Watching the Golden State Warriors at Chase Center is a very different experience from the old Oracle Arena days. The building is sharper, louder, and far more vertical. Sightlines are excellent almost everywhere, but some sections clearly punch above their price while others are more about vibes than value. This is where you actually want to sit, depending on how you like your basketball served.
Lower Bowl Sweet Spots
The lower bowl at Chase Center is where the game feels fastest. The court looks closer than it really is, and you hear every sneaker squeak and referee argument.
The best value sits in the corner sections of the lower bowl, especially rows 10 to 20. You get a clear diagonal view of the floor, solid depth perception on jump shots, and far better pricing than centre court. These seats are ideal if you like seeing plays develop rather than craning your neck every time the ball swings sides.
Centre sideline lower bowl seats are the cleanest view in the building. You see spacing, off ball movement, and defensive rotations exactly as coaches do. The downside is the price. These are premium seats in every sense, including the hit to your wallet.
Baseline lower sections are hit or miss. Close rows feel intimate during fast breaks but can get awkward when play settles at the far end. Mid baseline rows are safer and usually easier on the bank balance.
Courtside and Floor Seats
Courtside at Chase Center is theatre. You are close enough to feel the bass from the speakers and occasionally make accidental eye contact with players saving loose balls.
These seats are not about analysing the game. They are about experience, celebrity sightings, and telling your friends you were close enough to hear Draymond Green narrate the game in real time. If you want to study basketball, sit higher. If you want a story, courtside delivers.
Club Level Comfort Picks
The Chase Club and surrounding club sections strike a rare balance. Elevated sightlines give you a tactical view while padded seats, wider concourses, and better food options make long games easier on the body.
Rows near the front of club sections are especially strong. You are high enough to see everything, low enough to stay connected to the noise. These seats are ideal for fans who want comfort without feeling detached from the action.
Upper Bowl Value Plays
The upper bowl at Chase Center is steeper than it looks, and that works in its favour. Even the back rows feel closer than expected, and the massive video board keeps you locked in.
The first five to eight rows of the upper bowl are the real bargains. You get a clean, wide view of the floor and excellent perspective on shooting arcs and defensive spacing. If you actually like understanding why a play worked, this is a strong choice.
Corners in the upper bowl outperform the baselines here. Baseline upper seats can feel distant during half court sets, while corner angles stay readable throughout the game.
Where Not to Sit
Behind the baskets in the lowest baseline rows can be frustrating. The backboard blocks more than you expect, especially during free throws and post play.
Obstructed view seats are rare at Chase Center, but always double check if you are sitting near railings or camera platforms in the upper sections. The arena is well designed, but no building is perfect.
Best Seats by Fan Type
If you want the best basketball view, lower bowl sideline or front row upper bowl is the move.
If you want value, upper bowl corners near the front rows deliver far more than their price suggests.
If you want atmosphere and stories, courtside or lower baseline sections bring you into the noise and chaos.
If you want comfort, club level seats are the quiet winner.
TFC Takeaway
Chase Center does not really have bad seats, but it does have smart seats and expensive ones. The trick is knowing whether you want immersion, analysis, comfort, or bragging rights. Pick the section that matches how you watch basketball, not how Instagram thinks you should.
