The Flyers haven’t won a playoff round since 2012 and the way this week has gone, it looks like that streak will extend until at least 2020.

While the roster has gotten younger with some homegrown prospects, it’s not enough to please some fans who pay top dollar for season tickets. So when invoices came out this week, there was some sticker shock for some fans in certain sections of the changing Wells Fargo Center and the social media outrage to go with it.

Before next season, the Flyers’ parent company says, there will be a new scoreboard and new seats in the lower bowl as well as an upgrade to the main concourse. Last season the upper concourse was upgraded and the upper bowl got new seats.

Depending on the section, season tickets for next year may not increase at all or could go up by a whopping 89 percent. Here’s a breakdown of what and why from parent company Comcast Spectacor.

The majority of season tickets in the arena are going up, but the company says more than 50 percent of the venue, roughly 10,000 seats, will see an increase of $3 or less per ticket. Roughly 15 percent of the arena, 2,400 seats, is in for no increase at all.

Where the biggest price increase comes, is a certain section of the lower bowl. Fans have reported that their seats which typically cost $130 per ticket are skyrocketing to $240 per ticket and that’s for a new product. As part of the renovations at Wells Fargo Center, there are a couple sections of the lower bowl reserved for an area they’re calling the “Center City Club.”

The new product affects 641 seats, according to Comcast Spectacor, and allows fans to access a restaurant and bar where they’ll have an all-inclusive package that provides unlimited food and beverages. Among those, 478 of the seats are in for the biggest increase of 89 percent and 163 seats along ice row are in for a 30 percent increase.

There is no option to keep the seats in the new premier section but decline access to the “Center City Club.” Season ticket holders who don’t want the stark upsurge would have to move their seats to another section that does not have access to the new product. There are roughly 800 seats in the lower bowl that are receiving no price increase, so there are options to remain on that level of the arena.

Dave Isaac; @davegisaac; 856-486-2479; disaac@gannett.com