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  • What to See on a SoFi Stadium Tour, From the Oculus to the Locker Rooms
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What to See on a SoFi Stadium Tour, From the Oculus to the Locker Rooms

Rick Dalton May 11, 2026 7 minutes read
SoFi Stadium Tour

There are stadiums, then there is SoFi Stadium. The place looks less like a football venue and more like somebody gave a Silicon Valley billionaire unlimited concrete, glass, and ambition. Even by Los Angeles standards, where subtlety goes to die, SoFi somehow still feels excessive.

And honestly, that is part of the charm.

A stadium tour here is not just a walk through seats and corridors. It is part architecture showcase, part NFL fantasy camp, and part reminder that Stan Kroenke apparently saw a modest budget and took it personally.

If you are planning a visit, here is what actually stands out once you get inside.


The First Look at the Roof and Open-Air Design

Before you even reach the gates, the scale of the place hits you. The translucent canopy roof stretches over the entire complex like a giant wave frozen mid-crash. It is massive, but somehow still elegant. California does love pretending weather is optional.

One of the clever details on the tour is learning that SoFi is technically an indoor-outdoor stadium. The sides remain open, allowing air to flow through the building while still protecting fans from rain and heat. In practice, it creates a strange feeling where you are indoors, outdoors, and slightly inside a spaceship all at once.

Tour guides usually point out how the stadium sits partially below ground level because of height restrictions near LAX. That explains why the place feels oddly sunken despite being one of the largest venues on earth.


The Infinity Screen, Also Known as the Giant Flex

The Samsung Oculus hangs above the field like a sci-fi monolith. You cannot miss it. Nobody misses it. It weighs around 2.2 million pounds and wraps around the field in a full oval shape.

Standing underneath it during a quiet tour is strangely impressive because you finally notice how absurdly detailed the thing is. During games it is sensory overload. Without the crowd noise, you can actually appreciate the engineering.

The screen stretches roughly 70,000 square feet. That is less “scoreboard” and more “digital moon hovering above humanity.”

Expect guides to spend time here because visitors inevitably stare upward like tourists seeing Times Square for the first time.


The Rams and Chargers Locker Rooms

This is the section most NFL fans secretly care about, even if they pretend they are there for architecture.

Depending on scheduling and availability, tours often include access to one or both locker rooms. The Rams’ setup leans into modern luxury with sharp branding, polished finishes, and lighting that feels suspiciously flattering. You leave convinced even backups look cooler here.

The Chargers’ side has its own identity too, though both spaces share the same ultra-modern feel. Massive lockers, recovery areas, and digital displays remind you how far the NFL has moved from muddy benches and men smoking cigarettes at half-time.

Some guides share stories about player routines, game-day preparation, and how the stadium handles two NFL franchises without complete chaos. It is actually more interesting than it sounds.


Walking Through the Player Tunnel

This is where the tour briefly tricks grown adults into believing they could still make the league.

The player tunnel is designed for drama. Lighting effects, giant graphics, booming acoustics. You can practically hear imaginary crowd noise while walking toward the field.

Every sports venue tries to manufacture atmosphere, but SoFi does it with Hollywood production values. Which makes sense. This is Los Angeles. Even the concrete probably has an agent.

If you time it right and the field is accessible, stepping out onto the turf area becomes one of the highlights of the visit.


The Premium Suites and VIP Spaces

Even if you never plan on spending five figures for a luxury suite, these areas are worth seeing simply because they reveal who modern stadiums are really built for.

The clubs and suites inside SoFi look more like upscale hotels than sports seating. Leather seating, private bars, climate-controlled lounges, and panoramic views everywhere.

The YouTube Theater and premium hospitality areas show how the stadium operates as more than an NFL venue. Concerts, boxing events, college football, WrestleMania, international football matches. The building barely sleeps.

And yes, you may briefly wonder if you made poor life decisions while standing inside a suite larger than your first flat.


The Field-Level Perspective

Watching football on television does not prepare you for how enormous NFL players look from field level.

One of the best moments on the tour is standing near the sideline and realising how steep the seating bowl rises around you. SoFi was designed to keep fans visually close to the action despite its size, and from the turf the effect becomes obvious.

The field itself feels pristine. Almost suspiciously pristine. You half expect somebody to vacuum it between tours.

Guides often explain how the stadium converts between NFL games, concerts, and major entertainment events at remarkable speed. Modern stadium crews deserve more respect than they get. Those people basically perform logistical sorcery.


Hidden Design Details Most Visitors Miss

Some of the smaller details become surprisingly memorable.

The art installations throughout the stadium are genuinely impressive, not the usual corporate filler you ignore while looking for nachos. Local influences, digital displays, and public artwork give the venue more personality than many modern arenas.

The lake and surrounding plaza areas outside the stadium are also worth exploring after the tour. On sunny days, which in Los Angeles is essentially every day ending in “y,” the entire Hollywood Park development feels more like a luxury entertainment district than a sports complex.

There is also a weird quietness during off-days. Without 70,000 screaming fans, you notice the echoes, the scale, and just how carefully choreographed every part of the building feels.


Best Time to Take a SoFi Stadium Tour

Weekday tours usually feel more relaxed and allow better photo opportunities. Non-event days are ideal if you actually want time to appreciate the architecture without crowds everywhere.

If possible, avoid touring immediately before a major concert or NFL game because certain areas may be restricted.

Morning visits also tend to work better for lighting inside the stadium, particularly around the roof canopy and Oculus screen.

And wear comfortable shoes. Every modern stadium tour quietly turns into a cardio session.


Is the SoFi Stadium Tour Worth It?

For NFL fans, absolutely.

For architecture lovers, probably yes.

For anyone curious about how modern sports venues became billion-dollar entertainment machines, definitely.

SoFi Stadium sometimes feels ridiculous in the way only Los Angeles can produce. Bigger screens, bigger budgets, bigger ambition. Yet beneath all the spectacle there is genuine substance. The design works. The atmosphere works. Even sceptics usually leave impressed.

Just try not to look up the construction cost while standing inside. It may trigger an existential crisis halfway through the gift shop.


TFC Takeaway

A SoFi Stadium tour gives you more than access to a famous NFL venue. It shows how sports, entertainment, technology, and branding have merged into one gigantic modern experience.

Some fans will come for the Rams. Others for the Chargers. Some just want a photo beneath the Oculus or a glimpse inside the locker rooms.

Most leave talking about the scale of the place.

And fair enough. Few stadiums on earth make you feel quite this small while charging this much for parking.

About the Author

Rick Dalton

Author

Rick Dalton – Sports Writer, Los Angeles Opinionated, caffeinated, and occasionally vindicated. Rick Dalton is a Los Angeles-based sports writer who covers the NFL and NBA with opinions as bold as a Rams fourth-down call. He’s got a knack for mixing sharp analysis with humour that cuts through the noise, never afraid to say what fans are already thinking...but with better punctuation. A child of the California coast, Rick grew up splitting his loyalty between the Lakers, the Raiders, and whichever team promised excitement that week. His writing blends old-school grit with new-school swagger, turning game breakdowns into something closer to barstool debate than dry reportage. When he’s not dissecting blown coverages or overhyped trades, Rick’s probably searching for the best breakfast burrito in the Valley or reliving the Showtime era through grainy VHS highlights.

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