Key Things to Know Before You Go

- Paper-ticket pickup at Kia Center: Plan to redeem in person at the box office area at 400 W Church St.
- Arena time is part of the experience: Interactive fan areas and lots of in-venue entertainment keep the gaps from feeling empty.
- Food is easy, but not cheap: You won’t go hungry—just expect prices to be like NBA prices.
- Seat selection isn’t the point here: You get the best available seat within your price point, so sightlines can vary.
- Best for families and first-time NBA fans: It’s a straightforward way to see an NBA team without building a whole plan from scratch.
What $31 Gets You at the Kia Center

At around $31 per person, this is one of those rare ways to catch NBA basketball that won’t blow up your Florida budget. The value isn’t just the game ticket—it’s the whole arena day. You’re paying for a live Orlando Magic home game experience that lasts roughly 3 hours, and the venue is set up for people who want more than just sitting still for 48 minutes.
The key perk is that you’re not stuck figuring out food and entertainment on your own. Kia Center has nine restaurants and bars plus interactive fan areas, so you can build a simple plan: arrive, redeem tickets, grab a drink or bite, explore the fan areas, then settle in for tipoff.
Is it perfect? No. This is sports entertainment, and it comes with the usual tradeoffs: food and merchandise cost extra, and your seat is assigned rather than chosen. Still, for the price, it’s a practical way to see a real NBA game in a real NBA arena.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Orlando
Redeeming Paper Tickets: The Box Office Game Plan
This ticket is delivered as a paper ticket, which changes how you should show up. Instead of walking straight to the arena with a barcode on your phone, you’ll redeem in person.
Your ticket redemption point is: Kia Center, 400 W Church St, Orlando, FL 32801.
Here’s the part I’d treat seriously: don’t leave redemption until the last second. Some people found the pickup process very smooth—tickets waiting at the ticket office—but the safest approach is to arrive early enough to handle lines, security checks, and any voucher-print requirements.
A few practical tips based on real-world pickup experiences:
- Bring your ID if you have it. Some guests report picking up tickets at a window with ID.
- If your booking includes a voucher, have it ready to show or print as instructed at booking.
- Expect the ticket desk to be the main workflow. Once you’ve redeemed, you’re basically in.
Also, this works well if you like simple instructions. You’re not trying to interpret a seating map from a distance. You redeem, then you walk in and deal with the rest like any other arena day.
Pre-Game Energy: Fan Areas, Food Options, and How the Night Flows

For me, the best part of NBA games isn’t just the basketball. It’s the whole rhythm: coming in with the crowd, building anticipation, and having things to do during breaks.
This is where Kia Center earns its keep. You get access to the arena’s interactive fan areas, plus a packed mix of food and drink options. The venue has nine restaurants and bars, which matters because it gives you choices when you’re hungry. No one needs to carry snacks like it’s a road trip.
What the in-game vibe feels like:
- There’s usually entertainment during timeouts and breaks between quarters.
- The arena keeps moving, so the night doesn’t feel long even if you’re with kids or newer fans.
- Halftime often includes a show. People specifically called out a strong halftime experience.
The practical takeaway: if you’re going with family, this layout helps everyone stay engaged. Kids get distractions during the game rhythm, and adults can switch between the action and the arena environment without feeling trapped.
One consideration: food and drink can get pricey. The arena makes it easy to buy, but it’s still an entertainment venue, not a grocery store. If you’re trying to save, set expectations before you walk in.
Finding Your Seat: Assigned Ticket Zones and Real Sightlines

This is an important part of the decision.
With this ticket type, you’re typically assigned seats within your chosen price level. You’re not selecting a specific seat zone yourself. That’s a mixed bag: sometimes it’s great, sometimes it’s merely decent.
Here’s what you should know from seat experiences:
- Some people got excellent placements, including seats very close to the court and even first-row results within the assigned section.
- Others noted limitations, like a view that was clear but had a downside if a large screen placement interfered with their view.
So how do you handle this if you care about views?
- If you want a guaranteed exact seat zone (like right near the corner basket or behind the visitor bench), this may not be the best fit.
- If you mainly want a live NBA game experience and are okay with “best available for the price,” this is usually a workable deal.
And if you’re willing to spend more at booking (when available), some guests described club-level seating as a meaningful upgrade: more comfort, plus access to private concessions and bathrooms. That’s not included automatically in the base ticket price here, but it’s a real option you can look for depending on what you book.
Choosing the Right Opponent: Orlando Magic Home Games (Oct–Apr)

