Little Caesars Arena guide | Itinerant Fan (2024)

By Edward de la Fuente

Our guide to Little Caesars Arena in Detroit includes information on events, tickets, parking, public transportation, nearby hotels and restaurants, seating and more. Read on to find out how to get the most out of your gameday experience.

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In the new arena game, it can be difficult to come up with a building concept that combines architectural trends and technology to deliver a live sports experience that impresses the increasingly savvy fan.

In the case of Detroit’s Little Caesars Arena, the challenge was twofold: Build a state-of-the-art venue that also honored the history of a storied franchise, the Red Wings, and its previous homes, Joe Louis Arena and the Olympia.

Take in a game at the new building, and you’ll see that they largely succeeded on both counts. The game presentation is second to none, driven largely by the technology incorporated into the arena.

Yet you can also spend a lot of time walking around and taking in all the arena has to offer, including mementos and displays dedicated to the Red Wings and the arena’s other tenant, the Pistons. Little Caesars Arena has also taken its place as one of the top events venues in Detroit, with major concerts and shows coming to the facility.

Our opportunity to check out Little Caesars Arena came on a December weekend, and we came away just as impressed by the things we saw around the building as on the event floor itself.

Looking for Little Caesars Arena event tickets? Search events on Ticketmaster.

Contents hide

1Getting to Little Caesars Arena

1.1Parking at Little Caesars Arena

1.2Detroit hotels near the arena

2Map of Detroit’s Midtown and surrounding area

3Things to do around Little Caesars Arena

3.1Detroit restaurants near the arena

4Watching a game at Little Caesars Arena

4.1Food and drink at Little Caesars Arena

Little Caesars Arena guide | Itinerant Fan (1)

Getting to Little Caesars Arena

Little Caesars Arena sits on the edge of downtown, within shouting distance of Detroit’s other pro sports venues, Comerica Park and Ford Field. But don’t call the arena’s home area downtown — it’s actually Midtown, a lively neighborhood in its own right. (More precisely, the area is part of the Cass Corridor, considered a haven for students and artists.)

But for visitors staying downtown for an event, Little Caesars Arena is easy to reach. The most direct approach is via Woodward Avenue, a main thoroughfare in the city — the venue is just on the other side of the Fisher Freeway (Interstate 75).

Most of the major downtown hotels are within a mile’s walk of Little Caesars Arena via Woodward, just past Comerica Park and other landmarks such as the Fox Theatre.

The downtown/Midtown area is also served by a streetcar line known as the QLine, which runs along Woodward Avenue from Congress Street downtown to Grand Boulevard. Get off at Sproat Street or Adelaide Street, depending on your direction of travel, to access Little Caesars Arena; a single-ride fare costs $1.50.

Parking at Little Caesars Arena

Little Caesars Arena has its own parking garage, located just west of the venue. But numerous lots and structures are also available in the surrounding area. Most of the Midtown parking options are located in the blocks just west, including along and just beyond Cass Avenue.

For budget-hunters, try parking in a structure just south of the Fisher Freeway and making the short walk across the Woodward Avenue bridge to Little Caesars Arena.

Follow the link for a map of arena-accessible parking options and to purchase parking for Little Caesars Arena in advance.

Detroit hotels near the arena

Inn at 97 Winder – 0.2 miles away
Aloft Detroit at The David Whitney – 0.4 miles away
The Siren Hotel – 0.5 miles away
Search for more Detroit hotels on Booking.com.

Map of Detroit’s Midtown and surrounding area

Check out rates for hotels near Little Caesars Arena below.

Things to do around Little Caesars Arena

The venue is the centerpiece of an area branded as District Detroit, a shopping and entertainment destination. Construction in the blocks surrounding the arena as part of this development was still ongoing as of the fall of 2018, but the arena is already playing its part.

Its outward-facing restaurants, Mike’s Pizza Bar, the Mixing Board and UVM District Market, maintain regular business hours even when there is no event at the arena, and Google has moved into office space attached to the venue.

