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Surprise Stadium Guide: Rangers and Royals Spring Training in Surprise
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Surprise Stadium Guide: Rangers and Royals Spring Training in Surprise

ZonaHaps|June 5, 2026

Surprise Stadium sits at the northern edge of the Phoenix metro, and it is one of the more relaxed and spacious spring-training venues in the Cactus League. The complex hosts two American League clubs: the Texas Rangers and the Kansas City Royals. Surprise draws a loyal contingent of Midwest and Texas transplants who have relocated to the West Valley and treat Cactus League season as an annual homecoming of sorts.

The stadium and campus

The main stadium seats about 10,500, making it one of the mid-sized venues in the Cactus League. The grass berm in left field is a staple of the experience — it fills up early for Rangers home games in particular, as the Texas fan base in Arizona is substantial. The stadium sits within a larger recreational campus that includes additional practice fields, an aquatic center, and park space, giving the whole complex a more open-air and less commercial feel than some of the newer facilities.

Practice access is good. The fields are positioned so that fans walking the grounds can observe both organizations on their separate diamonds. Early-week morning sessions in late February are the best times for close access before game-day crowds arrive.

Location and parking

The address is 15850 N Bullard Ave, Surprise, AZ 85374. Surprise sits in the far northwest corner of the Valley, about 35 minutes from Sky Harbor and 20 minutes from Peoria Sports Complex. That proximity to Peoria is the real logistical bonus — you can combine a morning practice at one stadium with an afternoon game at the other and see two full organizations in a single day. Parking on-site is plentiful and generally free, with lots spread around the campus.

Tickets and schedule

The Rangers and Royals alternate as the home team through the spring schedule. Texas draws bigger crowds, so Rangers home dates — especially against AL West rivals — book faster. Kansas City games are often an easier get, with tickets available closer to game day at lower prices. Both fan bases are vocal and the atmosphere is warm rather than intense, which makes Surprise one of the friendlier parks in the league for neutral fans just there to watch baseball in the sun.

Food, drink, and the scene

Surprise Stadium leans toward classic ballpark food with some Sonoran influences. The concourse is open and uncrowded compared to larger venues, and lines are short even at peak times. Outside the stadium, Surprise has grown substantially in the last decade and now has a solid restaurant corridor along Litchfield and Bell roads — sports bars, Mexican food, brewpubs, and the kind of casual post-game spots that Rangers and Royals fans gravitate toward.

Tips for visiting Surprise

  • Combine with Peoria. The two stadiums are the closest pair in the West Valley — a short drive makes a doubleheader day easy.
  • Rangers dates fill faster. Book Texas home games early, especially weekend matchups.
  • The campus is large and walkable — arrive early and explore the practice areas before the main gates open.
  • Midweek Royals games are among the most relaxed, affordable spring-training experiences in the league.

See the full Cactus League guide for trip-planning context, and the West Valley events hub for what else is happening in the area during your visit.