The stadium contains 68 luxury suites, 5,200 club seats on the club level, and an additional 1,500 club seats at the field level behind home plate. On the facing of the upper deck along the left-field line are the retired numbers of
Bill Terry,
Mel Ott,
Carl Hubbell,
Monte Irvin,
Will Clark,
Willie Mays,
Barry Bonds,
Juan Marichal,
Orlando Cepeda,
Jackie Robinson,
Willie McCovey, and
Gaylord Perry, as well as the retired uniforms, denoted "NY", of
Christy Mathewson and
John McGraw who played or managed in the pre-number era. These two pre-number–era
retired uniforms are among only six such retired uniforms in all of the Major Leagues. Oracle Park has a reputation of being a pitcher's park and the most pitcher-friendly ballpark in the National League. According to MLB's Statcast data, Oracle Park is slightly hitter friendly for singles and doubles and a very strong park for triples, but strongly suppresses home runs. In 2025, Oracle Park was 15th of 30 MLB stadiums in overall
Park Factor at an almost-neutral 99, but ranked 25th of 30 in home runs.
Right field and McCovey Cove The most prominent feature of the ballpark is the right-field wall, which is high in honor of former Giants
Willie Mays, who wore number 24. Because of the proximity to the
San Francisco Bay, the right-field
foul pole is only from home plate, the shortest in the NL [only AL
Fenway Park's is shorter, at ]. The wall is made of brick, with fenced-off archways opening to the Cove beyond, above which are several rows of arcade seating. The fence angles quickly away from home plate; right-center field extended out to from home plate (changed with the 2020 renovations to 415 feet). Atop the fence are four fountain pillars. Jets of water burst from the four pillars at the end of the National Anthem, as well as when the Giants hit a home run or win a game. The right field area was designed to resemble the
Polo Grounds. This deep corner of the ballpark has been dubbed "Death Valley" and "
Triples Alley". Like its Polo Grounds counterpart, it is very difficult to hit a home run to this area, and a batted ball that finds its way into this corner often results in a triple. It is . Triples Alley is also infamous for bad bounces, most notably when
Ichiro Suzuki hit the first-ever
inside-the-park home run in an
All-Star Game in
2007, by lining the ball off one of the archways and sideways past the outfielders.
Nate Schierholtz performed the same feat in the 2009 season as a pinch hitter.
Aubrey Huff did it again in the 2010 season, as did
Conor Gillaspie in 2011.
Ángel Pagán ended a game in May 2013 with a two-run walk-off (extra-inning, come-from-behind) inside-the-park home run, the first of its kind at the then-named AT&T Park. Beyond right field is China Basin, a section of
San Francisco Bay, which is dubbed
McCovey Cove after famed Giants
first baseman and left-handed slugger
Willie McCovey, and into which a number of home runs have been hit on the fly. As of April 9, 2025, 106 "splash hits" have been knocked into the Cove by Giants players since the park opened; 35 of those were hit by Barry Bonds, who remains the only player to record two splash hits in the same game. On September 15, 2024,
Heliot Ramos became the first right-handed batter to record a "splash hit", as all 104 previous hits were done by left-handed batters. These hits are tallied on an electronic counter on the right field wall. Opponents have hit the water on the fly 57 times;
Todd Hundley of the
Los Angeles Dodgers was the first visitor to do so on June 30, 2000.
Curtis Granderson,
Luis Gonzalez,
Cliff Floyd, and
Max Muncy are the only visiting players to do so twice.
Carlos Delgado and
Adam LaRoche have performed the feat thrice.
Ronny Mauricio is the most recent visiting player to record a splash hit, doing so in July of 2025. On June 27, 2010,
David Ortiz became the first
American League player to hit a splash hit. Since then, the only other AL players who have are
Mitch Moreland,
Adam Dunn,
Rougned Odor, and
Shin-Soo Choo. Behind the scoreboard in center field is a pier where ferries let fans off at the park. On game days, fans take to the water of McCovey Cove in boats often with fishing nets in the hope of collecting a home run ball. Just beyond the wall, behind the King Street ballpark, is a public waterfront promenade. Across the cove from the ballpark are McCovey Point and China Basin Park, featuring monuments to past Giants legends.
Rusty, the Coke bottle, and the glove When the park opened in 2000, taking residence on the right field wall was Rusty the Mechanical Man, a two-dimensional, robotic baseball player that stood tall and weighed tons. The
Santa Clarita-based firm Technifex engineered, fabricated and programmed Rusty to appear after major plays during games as a fully animated giant 1920s-era tin toy. After technical problems arose with Rusty, it was removed from the wall, though the enclosure that housed him remained for years. In 2008, the enclosure was removed to make way for luxury boxes. bottle and old-fashioned glove Behind the left field bleachers is "The Coca-Cola Fan Lot". The ballpark features an long
Coca-Cola bottle with playground slides that light up with every Giants home run, and a miniature version of the stadium. Bubbles originally accompanied the bottle, but never worked as intended and were removed. Directly to the bottle's right from home plate is another oversized representation of a ballpark stalwart, the "Giant 1927 Old-Time Four-Fingered Baseball Glove"—this particular one is made of steel and fiberglass, which is behind the sign. Behind and farther to the left is "The Little Giants Park", a miniature baseball diamond. To the right of the glove sculpture is a large plaza area for functions and parties to be held during games. It is also the site of "Orlando's", the concessions stand of Giants great
Orlando Cepeda. Right-center field features a retired San Francisco
cable car numbered 44 (retired cable car #4, formerly #504) in honor of Giants great
Willie McCovey. Originally, the cable car had a label that stated
"No Dodgers Fans Allowed", as well as one end of the car numbered 24 in honor of
Willie Mays and the other end numbered 44 in honor of Willie McCovey. The
foghorn—a feature introduced at
Candlestick Park by the current Giants ownership group – was transferred to Oracle and hung underneath the scoreboard. It blows when a Giants player hits a home run or at the conclusion of a Giants win.
