Colorado Avalanche Upcoming Events & Tickets

Event Details
SEASON PREVIEW: The 2025–26 season, the Avalanche’s 47th NHL campaign, comes into focus following modest disappointment in their 2024–25 playoff run — where they bowed out in a tight seven-game opening-round loss to the Dallas Stars after finishing third in the Central Division with a 49–29–4 record. Led by elite talents like Nathan MacKinnon, a Hart Trophy winner and Norris finalist Cale Makar, and cornerstone defender Devon Toews, the Avs have reinforced their blue line and forward depth with veteran acquisition Brent Burns and extended contract commitments to penalty-killing workhorse Logan O’Connor (effective in 2025–26). A major trade in July sent star winger Mikko Rantanen to Carolina in exchange for Martin Nečas, Jack Drury, and future draft picks — a calculated gamble by GM Chris MacFarland to secure long-term financial flexibility and roster control heading into a pivotal year. Under Jared Bednar, returning as head coach, Colorado’s offseason work emphasizes balancing elite playmaking with organizational depth and health as keys to reclaiming contender status in the deep Central Division.
TICKETS INFO: Tickets for Colorado Avalanche 2025 home games at are on sale now via EventsChaser, with NO hidden service fees. Entry-level prices start around $60–$70 for lower-demand matchups, while average ticket prices fall in the $100–$150 range. High-demand games — especially those against teams like the Toronto Maple Leafs or Pittsburgh Penguins — can see average listings well over $200, with marquee matchups topping $248 on average.
VIP-style listings often include perks like club access or center-ice placement and typically start around $300–$400, but can rise considerably for high-stakes matchups, depending on game popularity, location, and timing.
AVALANCHE’S OPPONENTS: During the 2025–26 season, the Avalanche will face all 31 NHL teams. They’ll play Central Division rivals Dallas Stars, Minnesota Wild, Nashville Predators, Utah Mammoth, and Winnipeg Jets four times each (balanced home and away), plus St. Louis Blues three times and Chicago Blackhawks three times (two away, one at home). Cross-conference matchups will include home-and-away series against every Eastern Conference team, ranging from Atlantic Division clubs like Boston, Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Florida, Tampa Bay, and New Jersey, to Metropolitan Division opponents such as the New York Rangers, Islanders, Penguins, Capitals, Flyers, Blue Jackets, and Hurricanes. Additionally, they host and visit Pacific Division and Wild Card teams across one series each, including the Los Angeles Kings, Anaheim Ducks, Edmonton Oilers, Vancouver Canucks, San Jose Sharks, and Vegas Golden Knights — completing a full slate against the entire league.
AVALANCHE’S 2025 SCHEDULE:
- Week 1 (Oct 7–13):
Oct 7 @ Kings; Oct 9 vs Mammoth; Oct 11 vs Stars; Oct 13 @ Sabres - Week 2 (Oct 14–20):
Oct 16 @ Blue Jackets; Oct 18 vs Bruins; Oct 21 @ Mammoth - Week 3 (Oct 21–27):
Oct 23 vs Hurricanes; Oct 25 @ Bruins; Oct 26 @ Devils - Week 4 (Oct 28–Nov 2):
Oct 28 vs Devils; Oct 31 @ Golden Knights; Nov 1 @ Sharks - Week 5 (Nov 3–9):
Nov 4 vs Lightning; Nov 8 @ Oilers; Nov 9 @ Canucks - Week 6 (Nov 10–16):
