Tickets to the Utah Jazz's upcoming playoff home game are the most expensive in the NBA playoffs.

That's right. More than the NBA Champion Cleveland Cavaliers, the Boston Celtics and the San Antonio Spurs.

Secondary ticket marketplace TickPick released a new pricing report for the quarterfinal round of the NBA playoffs and found the Utah-Golden State matchup has the most expensive average listing price for the second round.

The report ranked the average listing price — taking the highest and lowest individual ticket prices together — of each NBA playoff team.

Ticket prices for the Jazz-Warriors series opener on Tuesday — which the Jazz lost 106 to 94 — went for an average of $516.

Tickets to Game 3 in Salt Lake City, though, are going for an average of $672, according to TickPick.

Oh, and if the Jazz make their way home for Game 6, tickets will run for an average of $815, TickPick found.

Funny enough, the Cavaliers have the cheapest listing price of all round two teams, and by a wide margin, according to Jack Slingland, the director of client relations at TickPick.

He said the average Cavs listing price is $116 for the second round. The next closest? A Celtics-Wizards ticket, which, on average, costs $207.

Slingland told the Deseret News in a phone interview that Jazz tickets are so pricey because it’s the first time the Jazz have made the playoffs since 2012.

“That’s going to drive prices up,” he said.

And, “They’re just playing the Warriors," he said. "It’s one of the more popular teams to see.”

Slingland said prices increase per round in the playoffs, so Jazz fans should expect to see more price hikes if they beat the Warriors.

But there’s some good news, too. If the Jazz are down 3-0 in the series going into Game 4 on Monday at Vivint Arena, the prices will “drop drastically,” Slingland said.

“If that ends up being an elimination game, people don’t like to spend $100 to see their team beat,” he said.