17 Most Expensive Concert Tickets Ever Sold

By Ace Vincent | Published

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Concert tickets aren’t what they used to be. What started as simple door passes have morphed into luxury experiences costing more than some people’s rent. Twenty-dollar tickets? Those went extinct alongside flip phones.

Fans now drop serious cash — hundreds, sometimes thousands — for premium seats and backstage access. Whether it’s aging rock legends or TikTok-famous pop stars, today’s artists demand prices that would’ve seemed laughable just a decade ago. Here’s a rundown of 17 concerts where tickets hit wallet-crushing heights.

Kendrick Lamar and SZA’s grand national tour

Flickr/consequenceofsound2

Kendrick and SZA’s joint tour tops every expensive ticket list at $206.47 per seat. Two of music’s biggest names joining forces? That’s rare enough to justify the sticker shock.

These aren’t your typical rap shows either — we’re talking moving stages, wild visuals, and production budgets that rival small movies. When a Pulitzer Prize winner teams up with one of R&B’s finest voices, people pay whatever it takes.

Drake’s it’s all a blur tour

Flickr/musicisentropy

Drake’s charging $191 on average, but here’s the thing — his shows actually earn it. Forty-plus songs spanning his entire career, holographic technology making it look like he’s performing with ghosts of collaborators past.

The 360-degree stage setup means there’s literally no bad seat in the house. VIP packages? Those’ll run you close to a grand, assuming you can even snag one before they sell out.

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Lana Del Rey’s nostalgia tour

Flickr/Mark Wood

Lana’s mysterious $187.89 tickets come with built-in scarcity — she deliberately picks smaller venues despite massive demand. Smart business move that drives prices through the stratosphere.

Her vintage-inspired stage setups transform regular concert halls into something straight out of an old Hollywood movie. It’s less a concert, more a cinematic experience.

Dua Lipa’s radical optimism tour

Flickr/Aaron Corr

Dua Lipa commands $186 per ticket, and watching her perform explains exactly why. Non-stop choreography that never affects her vocals, costume changes that belong in fashion magazines, neon lighting that turns venues into disco wonderlands.

Pop perfection doesn’t come cheap, especially when it’s delivered with this level of polish.

Green Day’s saviors tour

Flickr/Andy Ziegler

Green Day still pulls $186 per ticket after thirty-plus years in the business. These guys deliver marathon two-and-a-half-hour shows covering everything from “Dookie” deep cuts to brand-new material.

Sure, they’re playing arenas instead of dive bars now, but the political anger and punk energy remain intact. Experience matters in live music.

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Blackpink’s born pink world tour

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K-pop’s biggest export averages $185 per ticket — cheap considering what you get. Blackpink shows are more like theatrical productions than concerts. Choreography so precise it looks robotic, costume changes every few songs, visual effects that put most movies to shame.

Each member gets spotlight moments showcasing individual skills while maintaining that group dynamic that made them global superstars.

Gracie Abrams’ secret of us tour

Flickr/Justin Higuchi

Gracie Abrams might seem like an odd choice for $181 tickets — she’s still building her catalog after all. But intimate singer-songwriter experiences in perfectly acoustically-tuned venues?

That’s premium stuff. Minimalist staging lets her voice carry the entire show. Sometimes less really is more, especially when the artist can actually sing.

Olivia Rodrigo’s guts world tour

Flickr/thedailytexan

Another $181 average for Olivia Rodrigo, proving Gen Z knows how to monetize teenage angst. Her 90-minute sets bounce between heartbreak ballads and pop-punk bangers with production design that looks like it came straight from a teenager’s bedroom walls.

Nostalgic yet current — a tricky balance she pulls off effortlessly.

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Billie Eilish’s hit me hard and soft tour

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Billie’s $179 tickets buy something different than typical pop spectacles. Dark, moody lighting creates atmospheres that match her music perfectly. Most sounds come from live instruments rather than backing tracks — her brother Finneas handles production duties right there on stage.

Authenticity costs extra these days.

Coldplay’s music of the spheres tour

Flickr/Rossell’ Art

Coldplay rounds out the top ten at $173 per ticket. Their LED wristbands powered by crowd movement create light shows throughout entire venues — sustainability meets spectacular visuals.

Two hours of arena-filling anthems supporting their carbon-neutral touring mission. Feel-good music with an environmental conscience.

Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band world tour

Flickr/MyiPop.net

The Boss commands $169 per ticket because three-hour concerts are his specialty. Five decades of material means deep cuts alongside crowd favorites.

The E Street Band remains one of rock’s tightest units, and Springsteen’s energy level puts performers half his age to shame. Quality never goes out of style.

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Katy Perry’s lifetimes tour

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Katy Perry’s $160 tickets come with guaranteed spectacle. Multiple costume changes, elaborate props, interactive crowd elements that turn venues into colorful playgrounds.

Her blend of humor and high-energy performance creates memorable nights that stick with audiences long after they’ve left the parking lot.

Childish Gambino’s new world tour

Flickr/genesisdaniela

Donald Glover’s musical persona averages $124 per ticket for shows that blur the line between concert and art installation. Theatrical staging reflects his creative vision while pushing traditional concert boundaries.

These feel more like cultural statements than simple musical performances.

Stevie Nicks’ BST Hyde Park concert

Flickr/guy hurst

Stevie Nicks still captivates at $120 per ticket. Her mystical stage presence and distinctive voice transport audiences to different worlds entirely.

Career-spanning sets include Fleetwood Mac classics alongside solo material, all delivered with that ethereal quality that made her a legend.

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Oasis reunion tour

Flickr/David Watts1978

The Gallagher brothers reuniting commands $99 per ticket after years of very public feuding. Britpop’s most controversial band returning represents one of rock’s most anticipated comebacks.

Original lineup performing the anthems that defined an entire generation’s musical taste.

Adele’s world tour

Flickr/Adele Archive

Adele proves vocal power alone justifies $84 tickets. Minimal staging puts complete focus on her incredible voice and genuine personality.

Between-song chatter feels like conversations with old friends despite arena-sized venues. Sometimes simple approaches work best.

Sabrina Carpenter’s short n sweet tour

Flickr/Justin Higuchi

Former Disney star turned mainstream pop artist charges $79 per ticket for polished productions showcasing her evolution. Choreographed routines and costume changes appeal to both longtime Disney fans and newer pop audiences.

Successful career transitions don’t happen by accident.

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Money talks, music walks

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Ticket prices reflect how live music has evolved in the streaming era. Digital access made recorded music cheap, but live experiences became precious commodities. Artists compete with Netflix, gaming, social media — every entertainment option imaginable. Elaborate productions justify premium pricing because fans demand experiences they can’t get at home.

People still pay these prices because nothing replaces live music’s magic. Streaming can’t replicate crowd energy, unexpected moments, or that feeling when your favorite song hits different in person. Artists know this, venues know this, and wallets feel it. But judging by sold-out shows worldwide, fans think it’s worth every overpriced penny.

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