Don’t want to pay $75 to park near Target Center for Timberwolves game? Here are options.

Here is a list that includes parking ramps a few blocks from Target Center with a much more affordable cost.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
May 22, 2024 at 10:40PM
A sign shows the steep cost to park at the Mayo Clinic Square Ramp in downtown Minneapolis for the Timberwolves game Wednesday night. (Louis Krauss)

The Timberwolves return for game one of the Western Conference finals Wednesday night, and a handful of parking lots are jacking up their “event rates.”

Go ahead and pay $75 for parking if you want.

But parking garages a few blocks away are charging significantly less. Here’s a price comparison of a few parking options before this big playoff series for Timberwolves fans.

Diagonally from the Target Center entrance at 100 N. 6th St., the Butler Park surface lot began charging $45 for a full night of parking at 3 p.m. Wednesday. (On nonevent days it is $10 after 5 p.m. on a Wednesday.) This lot will be closed on Friday for game two because the Timberwolves are renting the space for a block party, according to a sign at the pay booth.

The priciest option we saw was $75 for a spot at the Mayo Clinic Square Parking Ramp.

At the Park & Lock surface lot next to the First Avenue nightclub, at the intersection of First Avenue and North 8th Street, the full-night event cost is $35.

To the south, several parking ramps are much cheaper. The Park and Shop ramp at 24 S 8th St., charges $7 for the night if you enter after 4 p.m.

For those willing to walk four blocks, the Northstar ramp at 110 S. 7th St. charges $6 per night if you enter after 4 p.m. and exit by 3 a.m.

Somewhat closer, the ramp at 517 Marquette Av. will cost $10, but it doesn’t accept cash, according to a sign.

City-owned garages next door to the arena, such as the Hawthorne Municipal Parking Ramp, are charging a $20 special event rate for the night.

about the writer

about the writer

Louis Krauss

Reporter

Louis Krauss is a general assignment reporter for the Star Tribune.

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