Nov 11 vs Ducks; Nov 13 vs Sabres; Nov 16 vs Islanders - Week 7 (Nov 17–23):
Nov 20 vs Rangers; Nov 22 @ Predators; Nov 23 @ Blackhawks - Week 8 (Nov 24–30):
Nov 26 vs Sharks; Nov 28 @ Wild; Nov 29 vs Canadiens - Week 9 (Dec 1–7):
Dec 2 vs Canucks; Dec 4 @ Islanders; Dec 6 @ Rangers; Dec 7 @ Flyers - Week 10 (Dec 8–13):
Dec 9 @ Predators; Dec 11 vs Panthers; Dec 13 vs Predators - Week 11 (Dec 14–20):
Dec 16 @ Kraken; Dec 19 vs Jets; Dec 21 @ Wild; Dec 23 vs Mammoth - Week 12 (Dec 27–31):
Dec 27 @ Golden Knights; Dec 29 vs Kings; Dec 31 vs Blues - Week 13 (Jan 1–3, 2026):
Jan 3 @ Hurricanes - Week 14 (Jan 4–10):
Jan 4 @ Panthers; Jan 6 @ Lightning; Jan 8 vs Senators; Jan 10 vs Blue Jackets - Week 15 (Jan 11–17):
Jan 12 vs Maple Leafs; Jan 16 vs Predators; Jan 19 vs Capitals; Jan 21 vs Ducks - Week 16 (Jan 18–24):
Jan 23 vs Flyers; Jan 25 @ Maple Leafs; Jan 28 @ Senators; Jan 29 @ Canadiens; Jan 31 @ Red Wings - Week 17 (Feb 1–7):
Feb 2 vs Red Wings; Feb 4 vs Sharks - Week N/A (Feb 25–28):
Feb 25 @ Mammoth; Feb 26 vs Wild; Feb 28 vs Blackhawks - Week 18 (Mar 1–7):
Mar 2 @ Kings; Mar 3 @ Ducks; Mar 6 @ Stars; Mar 8 vs Wild - Week 19 (Mar 9–15):
Mar 10 vs Oilers; Mar 12 @ Kraken; Mar 14 @ Jets; Mar 16 vs Penguins - Week 20 (Mar 16–22):
Mar 18 vs Stars; Mar 20 @ Blackhawks; Mar 22 @ Capitals - Week 21 (Mar 23–29):
Mar 24 @ Penguins; Mar 26 @ Jets; Mar 28 vs Jets - Week 22 (Mar 29–Apr 4):
Mar 30 vs Flames; Apr 1 vs Canucks; Apr 4 @ Stars - Week 23 (Apr 5–11):
Apr 5 vs Blues; Apr 7 @ Blues; Apr 9 vs Flames; Apr 11 vs Golden Knights - Week 24 (Apr 12–13):
Apr 13 @ Oilers
ABOUT COLORADO AVALANCHE: The Colorado Avalanche are a professional ice hockey team based in Denver, Colorado, competing in the NHL as part of the Central Division in the Western Conference. Originally founded in 1972 as the Quebec Nordiques in the WHA, the franchise moved to Denver in 1995 and immediately made an impact. In their first season after relocating, the Avalanche won the Stanley Cup in 1996, becoming the first NHL team to do so in its debut season in a new city. They followed that with additional championships in 2001 and 2022, solidifying their legacy as one of the NHL’s premier franchises.
The Avalanche play their home games at Ball Arena, a downtown Denver venue they share with the NBA’s Denver Nuggets. Known for fast-paced, high-skill hockey, the team has boasted elite players across generations — ranging from legends like Joe Sakic, Peter Forsberg, and Patrick Roy, to current stars Nathan MacKinnon, Cale Makar, and Mikko Rantanen (until his 2025 trade). Joe Sakic, the franchise icon, now serves as a top executive, guiding the team’s roster construction and competitive direction.
As of the 2025–26 season, the Avalanche are in a retooling phase — not a rebuild — balancing an elite core with strategic roster changes. After an early playoff exit in 2025, they dealt star forward Mikko Rantanen to Carolina for Martin Nečas and Jack Drury, aiming to extend their competitive window and improve salary cap flexibility. Led by head coach Jared Bednar, the Avs remain a top-tier team in the NHL, known for speed, puck control, and their ability to transition quickly from defense to offense—keeping them squarely in the playoff mix.