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Vicky Parry
2nd Feb 2026
Reading Time: 3 minutes
Harry Styles’ Together, Together tour for 2026 has officially been announced, and fans across the UK, Europe, the US and beyond are scrambling for tickets. With multiple-night stadium runs, record-breaking residencies, and ticket queues stretching into the hundreds of thousands, getting a seat — let alone a cheap one — has been anything but simple.
Here’s everything you need to know: the tour dates, ticket prices, presale chaos, and our honest take on whether cheap tickets are still out there. Plus, we show you how to avoid touts and scams.
🪩 Harry Styles 2026 Tour Dates
Harry Styles’ Together, Together tour isn’t a standard global hop — it’s a residency-style run in a few major hubs with multiple shows per city.
🇬🇧 UK: Wembley Stadium, London
- June 12, 13, 17, 19, 20 & 23, 2026
- June 26 & 27, 2026
- June 29, July 1, 3 & 4, 2026
This is 12 separate Wembley nights, more than any artist has played there in a single year.
🌍 Other International Dates
- Amsterdam (multiple nights)
- São Paulo, Brazil
- Mexico City, Mexico
- Madison Square Garden, New York City (record-breaking 30-night residency)
- Melbourne and Sydney, Australia
With around 50 shows worldwide, the tour packs a lot of music into relatively few cities — meaning ticket demand is exceptionally high. (nme.com)
Presale Chaos: What Really Happened
Presales kicked off in late January, giving fans with early access codes or credit cards special opportunities to buy tickets before the general public.
But the presale quickly became infamous:
- Digital queues with hundreds of thousands of fans waiting
- Limited ticket availability, especially the cheapest seats
- Long waiting times — some fans reported hours online only to find tickets sold out
Even with presale codes, getting a budget-friendly ticket was far from guaranteed, and many fans ended up disappointed. The subsequent general sale didn’t alleviate the problem — most cheap seats had already gone.
Ticket Prices: What Fans Were Paying
Face-value ticket costs for the UK and international shows ranged widely:
- Cheapest seated tickets: ~£40–£50
- Standard seats: ~£90–£180
- Standing tickets: ~£140–£280
- Premium and VIP packages: £400–£700+
Once resale sites came into play, prices for popular shows like Wembley or Madison Square Garden skyrocketed, sometimes hitting hundreds or thousands of pounds above face value.
Are Cheap Tickets Even Possible Now?
Let’s be honest:
- Cheap, face-value tickets technically exist, but most were snapped up during presale.
- Some upper-tier seats or less popular dates may still appear at lower prices.
- Resale platforms sometimes undercut extreme markups closer to the event, but even these “discounted” tickets often cost more than a typical budget ticket.
Bottom line: cheap tickets aren’t impossible, but they are the exception, not the rule. Fans chasing bargains should temper expectations.
💡 Tips to Maximise Your Chances
- Stick to official sellers: Ticketmaster or the official Harry Styles site.
- Be ready early on general sale days: Log in 15–30 minutes before tickets go live.
- Use official resale platforms: Verified resale is safer than secondary marketplaces.
- Watch multiple dates: Less popular shows or higher-tier seats may offer better deals.
- Be patient: Resale prices can drop as the show approaches.
Avoid Touts and Scams
High demand makes fans vulnerable to fraud:
- Avoid social media or DM-only ticket sellers
- Never pay via gift cards, crypto, or untraceable methods
- Don’t trust “miracle deals” — if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is
Stick to official sales and verified resale channels to protect yourself.
🪄 The Takeaway
If you already have tickets at face value, you’re lucky. For everyone else:
Cheap tickets are scarce, competition is fierce, and most affordable seats are gone. The best strategy is caution, patience, and flexibility. Be ready, be early, and avoid touts — but understand that getting a true bargain is now the exception, not the rule.