@Café Located behind the centerfield bleachers, the ballpark features the @Café, a social media café, which opened in the 2013 season. The cafe serves Peet's Coffee and features large screens that show off fans' social media posts from Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, which are curated by the Giants organization. The cafe replaced a team-themed
Build-A-Bear Workshop store, where fans could build their own stuffed
Giants' mascot,
Lou Seal, or create other Giants-themed stuffed animals.
Scoreboards In addition to the automated scoreboards, which now include a new
HD videoboard by
Mitsubishi, the park has a manually operated scoreboard on the right field wall, which displays all the scores of Major League Baseball games being played elsewhere. The manual scoreboards are operated by three employees, whose work on game days starts at least two hours before the first pitch. A members-only bar, Gotham Club, is located behind the manual scoreboard, complete with a bowling alley and pool tables. Former players and VIPs are the only patrons of this exclusive area. Four other ballparks also use hand-operated out-of-town scoreboards: Coors Field, Fenway Park,
Daikin Park, and
Wrigley Field.
Wireless internet Starting in 2004, the Giants installed 122
wireless internet access points, covering all concourses and seating areas, creating one of the largest public
hotspots in the world at the time.
San Francisco Giants Wall of Fame On September 23, 2008, the Giants Wall of Fame was unveiled on the King Street side of the ballpark, as part of the 50th-anniversary celebration of the Giants' move to San Francisco. 48 retired players were inducted, based on longevity and achievement. Eligibility requirements for players to be on the Wall are either a minimum of three seasons with three MLB All-Star selections in every season, five years as a San Francisco Giant with an MLB All-Star Game selection, nine seasons played with the team, or any player with three
World Series rings as a Giant.
Rich Aurilia and
Shawn Estes were added in 2010.
Jason Schmidt and Marvin Benard were added in 2011, and Barry Bonds was added in 2017.
Statues Outside the ballpark are six statues, five of which are dedicated to San Francisco Giants all-time greats. The
Willie Mays statue is located in front of the ballpark entrance at 24 Willie Mays Plaza and is surrounded with 24 palm trees, in honor of his number 24 uniform, retired by the Giants. It was dedicated at noon on March 31, 2000, prior to the opening of the ballpark and was commissioned by Giants Managing Partner
Peter Magowan. Another
statue was dedicated to
Willie McCovey in 2003, and is located at McCovey Point across
McCovey Cove. Around the statue are a number of plaques that celebrate the winners of the
Willie Mac Award. The statue is located at China Basin Park next to the Barry Bonds Junior Giants Field, a T-ball park. Also located on the sea wall promenade are plaques showing the
Opening Day roster of every Giants team from 1958 through 1999. Giants fans who contributed funds to China Basin Park had their own tiles with their own inscriptions set into the wall. A
third statue, dedicated in 2005, honors former Giants pitcher
Juan Marichal, and is located outside the ballpark at the
Lefty O'Doul Gate entrance. The fourth and only non-human statue is located at the park's ferry plaza behind center field, also known as Seals Plaza. A statue of a seal bobbing a baseball on its nose honors the memory of the
San Francisco Seals, the minor league baseball club that played before the arrival of the Giants in 1958. On September 6, 2008, during a series against the
Pittsburgh Pirates, a fifth statue depicting Giants great
Orlando Cepeda was dedicated at the corner of 2nd Street and King Street, next to the ballpark. A sixth statue, dedicated on August 13, 2016, honors former Giants pitcher
Gaylord Perry in the same location. All five player statues were created by sculptor
William Behrends of North Carolina. in the background and
McCovey Cove on the right
Left field Chevron banner and ground rule issues One feature of the ballpark is the long-running
Chevron advertisement located in left field, featuring an outline of the company's claymation
Chevron Cars. The top 'roofs' of the cars (along with a dog and a surfboard hanging out a car window) are extended out, rendering it several inches higher than the wall base, creating a
ground rules issue. Several instances where potential over-the-wall catches to take away home runs were thwarted have occurred because of the advertisement's top dimensions. One notable example of this occurred during
Game 3 of the 2016 NLDS against the
Chicago Cubs.
Kris Bryant hit a ball well into left field, with Giants left fielder
Gregor Blanco attempting a catch. The ball landed on the roof of one of the cars, past the wall, and out of his reach, rendering it a home run and tying the game in the top of the ninth inning (though the Giants would win the game in extra innings for their only win in the series).
Climate ==Notable events==