A Sunday afternoon spent at an NFL game can sometimes feel like an all-out blitz. You head to the stadium, park your car, scan your ticket, head to the concession stand to buy your hot dog, soda and beer, then run a curl route to the team store to deck yourself out in some team swag before putting your head down and bouncing through obstacles to get to your seat ahead of kickoff.

By the time the game begins, you realize you might be ready to call a 15-yard penalty for roughing the wallet.

The cost of being a fan can add up quickly. And if you think NFL ticket prices are too high, you're not alone. A New Jersey man earlier this year sued the league, saying it prices the average fan out of attending the Super Bowl.

Indeed, ticket prices for Sunday's big match-up between the Denver Broncos and the Seattle Seahawks have gone down significantly, perhaps due to expected cold weather. But even so, they'll still run you around $1,500 a seat.

That's the Super Bowl, but what about the regular season?

The cost to attend an NFL game depends on which of the league's 32 franchises you support. Al Jazeera — with help from the sports business research firm Team Marketing Report — breaks down the cost of tickets, concessions and souvenirs, and compares them with regional income figures to lay it all out in the table below (click here to see all 32 teams).