This ticket option is for an Orlando Magic home game, and the exact opponent depends on the date you choose during the available season window shown.
If you want a few of the matchups to grab your attention, here are examples from the home schedule list:
October home dates include:
- Oct 11 vs Memphis Grizzlies
- Oct 14 vs Cleveland Cavaliers
- Oct 22 vs Boston Celtics
- Oct 28 vs Charlotte Hornets
November home dates include:
- Nov 5 vs Sacramento Kings
- Nov 7 vs Houston Rockets
- Nov 9 vs Dallas Mavericks
- Nov 11 vs Phoenix Suns
- Nov 14 vs Charlotte Hornets
December home dates include:
- Dec 5 vs Milwaukee Bucks
- Dec 7 vs LA Clippers
- Dec 9 vs Toronto Raptors
- Dec 11 vs Toronto Raptors
- Dec 23 vs San Antonio Spurs
January home dates include:
- Jan 4 vs Oklahoma City Thunder
- Jan 5 vs Memphis Grizzlies
- Jan 20 vs New Orleans Pelicans
- Jan 23 vs Boston Celtics
- Jan 25 vs Indiana Pacers
February home dates include:
- Feb 7 vs New York Knicks
- Feb 9 vs Denver Nuggets
- Feb 23 vs Detroit Pistons
- Feb 25 vs Indiana Pacers
March home dates include:
- Mar 5 vs Trail Blazers
- Mar 7 vs Milwaukee Bucks
- Mar 9 vs Utah Jazz
- Mar 21 vs Washington Wizards
- Mar 23 vs New York Knicks
- Mar 26 vs Brooklyn Nets
April home dates include:
- Apr 2 vs Detroit Pistons
- Apr 4 vs Cleveland Cavaliers
- Apr 6 vs Cleveland Cavaliers
Practical advice: start with the opponent you care about most, then check the price and seat availability. Also, this kind of ticket is often booked in advance. On average, it’s reserved about 36 days ahead, so waiting until the last minute can mean higher prices or less availability.
Food, Drinks, and Merchandise: What’s Included vs. What Costs Extra

Your ticket includes the game, plus access to the venue amenities like the interactive fan areas and the nine restaurants and bars inside Kia Center. That means you can eat and drink on-site if you want.
But the food itself isn’t automatically included in the base ticket. The listing notes that food and beverage are not included unless you choose an Ultimate level option. So plan on paying at the venue.
Merchandise is also extra. If you want a Magic shirt, hat, or giveaway-style items, that’s on your own budget.
The practical way to handle this:
- Decide whether you want a light snack plan or a full dinner plan.
- If you’re traveling on a tight budget, eat earlier off-site and treat arena food as a splurge.
- If you’re in vacation mode with kids, it’s nice to know you won’t be stuck searching for food inside the arena. You’ll have options.
One more note: bag rules can be strict. Some people advised not to bring a bag unless it’s tiny. So if you’re coming from the hotel with a daypack, consider traveling light.
Getting There Without Parking Stress

Parking isn’t included. That doesn’t mean you can’t park—it just means you should plan your approach.
The good news: the venue is listed as being near public transportation, so you have options other than driving-and-paying. If you don’t want to gamble on street parking, transit can be the calmer choice.
If you do drive, give yourself extra time. One guest even mentioned finding street parking by arriving early. That’s not guaranteed, but it supports the bigger point: arriving early gives you more choices.
Also, because ticket redemption happens at the venue, you’ll be walking in with crowds. Arriving early helps you avoid that last-minute scramble.
Best For: Who Should Book This Magic Game Ticket

This is a strong pick if you want an NBA night that’s:
- Budget-friendly (for real NBA basketball, not a cheap substitute)
- Simple (ticket pickup at the venue, then you’re in)
- Fun for families (especially because the arena has activities and entertainment beyond just the game)
It’s also a good match if it’s your first NBA game. People noted how impressed they were by the staff and the arena’s coordination to keep things smooth. That matters. You don’t want your first live game experience to feel chaotic.
Two group notes from the details you should watch:
- Kids 36 inches (92 cm) and over need a ticket for an Orlando Magic game.
- Service animals are allowed.
So if you’re traveling with a family and your kids are tall enough to count as needing their own ticket, plan for that in your booking.
Should You Book This Orlando Magic Game Ticket?
Book it if you want real NBA action in Orlando at a reasonable price, and you’re okay with the tradeoff that your seat is assigned rather than chosen. The included access to interactive fan areas plus a lot of on-site places to eat makes it feel like a full arena outing, not just a ticket scan.
Consider skipping (or upgrading) if:
- You’re picky about exact seating and sightlines.
- You need food and beverage included without paying on-site.
- You want a fully digital, instant ticket experience and don’t want to deal with paper-ticket redemption.
If you’re flexible, arriving early, and treating it like an all-in-one evening at Kia Center, this is the kind of ticket that delivers big fun per dollar.
FAQ
FAQ
Where do I pick up or redeem the paper ticket?
You redeem at Kia Center, 400 W Church St, Orlando, FL 32801, USA.
How long is the Orlando Magic game ticket experience?
It’s listed as about 3 hours (approx.).
What dates and opponents are available?
The game schedule shown includes home games with dates and opponents from October through April, including matchups like Memphis Grizzlies, Cleveland Cavaliers, Boston Celtics, Charlotte Hornets, and many others.
Are food and drinks included with the ticket?
Game entry and arena amenities are included, but food and beverage are not included unless you select an Ultimate level option.
Can I choose my seat or seat zone?
Seat selection isn’t stated as something you choose. Seats are assigned within your price point, so you won’t pick a specific section or zone yourself.
Do I need to print anything for ticket redemption?
This isn’t stated as a universal rule in the basic info, but some ticket pickup experiences mention needing a voucher and printing it before redemption. Have your confirmation/voucher details ready as instructed.
Is parking included?
No. Parking is not included.
Can kids enter without a ticket?
Kids 36 inches (92 cm) tall and over must have a ticket to enter for an Orlando Magic game.
Is there free cancellation?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
Are service animals allowed?
Yes. Service animals are allowed.



























