As the Tampa Bay Rays prepare for their long-awaited return to Tropicana Field this April, the club is rolling out a slate of privately funded upgrades aimed at reshaping the premium fan experience.
The Rays detailed significant renovations to The Baldwin Group Club, the DEX Imaging Home Plate Club and multiple suite levels at Tropicana Field ahead of the April 6 home opener against the Chicago Cubs. The improvements, funded entirely by the team, reflect a renewed commitment to elevating fan hospitality for the 2026 season under new team ownership.
“Simply put, our fans deserve the best, and we are committed to setting a new standard for premium experience in all of these new neighborhoods at Tropicana Field,” Rays CEO Ken Babby said in a statement. “The upgrades reflect our ownership group’s new vision for creating elevated, memorable spaces that offer the best in hospitality while also staying connected to the energy and excitement that makes Rays baseball special.”
The upgrades will be in place in time for the Rays’ return to St. Petersburg after extensive hurricane repairs forced the team to spend the 2025 season playing home games at Steinbrenner Field in Tampa. With the roof replacement completed and interior restoration work nearing the finish line, the Rays are now shifting focus to fan-facing enhancements.
The Baldwin Group Club has been redesigned with new flooring, upgraded lighting, expanded media and video walls, refreshed lounge furniture and revamped food and beverage stations with chef-driven concepts. The Tropicana Room, which is located within the Baldwin Club, has also been fully renovated and will serve as the exclusive dining and lounge area for DEX Imaging Home Plate Club members. The spaces will also be available for special events and rentals on non-game days.
The DEX Imaging Home Plate Club has also been overhauled with new premium gathering spaces. Additions include a speakeasy-style lounge offering craft cocktails and live media feeds from around Major League Baseball, along with a specialty candy room stocked with nostalgic, curated treats.
Executive Suites on the main concourse have also been refreshed with new appliances, built-in induction systems for food service and in-suite restrooms. Premium Suites on the Webull Suite Level have been redesigned with upgraded lighting, technology, quartz countertops, new cabinetry and reconfigured layouts.
Season memberships for the renovated premium areas — including 20-game, half-season and full-season plans — are now on sale, with limited availability remaining.
The upgrades arrive as the franchise continues discussions about its long-term future in the Tampa Bay region, including early-stage negotiations over a potential new ballpark in Hillsborough County. Under the team’s current agreement, Tropicana Field remains its home through at least the 2028 season.
For now, however, Major League Baseball will return to Tropicana Field and St. Petersburg on April 6, this time with a noticeably upgraded premium experience. More information is available at RaysBaseball.com/Premium.