NFL Playoffs Ticket Updates – Divisional Round Prices Soften (But Just Barely) After Wild Card Weekend

After a wild opening weekend of the NFL playoffs, the ticket market has shifted from “what-if” listings to a much clearer, matchup-driven picture. The San Francisco 49ers stunned Philadelphia to advance, the Buffalo Bills escaped Jacksonville in a back-and-forth thriller, and the New England Patriots rolled past the Chargers on a defense-first night in Foxborough—leaving just one Wild Card game left on the calendar: Texans at Steelers tonight. With the bracket narrowing, buyers are now looking at a smaller slate of games, which typically concentrates demand and makes pricing move faster as kickoff approaches. Continue reading “NFL Playoffs Ticket Updates – Divisional Round Prices Soften (But Just Barely) After Wild Card Weekend”

Where Morgan Wallen Tickets Cost the Most — and Where Fans Can Save

If you’re gearing up to see Morgan Wallen on his 2026 stadium tour, you’ve probably already noticed one thing: ticket prices aren’t just high — they’re wildly inconsistent from city to city. A quick search for Morgan Wallen tickets shows just how much prices can fluctuate depending on the market, the venue, and even the night of the week.

Continue reading “Where Morgan Wallen Tickets Cost the Most — and Where Fans Can Save”

CFP Semifinal Ticket Prices: Deals to be Had on Last Minute Tickets for Peach, Fiesta Bowls

As the College Football Playoff semifinals arrive, the ticket market is telling a familiar late-January story: urgency on the field, patience rewarded at the box office. With kickoff hours away in Glendale and Atlanta, asking prices for both semifinal games have continued to drift lower from their early-January levels, creating genuine last-minute opportunities for fans willing to stay flexible.

That softening has coincided with a bracket that, while still compelling, lacks some of the traditional demand drivers. As was noted after the quarterfinals, Miami and Ole Miss bring contrasting styles and recent momentum, while Indiana and Oregon represent programs chasing modern-era validation rather than defending entrenched national brands. That novelty makes for great television — but it often tempers last-minute resale demand.

All prices below reflect current average asking prices and current inventory snapshots and can change quickly as kickoff approaches. Continue reading “CFP Semifinal Ticket Prices: Deals to be Had on Last Minute Tickets for Peach, Fiesta Bowls”

NFL Wild Card Ticket Prices Update: Where Each Game Stands Now (Plus a Look Ahead to the Rest of the Playoffs)

Now that the bracket is set, the NFL postseason ticket market has shifted from “what-if” pricing to real, matchup-driven demand. Using Ticket Club marketplace averages, we’re comparing each Wild Card game’s average asking price as of the morning of January 6 to where it stood before Week 18—and pairing that with “get-in” price snapshots by stadium level, so fans can see what the entry point looks like in different parts of each venue.

One quick note: “get-in” pricing below reflects the lowest available listings by venue level at the time of the seating-map snapshots. Inventory moves fast, and the cheapest section can change hour to hour—so think of it as a directional look at where value is (and isn’t) showing up. Continue reading “NFL Wild Card Ticket Prices Update: Where Each Game Stands Now (Plus a Look Ahead to the Rest of the Playoffs)”

Ticket Club Price Watch: A Snapshot of the Biggest Concerts (and Biggest Ticket Swings) in the Months Ahead

As live music ramps up for 2026, ticket demand is already painting a clear picture of what fans are prioritizing. From massive country stadium tours to destination residencies in Las Vegas and blockbuster pop runs, early pricing trends show which shows are shaping up to be the most talked-about events of the year.

Using current Ticket Club inventory from concerts taking place over the next few months, we’ve identified the tours driving the most attention—and, in many cases, the highest ticket prices—along with a few surprises that still offer strong value for fans planning ahead.

