logo
How to get Morgan Wallen tickets: 2025 concert tour prices and dates compared

How to get Morgan Wallen tickets: 2025 concert tour prices and dates compared

Following the May release of Morgan Wallen's fourth studio album 'I'm The Problem,' his 2025 tour of the same name is set to kick off this June, just after his appearance at the Sand in My Boots music festival. With an exciting summer schedule lined up, I've gathered the details below that will tell you everything you need to know about how to get Morgan Wallen tickets.
Morgan Wallen first announced his album 'I'm The Problem' in January, while thanking his fans for their continued support. The album announcement also continued with confirmation of both his coming tour and of the previously hinted at title track, also titled 'I'm The Problem,' in addition to two other tracks, 'Superman' and 'I'm a Little Crazy.' His tour is set to include guest performances by Brooks & Dunn, Miranda Lambert, Thomas Rhett, Koe Wetzel, Gavin Adcock, Corey Kent, Ella Langley, and Anne Wilson.
We've got you covered if you want tickets to Morgan Wallen's 2025 concert tour. Here's our breakdown of the tour schedule, purchasing details, and a comparison of prices between original and resale ticket options. You can also explore resale sites like StubHub and Vivid Seats on your own.
Morgan Wallen's 2025 tour schedule
Morgan Wallen will perform at the Sand In My Boots music festival this May. Then, in June, his I'm The Problem tour will kick off with a show in Houston, Texas. The artist will then tour across North America, finishing up in September with back-to-back performances in Edmonton, Canada.
* Indicates a music festival Morgan Wallen will be performing at, in addition to several other artists.
How to buy tickets for Morgan Wallen's 2025 concert tour
You can purchase tickets for Morgan Wallen's 2025 I'm The Problem tour on Ticketmaster. While there are no shows sold out yet, inventory may be limited if you have preferences for seating, especially at popular locations. Several stops only have a few original tickets available for purchase on Ticketmaster, with resale tickets also available on the platform.
Tickets to see Morgan Wallen are also available from verified resale vendor sites such as StubHub and Vivid Seats. For high-demand tour dates where the number of remaining original tickets is limited, you may have better luck with seating and pricing options from these sites. The Sand In My Boots festival, at which Morgan Wallen is set to perform just before his tour kicks off, is only offering waitlist options for original tickets, but you can still find options available from the resale vendors.
How much are Morgan Wallen tickets?
Original ticket prices generally vary between $140 for seated areas in the back of the stadium to close to and over $1000 for certain pit areas. A good portion of the pit sections are VIP tickets however, which include other amenities and perks as will be explained below. So while you will be paying a premium, you also gain access to several premium amenities.
Resale tickets from StubHub and Vivid Seats offer comparable pricing to original tickets, with the most affordable tickets currently being $97 on StubHub for Morgan Wallen's September 12 stop in Edmonton, Canada, and $96 on Vivid Seats for his performance in Seattle on July 26. While these prices are before taxes and fees, the overall range is quite similar to the pricing of original tickets from Ticketmaster. As the number of original tickets remaining is limited, especially for popular stops, you will be getting the most options from resale tickets, without too much of an upcharge (and some are even more affordable than the original ticket was).
There are four VIP packages available on Ticketmaster for Morgan Wallen's 2025 tour. The Hot Seat Package, Party Pit Package, VIP Lounge Package, and Premium VIP Lounge Package vary in price depending on the location, but they generally start at around $800 for the Hot Seat Package and go up to around $1,800 for the Premium VIP Lounge Package.
VIP package perks include exclusive VIP merchandise gifts, dedicated entrances, access to an on-site VIP support team, access to the VIP lounge, complimentary drink tokens, on-stage photo opportunities, and more. Please reference this Ticketmaster page for details on each package's specific amenities. VIP tickets are extremely limited, and availability will vary by date and location. There is no artist participation for any of the VIP packages.
Who is opening for Morgan Wallen's tour?
The I'm The Problem tour is confirmed to have a rotation of opening acts, including Koe Wetzel, Corey Kent, Miranda Lambert, Ella Langley, Gavin Adcock, Brooks & Dunn, and Anne Wilson. Each show is scheduled to have two opening acts, and schedule details are available on Morgan Wallen's official website.
Will there be international tour dates?
Morgan Wallen has four shows scheduled in Canada for his I'm The Problem tour. He is set to appear in Toronto on September 4 and September 5, then move to Edmonton on September 12 and September 13. Other than his Canada schedule, he does not have any performances scheduled for other international locations.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tributes Pour In for Actor Terence Stamp
Tributes Pour In for Actor Terence Stamp