More businesses have moved into the surrounding blocks over the first few years of Little Caesars Arena’s existence, including a handful of brewpubs, so it’s certainly worth a little advance scouting if you’re looking for pre-event entertainment.

If it’s your first time visiting Little Caesars Arena, you can certainly spend all your time in and around the venue and have a grand old time. But downtown and its numerous dining and bar choices are also viable options.

The numerous bars and restaurants that have sprung up around Comerica Park and Ford Field over the years can also be frequented prior to Red Wings and Pistons games at Little Caesars Arena, and can be reached via a short stroll even if you’ve parked your car in an arena lot or structure.

For Red Wings fans looking to stick with a hockey theme, check out the Hockeytown Cafe, on Woodward Avenue just on the other side of the freeway.

For more on visiting Detroit, check out our Detroit sports travel guide.

Detroit restaurants near the arena

Grey Ghost Detroit – American, 0.2 miles away
Bakersfield – Mexican, 0.2 miles away
Harry’s Bar and Grill – pub, 0.2 miles away
Search for more Detroit restaurants on Tripadvisor.

Little Caesars Arena guide | Itinerant Fan (2)

Watching a game at Little Caesars Arena

If you approach the arena from the south, by crossing the freeway via Woodward, you’ll enter through a plaza that looks more like the entrance to a shopping mall than a sports venue, with the restaurants and the Google office visible. The arena has four entrances, one at each corner and each with a sponsor, but judging by our visit it seemed the southeast entrance is the most well-trafficked.

Once inside, do plan to spend some time walking around the main concourse. Little Caesars Arena’s concourse is quite impressive and full of cool features — from the continuous projection display above to the Red Wings and Pistons exhibits scattered throughout (there are statues of Red Wings greats Gordie Howe, Ted Lindsay and Alex Delvecchio at different spots) to the manhole covers commemorating Red Wings players past to the original signage from the team’s long-ago home, the Olympia.

The concourse is also very wide, with plenty of room to move about — certainly a relief to the Wings fans who remember the cramped corridors of Joe Louis Arena.

If you’re a basketball fan, there are a few Pistons features to check out, but otherwise you’d be right to feel like the Pistons are an afterthought. Considering the team decided late in the arena construction process to move in, it has taken a little bit of time for it to make the building feel like home.

Little Caesars Arena’s snazzy technological features really come into play once you’re in your seating area. At the time of installation, the center-hung videoboard was considered the world’s largest seamless scoreboard system.

Another cool feature of Little Caesars Arena is the LED-lit, tiled ceiling, which can be used to great effect for event presentation and make it worth it for fans to get to their seating area early. The Red Wings have used it for a pregame presentation involving their 11 Stanley Cup championship banners and numerous retired numbers — which can extend and retract from the ceiling at will.

The sight lines are terrific from most spots, particularly the upper deck, where it almost feels like you’re on top of the action. A definite drawback, though, is that the aisles feel cramped and the seats seem to not be very wide, as though they crammed nearly 20,000 seats into a smaller than usual space.

As it turns out, the all-red seats were deemed a detriment, and Little Caesars Arena decided to change out every seat in the seating bowl during the 2018-19 season.

Little Caesars Arena also has a sportsbook, the PointsBet Sports Bar, which is a good spot to stop in for both sports bettors and fans looking for a full-service, seated dining option.

Interested in a suite at Little Caesars Arena? Buy suite tickets on SuiteHop.

Food and drink at Little Caesars Arena

Besides the standard pizza, burgers and chicken tenders — all of which are in ample supply — Little Caesars Arena also features Detroit-favorite food items such as coneys (from National Coney Island), shawarma, fried McClure’s pickles and pastries from Zingerman’s.

Also, owing to its Detroit’s location across the river from Canada, you can get Tim Hortons coffee and even poutine. In the arena’s early days, Canadian currency was accepted at the food stands, though nowadays all concession stands are cashless.

Not surprisingly, the arena’s title sponsor has a few concession stands as well — and judging by the lines we saw during our visit, Detroiters love their Little Caesars.

Original publish date: August 20, 2017
Most recent update: October 2, 2024

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