Oasis tickets FAQ: When do tickets go on sale for Croke Park? How much?...
Oasis tickets for the band's Dublin and UK gigs go on sale on Saturday via Ticketmaster.
It’s Definitely Maybe one of the biggest music moments in recent years (sorry, we had to) and it seems like everyone and their mother is hoping to secure tickets to see Oasis in Croke Park, Dublin, and other venues.
So, to make sure you’re best equipped, here’s everything you need to know about getting tickets for Oasis’s reunion gigs.
Oasis Live ’25 will kick off in Cardiff on July 4, 2025. The tour will travel to Manchester Heaton Park, Wembley and Murraryfield before making its way to Ireland.
The band will play two nights in Dublin’s Croke Park on August 16 and 17, rounding off this series of comeback gigs in the country their parents were born.
On Thursday, due to “unprecedented demand”, three new UK dates were added in Heaton Park, Wembley and Edinburgh, leaving fans hopeful for more Dublin shows. Let's see.
Tickets will be available for the upper and lower tiers in the Hogan and Cusack Stand, as well as the Davin Stand. Standing tickets will fill the pitch. No under 14s will be permitted to stand, while 15- and 16-year-olds will need to be accompanied by an adult. Under 16s in reserved seating will also need to be accompanied by an adult.

Tickets for the shows go on sale on Saturday, August 31, via Ticketmaster. The Irish tour dates will go on sale from 8am, while the UK dates will be released an hour later at 9am.
According to promoter MCD, the tickets will start at €86.50 (plus booking fees) – though it’s likely most people will be paying a lot more.
For Taylor Swift last year, fans paid €126 for general admission, with standing tickets going up to €206 and other packages reaching as high as €743.62.
More extensive pricing details were released for the UK shows. Taking Murrayfield in Scotland as an example, pitch standing has been listed as £151 (€179), with most seats priced at about €120-€200.
As mentioned, it’s not going to be an easy feat to secure the tickets.
The band opened up a presale feature to allow some fans to get in ahead of the general sale. To sign up, fans had to enter their details as well as answering a question about the original lineup of the band. If they got this question wrong, they would not be successful in getting to the ballot for presale codes.
Successful applicants would receive a code to use in the presale by midday on Friday. Due to high demand, however, Oasis’s team have had to make a number of statements to say they were still processing the pre-sale ballot entries – right up to Thursday.
For those who are not lucky enough to get into the pre-sale, it’ll be every man and woman for themselves in the general sale on Ticketmaster.
Those who don’t get a ticket in Ireland could try their hand at the UK shows an hour later, but they may need to pre-register for the general sale of these shows.
Do ensure you're on the Ticketmaster site rather than any of the resale sites that might come up in a Google search, and beware scammers.

First things first, make sure you have set up a Ticketmaster account, have verified it and have the log in details handy. You certainly don’t want to go scrambling for a password in the height of the panic. Log into your account in plenty before the sale.
In a similar vein, make sure your bank account details on the account are up to date and, if you keep your money in a separate account, that there is enough in your current account to cover the cost.
Charge up your phone and laptop and go somewhere with a steady internet connection – the last thing you need is a lag at the crucial moment. Private wifi is best, but Ticketmaster advises using mobile data instead of public wifi if it comes to it.
Most importantly, do not refresh the page while in the waiting room. Ticketmaster and other ticketing sites use a queuing system when they get busy, which means you will be put in an online waiting room with other fans.
Refreshing the page will not move you up further in the queue and the page will automatically update itself.
Once the sale starts, you will be able to see your place in the queue and hopefully be offered tickets at the end of it.
Bear in mind that there is a maximum of four tickets per household. Any tickets in excess of this will be cancelled.
Since the announcement, there has been a lot of discussion around who actually should get to go.
Of course, by asking a question to access the eligibility of fans for the presale, the band was aiming to weed out those who jumped on the bandwagon but, with Google, it seems a bit redundant to ask a question that can be answered in seconds.
In fact, Tony McCarroll, who was the drummer in the original line-up, was trending on Wednesday as fans were searching to answer the question. This suggests that asking a question to find who is a real Oasis fan is pointless.
On social media, many people joked that “true” Oasis fans would be hassling anyone who got a ticket and who was born after the band were big – that being anyone born from the late nineties onwards. Others made memes about older men asking younger women to name three Oasis albums to prove their eligibility to go to the concerts.
One X user wrote: “Imagine waiting 15 years for Oasis to reform only to lose out on tickets to Chloe, 21, from Stockport, who just wants to hear Wonderwall live.”
Oasis fans of all ages are going to be fighting for tickets and Ticketmaster cannot prioritise who is a “real fan”.
This may be the reunion of the decade and it’ll probably be hard to find someone who isn’t going to try for tickets. Let’s leave the discussion out of who deserves to go or not and just get giddy over the fact that the Gallagher brothers are reuniting.
