Oasis ticket prices announced as three new dates added to reunion tour

Noel Gallagher and Liam Gallagher
Noel Gallagher and Liam Gallagher will reunite on the tour - Scar

Oasis ticket prices have been announced, after three more dates were added in Manchester, London and Edinburgh for the Britpop band’s reunion tour.

A seat to watch the band at London’s Wembley Stadium begins at £74.25, with the most expensive ticket a £506.25 pre-show party, exhibition and seated package.

The cheapest seats are at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium shows, which will set you back £73, and Edinburgh’s Murrayfield Stadium at £74, according to Manchester-based promoter SJM Concerts, which runs the website Gigs And Tours.

Before the prices for UK shows were announced, Irish promoter MCD said on its website that the price of both of the two Croke Park gigs in Dublin will start at €86.50 (£72.75) without booking fees.

In the band’s home city of Manchester, tickets start from £148.50, with only standing available alongside a number of hospitality and luxury packages.

Standing tickets at Wembley will cost fans £151.25, with the same tickets in Cardiff and Edinburgh slightly cheaper at £150 and £151 respectively.

Earlier on Thursday, three more shows for the world tour were announced.

A post from the band’s official account on X, formerly Twitter, read: “Due to unprecedented demand, three new UK dates will be added to Oasis Live ’25.”

The new dates are in Manchester on July 16, London on July 30 and Edinburgh on Aug 12.

Demand for tickets is so high that many Oasis fans entered a ballot to apply for a pre-sale of tickets ahead of the general sale on Saturday Aug 31 at 9am. Fans had to fill out their contact details, and answer a general knowledge question about the band.

They were meant to receive an email with a link to confirm their entry, but many fans are yet to receive it. The band’s official X account blamed “a last minute surge in pre-sale ballot entries”.

The deadline to confirm ballot entries has been extended until Friday at 10am, and successful applicants will be sent pre-sale access information by 5pm that day.

The band will kick off the tour with two performances at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium on July 4 and 5. The next performance will take place at Manchester’s Heaton Park, where Oasis will play five dates in nine days on July 11, 12, 16, 19 and 20.

The band will then move on to London to play at Wembley Stadium on July 25, 26, and 30, and Aug 2 and 3, before heading to Murrayfield in Edinburgh for performances on Aug 9 and 12. Dublin’s Croke Park will be the final venue of the tour with dates on Aug 16 and 17.

The new dates mean that 17 performances are now planned, but more could still be added as anticipation grows for the band’s return. The existing shows are expected to sell out within minutes of going on sale, despite more than one million tickets being on offer.

Now 57 and 51 respectively, Noel and Liam Gallagher have left themselves frequent gaps between performances, sometimes stretching to almost a week. It marks a contrast to their younger days, when they would leave only a couple of days between gigs.

It has not been announced who will be performing with Liam and Noel as part of Oasis.

Fans have been pleading with the brothers to regroup since they disbanded, prompted by a backstage brawl at the Rock en Seine festival in Paris.

Noel, 57, quit the Manchester rock group on August 28 2009, saying he “simply could not go on working with Liam a day longer”, and the brothers have made negative comments about each other for more than a decade.

Though fans have been positive about a reunion, concerns have been raised about high ticket prices and accommodation, and the prospect of the brothers having another falling out.

On Wednesday, the band quashed speculation they would play a headline set at Glastonbury next year. “The only way to see the band will be on the Oasis Live 25’ World Tour,” they said in a post on X.

Advertisement