Time​ Magazine

time4 hours ago

  • Time​ Magazine

Tributes Pour In for Actor Terence Stamp

'My only regrets,' the Oscar-nominated British actor Terence Stamp once said, 'are the films that I passed on because I was fearful.' Stamp, who was best known for starring as the villain General Zod in Superman (1978) and Superman II (1980), has often called turning down the lead role in the 1967 Oscar-winning movie adaptation of Broadway hit Camelot—because he wasn't confident in his ability to sing—his biggest regret. But the actor, who died Sunday at age 87, took on no shortage of fearless roles later in his career and even got the opportunity to overcome his trepidation about singing onscreen when he starred in the 2012 film Song for Marion, earning a Best Actor nomination at the British Independent Film Awards for his portrayal of a widower in a seniors' choir. Stamp's family confirmed his death in a statement to Reuters, saying that he 'leaves behind an extraordinary body of work, both as an actor and as a writer that will continue to touch and inspire people for years to come.' Described by the Guardian as the 'seductive dark prince of British cinema,' Stamp had a film career that spanned decades. He was also a prolific writer, authoring five memoirs as well as a fiction novel and co-authoring two cookbooks. 'Terence was kind, funny, and endlessly fascinating,' said Edgar Wright, who directed Stamp in the 2021 film Last Night in Soho, in an Instagram tribute to the late actor. 'Terence was a true movie star: the camera loved him, and he loved it right back.' Bill Duke, who acted alongside Stamp in Steven Soderbergh's 1999 film The Limey, posted on Facebook that Stamp 'brought a rare intensity to the screen' but 'carried himself with warmth, grace, and generosity' off-screen. Stamp's artistry, Duke said, 'left an indelible mark on cinema, and his spirit will live on through the unforgettable characters he gave us.' Billy Budd and (almost) James Bond Stamp was born on July 22, 1938, in the Stepney area of London's East End. He was one of five children. According to the British Film Institute (BFI), Stamp's interest in acting began after his mother took him to a local cinema to watch the 1939 film Beau Geste, though his father, a merchant navy stoker, had encouraged him to pursue something more practical. "When I asked for career guidance at school, they recommended bricklaying as a good, regular job, although someone did think I might make a good Woolworths manager,' Stamp told British newspaper the Independent in 2011. After studying on scholarship at the Webber Douglas School of Dramatic Art, according to the BFI, Stamp would first tour in repertory theater. He appeared in a 1960 episode of the BBC series Spy-Catcher, according to his IMDb profile, but he first gained global prominence after portraying an 18th-century seaman in the film adaptation of Herman Melville's novel Billy Budd in 1962. That drama directed by Peter Ustinov earned him an Academy Award nomination as well as a Golden Globe Award for 'New Star Of The Year.' Throughout the 1960s, Stamp worked with renowned British filmmakers like Ken Loach and John Schlesinger as well as Italians like Federico Fellini and Pier Paolo Pasolini. Stamp earned fame not only for his work, but also for his high-profile romances during that decade, including with supermodel Jean Shrimpton and actor Julie Christie. At one point, Stamp was even considered to be the next James Bond after Sean Connery, though he said in a 2013 interview with the London Evening Standard that he scared the filmmakers behind the popular spy franchise with his ideas for how to make the role his own. But just as Stamp felt he was entering his prime, work started to dry up. Stamp recalled to the Guardian in 2015 his agent telling him when he was only 31 or 32 that the movie studios were all 'looking for a young Terence Stamp.' 'When the 60s ended, I almost did too,' he said. In 1969, Stamp moved to an ashram in India. 'I thought I'm not going to stay around here facing this day-in-day-out rejection and the phone not ringing,' he told the BFI in 2013, looking back on that period in his life. General Zod and The Adventures of Priscilla Stamp was in India when he received a now-famous telegram addressed to 'Clarence Stamp' that would lead to his most recognized role of his career. It was an invitation to meet with director Richard Donner to join the ensemble cast, including Christopher Reeve and Marlon Brando, of a blockbuster adaptation of DC comic Superman. Stamp received widespread acclaim for his portrayal of the Kryptonian villain General Zod in the 1978 film and its 1980 sequel and said in 2013 that he 'can't go out on the street in London without somebody saying, 'It's Zod!'' Sarah Douglas, who played fellow villain Ursa in the films, remembered the late Stamp on Instagram as 'beyond gorgeous and talented,' adding: 'What a start to my career to have spent so many months in his company.' Stamp told BFI that the 'great blessing' of this next phase of his career was that he'd been 'transmuted from a leading man to a character actor.' Throughout the decades that followed, he was praised by critics for his performances, particularly in crime thrillers The Hit (1984) and The Limey (1999). But he appeared in a multitude of genres, and many consider his star turn in the 1994 Australian film The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, to be a standout example of his creativity and dedication to his craft. Departing from his traditionally hardman roles, Stamp portrayed transgender woman Bernadette alongside co-stars Hugo Weaving and Guy Pearce as drag queens. The endearing comedy became a cult classic, and Stamp earned his second BAFTA and Golden Globe nominations for his performance. 'You were a true inspiration, both in & out of heels,' Pearce posted on X after Stamp's passing. Stamp's work would continue on in the 2000s and 2010s, with roles in films like The Adjustment Bureau, Valkyrie, Big Eyes, and the movie adaptation of Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children. Before Stamp's passing, Priscilla director Stephan Elliott told the Guardian last year that Stamp was slated to return with Weaving and Pearce for a sequel, with a script already finished. Elliott described Stamp to the Guardian as someone who had left a lasting impression on him since he first saw Stamp in 1965 thriller The Collector. 'Terence's greatest beauties were his eyes—in some of the early films you don't see it, but in person, when they were shining, he could hold a room,' Elliott said. 'He'd show up, use the eyes and turn everybody to jelly.' Elliott also noted how Stamp became more discerning with his roles later in his career. 'If he'd already seen something like it, he didn't care. If something pressed his buttons and piqued his interest, he'd consider it,' Elliott said. Elliott remembered marveling at all the notable directors and actors Stamp got to work with throughout his career. 'He said to me, 'I just drifted from one to the other—if somebody had something interesting, I'd do it. That's the way it's always been.''

