The New York Mets had the best record in baseball in June before a second-half collapse kept them out of the postseason in 2025. Still, it was a record financial year at Citi Field for the Amazins’ after they signed free agent Juan Soto to the richest deal in MLB history worth $765 million over 15 years.
Queens Ballpark Company had revenue of $311.4 million in 2025, according to a disclosure required by the financing agreement related to Citi Field. It was up from $260.8 million the prior year and $237.8 million in 2023.
Net ticket revenue was $157.6 million, up from $136.7 million, as 850,000 more fans came through the turnstiles last season versus 2024.
The increased attendance also boosted premium seating and concession revenue. Luxury suite and club premium revenue nearly doubled to $39.1 million, while concessions jumped 55% to $38.3 million.
Parking ($16 million) and other ($7.7 million) round out the revenue picture. The $311 million does not include any revenue from the club’s rights deal with SNY or distributions from MLB for its national media and sponsorship deals. The Mets also have to pay into MLB’s revenue-sharing system as a top revenue club.
Operating income for Queens Ballpark was $167 million, net of $26.3 million in depreciation and amortization charges. In reality, the Mets lost more than three as much as any other MLB club, due to their $347 million payroll, plus a $92 million luxury tax bill.
Steve Cohen can afford the $200 million-plus loss on the team he acquired in 2020 for an MLB-record $2.42 billion. The Point72 Asset Management CEO and founder earned an estimated $3.4 billion in 2025, according to Bloomberg’s recent look at the highest-paid hedge fund managers.