Lambeau Field in the snow
NFC North

Green Bay Packers

Lambeau Field

12-5
2026 Record
2nd
NFC North
Lambeau Field
Home Stadium

Explore Packers

The Holy Ground of Football

Lambeau Field is not a stadium; it is a shrine. It is the oldest continuously operating stadium in the NFL. Walking through the atrium feels like entering a cathedral. The history here—Lombardi, Starr, Favre, Rodgers, Love—hangs heavy in the air.

Because the team is owned by the people, the bond is different. There is no billionaire owner threatening to move the team to LA. The Packers ARE Green Bay. The stadium sits in a neighborhood, surrounded by houses that park cars on their lawns on game day.

The Frozen Tundra

The "Ice Bowl" of 1967 immortalized Lambeau as the Frozen Tundra. While the field has been heated underground since then to prevent it from freezing solid, the air above it is not. December and January games are tests of human will. Fans wear blaze orange hunting gear, sit on styrofoam blocks, and drink hot chocolate (or schnapps) to stay warm. It creates a home-field advantage that is psychological as much as physical.

Titletown USA

The Titletown District across from the stadium has turned game day into a weekend-long event. With a sledding hill, skating rink, and massive brewery (Hinterland), there is plenty to do. But the real magic is inside the bowl, where the bleacher seating (yes, actual metal bleachers) forces you to sit shoulder-to-shoulder with your neighbors, fostering a communal spirit you don't find in modern bucket-seat stadiums.

Fresh 2026 notes

Planning notes for Green Bay Packers

The most useful team hubs do more than repeat a score. They help fans understand how the schedule, the venue, and the standings fit together so the season feels easier to follow. Use this section as the quick planning layer for Green Bay Packers: it keeps the current mark at 12-5 in context, highlights why the next few games matter, and gives you a cleaner way to move between the schedule, the stadium guide, and the watch-party page.

Start with the division

Green Bay Packers pages are most useful when you read them like a living standings board. The record tells you where things stand today, but the division tells you what can actually move the season forward. Games inside NFC North usually matter twice: once for the win column and again for tiebreakers, so the schedule should always be read with those matchups at the center instead of at the edge.

Make the stadium the anchor

Lambeau Field is not just a backdrop. It is where parking, entry timing, concessions, and the local fan culture all come together. A good team hub should point people toward the stadium guide because that is where the practical details live: where to arrive, how early to leave, what the weather will do, and which corners of the venue create the best game-day rhythm for the most important home dates.

Read the schedule like a plan

A schedule page should help you make decisions, not just tell you when the next kickoff happens. Look for the games that sit in the same week as major division rivals, primetime windows, or travel-heavy road trips. Those are the spots where momentum can shift quickly, injuries matter more, and a single win can change how the rest of the month feels for fans following Green Bay Packers.

Use the hub as a weekly reset

The most helpful fan pages turn into a weekly checklist. Before each game, check the opponent, the kickoff window, the weather, and the travel plan. If you are staying local, pair the hub with the watch-party page and stadium guide. If you are on the road, use it to figure out where to park, when to arrive, and whether the trip should be a quick in-and-out visit or a full Saturday-or-Sunday plan.

Keep the playoff lens on

Once the calendar gets into the back half of the season, every result becomes a little more important. That is when a team hub earns its keep: it helps fans understand how home-field advantage, bye weeks, and division leverage are stacking up. Even a small record swing can change the tone of the month, so the best content is the kind that shows the path instead of only celebrating the current standing.

Schedule lens

Read the next few games in order, then look for division matchups and primetime slots that can swing the mood of the season.

Stadium lens

Use the stadium guide for parking, food, weather, and the small logistics that make a home game smooth instead of stressful.

Remote lens

If you are not traveling, pair the hub with the watch-party page so you can choose the right bar, the right crowd, and the right kickoff routine.

Playoff lens

Late-season games carry more weight because one result can change seeding, home-field advantage, or the entire bracket path.

Quick checklist

  • Check the opponent, date, and kickoff window before every game week.
  • Use the stadium guide when you are planning a home trip or parking decision.
  • Use the watch-party page when you are following the team from another city.
  • Pay extra attention to division games because they shape tiebreakers.
  • Treat late-season games as playoff math, not just another line on the schedule.

If you are only checking one page before kickoff, make it the team hub. It connects the record, the venue, the schedule, and the fan experience so you can decide whether the week is about parking and tailgates, a watch party with friends, or a playoff push that deserves full attention from the opening whistle.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I get tickets? The waitlist is huge.
The season ticket waitlist is over 30 years long. Your best bet is the secondary market (StubHub, etc.) or knowing a season ticket holder. 'Gold Package' games (Milwaukee ticket holders) are sometimes easier to get.
Can I rent a seat back?
Yes! Since the seats are aluminum benches, renting a seat back with a cushion upon entry is highly recommended for back support and warmth.
Who is Vince Lombardi?
The Super Bowl trophy is named after him for a reason. He coached the Packers to five NFL championships in the 60s, including the first two Super Bowls. His statue stands guard in front of the Atrium.
What is 'Go Pack Go'?
The chant is simple, rhythmic, and relentless. The music played to cue it is iconic and signals the defense to get loud.
Does the town shut down on game day?
Effectively, yes. The capacity of the stadium (81,000) is nearly equal to the population of the city of Green Bay (107,000). Everyone is at the game or watching it.