Terence Stamp: from arthouse icon to blockbuster villain
Terence Stamp: from arthouse icon to blockbuster villain

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Terence Stamp: from arthouse icon to blockbuster villain

Whether starring as a road-tripping transgender woman in "Priscilla, Queen of the Desert", an intergalactic supervillain in "Superman" or a mysterious beauty in "Theorem", Terence Stamp, who died Sunday at 87, captivated audiences in experimental films and Hollywood blockbusters alike. His bold, decades-long career swung between big productions Michael Cimino's "The Sicilian" to independent films such as Stephen Frears's "The Hit" or Steven Soderbergh's "The Limey". An emblem of London's "Swinging Sixties", he showed off a magnetic screen presence from his earliest roles, immediately gaining awards and fans. He made his breakthrough in 1962 playing an angelic sailor hanged for killing one of his crewmates in Peter Ustinov's "Billy Budd", earning an Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe. He would also win best male actor at Cannes in 1965 for "The Collector", a twisted love story based on a John Fowles novel. Stamp was born in London on July 22, 1938. His father stoked ship boilers and his family of seven crammed into a tenement with no bathroom in east London. In later interviews, he would recount experiencing hunger during his childhood, as well as facing problems at school because of his working-class accent. - Discovered by Fellini - Inspired by Gary Cooper and James Dean, he dreamed of being an actor from an early age and left home at 17 -- taking a scholarship to a drama school against his father's wishes. In the early 1960s, British cinema began to take an interest in the working class and Ken Loach hired Stamp for his first film, "Poor Cow" in 1967. His meeting with Italian director Federico Fellini that same year was decisive. While searching for "the most decadent English actor" for his segment of "Spirits of the Dead", Fellini cast Stamp as a drunk actor seduced by the devil in the guise of a little girl. Another Italian director, Pier Paolo Pasolini, cast him in 1969's "Theorem" as an enigmatic outsider who seduces the members of a bourgeois Milan family. But Stamp's scandalous roles fell out of fashion and he struggled to find work for a decade. He embarked on a mystical world tour and settled in India, where he was studying in an ashram in 1977 when his agent got in touch and offered him the role of General Zod in "Superman". - From 'Priscilla' back to hard men - His career took off again and he soon became a go-to face for Hollywood directors looking for British villains. The role of Bernadette in "Priscilla" came in the mid-1990s, just as he was growing weary of those Hollywood hardmen roles. A few years later though, he returned to familiar stomping ground for the "The Limey", playing a British ex-con who travels to California to find out who killed his daughter. Director Steven Soderbergh used scenes from "Poor Cow" that capture Stamp in his dazzling years as a sixties English beauty. One of his last films, Last Night in Soho (2021), was a supernatural thriller in which a teenager was haunted by characters from London's Swinging Sixties -- bringing Stamp full circle on a dazzling career. rap/gv/jxb-jj

British actor Terence Stamp, ‘Superman' star and famed figure of swinging London, dies at 87
British actor Terence Stamp, ‘Superman' star and famed figure of swinging London, dies at 87

CNN

time13 hours ago

  • CNN

British actor Terence Stamp, ‘Superman' star and famed figure of swinging London, dies at 87

Terence Stamp, the British actor who became synonymous with Swinging London in the 1960s, has died, his family said Sunday, according to Reuters. He was 87 years old. Stamp first came to prominence when he took on the titular role in the 1962 film 'Billy Budd.' The black and white drama, directed by Peter Ustinov, who also starred, saw Stamp nominated for an Academy Award for best supporting actor - the only Oscar nomination of his lengthy career. He went on to star in a host of films in the 1960s, among them John Schlesinger's Thomas Hardy adaptation 'Far From the Madding Crowd' and Ken Loach's first feature film, 'Poor Cow.' CNN has reached out to his representatives for confirmation of his death. He was a star who rose from humble beginnings in London's East End, about as far from Hollywood as you can get. He was born on July 22, 1938, to parents Ethel and Thomas, a merchant seaman. In a 2013 interview with the British Film Institute (BFI), Stamp revealed that his father tried to deter him from a career in showbiz. 'He genuinely believed that people like us didn't do things like that,' he said. But his mother, he said, 'loved every second of it.' 'In retrospect, my mother must have always wanted me to do it and must have wished that she could have been more supportive. But my dad was the head of the family and I never really knew what he thought of it because he was of that generation. 'He was a merchant seaman, he shovelled coal, and in that confined living quarters any show of emotion would have been considered unbearably flash.' Stamp would become one of the biggest figures of 1960s London, romantically linked to model Jean Shrimpton and actresses Julie Christie - his 'Far From the Madding Crowd' co-star - and Brigitte Bardot. His only marriage came in 2002 - to an Australian pharmacist 35 years his junior - but that lasted just six years, according to the Guardian. Stamp famously roomed with fellow actor Michael Caine, who was also a rising star at the time. The pair lost touch, however, as he disclosed in an interview with The Guardian newspaper in 2015. 'We just went different ways. I can understand it: in many ways he was much more mature than me,' he said of Caine, who was five years older. 'Caine gave me all my early values, like making sure you were doing good stuff, waiting for the right things – then as soon as he got away he did exactly the opposite. Went from one movie to another.' After a few years away from the screen, Stamp appeared in the 1978 blockbuster 'Superman' as the superhero's adversary, General Zod. He reprised the role of the comic book villain in the sequel two years later. Ironically, more than two decades later Stamp went on to voice the role of Superman's father Jor-El in the TV series 'Smallville.' His many screen credits also included his role as drag queen Bernadette in the 1990s Australian comedy 'The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert.' Of his eclectic career - including roles in Hollywood's 'Wall Street' and 'The Adjustment Bureau' - he told the Guardian that he had no ambitions, adding: 'I've had bad experiences and things that didn't work out; my love for film sometimes diminishes but then it just resurrects itself. 'I never have to gee myself up, or demand a huge wage to get out of bed in the morning. I've done crap, because sometimes I didn't have the rent. But when I've got the rent, I want to do the best I can.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store