Continue reading “Ticket Club Price Watch: A Snapshot of the Biggest Concerts (and Biggest Ticket Swings) in the Months Ahead”

The Top 10 Comedians Heading Into the New Year

Comedy is entering the new year with momentum that looks closer to a major concert cycle than a traditional stand-up slate. Arena bookings are becoming routine, pricing remains strong across most markets, and a handful of shows are pushing comedy tickets into true “event” territory.

Using current Ticket Club data, the following breakdown highlights the comedians driving the strongest demand heading into the new year—along with the tours and performances shaping today’s comedy ticket market across North America.

Continue reading “The Top 10 Comedians Heading Into the New Year”

Does Super Bowl host city affect the demand for tickets?

Las Vegas Sphere 2026 Residencies: Who’s Playing and When

Las Vegas’ Sphere has quickly established itself as one of the most talked-about venues in live entertainment, and its 2026 residency calendar shows no signs of slowing down. With a mix of legendary rock bands, pop icons, EDM productions, jam-band marathons, and genre-spanning global artists, the year ahead offers something for nearly every kind of fan.

Continue reading “Las Vegas Sphere 2026 Residencies: Who’s Playing and When”

Which of the four remaining playoff teams will make for the most competitive Super Bowl market?

CFP Ticket Prices Cool Off After Quarterfinals, Opening the Door for Last-Minute Semifinal Deals

The College Football Playoff ticket market has taken a noticeable step back after the quarterfinal round on Dec. 31 and Jan. 1. With today marking Jan. 2, both semifinal games have seen clear price softening—good news for fans who waited to buy, and a familiar pattern when several of the sport’s biggest “brand” programs are no longer driving national demand.

The biggest mover has been the Fiesta Bowl, where Miami vs. Ole Miss is now down about 20% from 12/31 to 1/2. The Peach Bowl matchup between Indiana and Oregon has fallen about 12% over the same window. As the market resets, the “get-in” landscape in both stadiums shows plenty of entry points—especially for shoppers comfortable with upper tiers, standing areas, or corner/end-zone locations.

On the storyline side, there’s a genuine bright spot for neutral fans: the remaining bracket sets up a novel champion angle no matter how it plays out. Miami’s last national title came in 2001, Oregon has come up short in prior title shots (including the first CFP title game in 2015 and the 2011 BCS Championship), Indiana is chasing a breakthrough championship, and Ole Miss’ three claimed titles (1959, 1960, 1962) come from the pre-modern era when championships were largely decided by polls and consensus rather than a true playoff. In other words: fresh stakes, and a market that’s suddenly more buyer-friendly. Continue reading “CFP Ticket Prices Cool Off After Quarterfinals, Opening the Door for Last-Minute Semifinal Deals”

A Look at the NFL Ticket Prices for Week 18 and the Upcoming NFL Playoffs Ticket Market

The final weekend of the NFL regular season is rarely quiet, but Week 18 of the 2025 campaign arrives with more uncertainty than usual. With playoff seeding still unsettled in both conferences, several division titles undecided, and multiple paths to the No. 1 seed still in play, Sunday’s slate features a mix of true “win-and-you’re-in” games and others that could swing dramatically based on results elsewhere.

That uncertainty is already reflected in the ticket market. Some matchups are pricing like postseason games, while others remain closer to typical late-season levels—at least for now. Below is an early look at the Week 18 games most likely to shape the playoff picture, and what current average ticket prices suggest about demand. Continue reading “A Look at the NFL Ticket Prices for Week 18 and the Upcoming NFL Playoffs Ticket Market”

College Football Playoff Ticket Prices – A Last-Minute Look as the Quarterfinals Begin

The College Football Playoff quarterfinals are officially here. The Cotton Bowl kicks things off tonight, with the remaining three games set for New Year’s Day, and for fans who have waited until the final window to buy, the ticket market is offering more opportunity than you might expect.

At this stage of the calendar, CFP pricing usually tells one of two stories: either a late rush tightens the market quickly, or supply holds and buyers gain leverage. This year, it has mostly been the latter. While individual games have taken different paths to get here, the common thread is that entry-level options remain available across the board, even as premium seating continues to command a sharp upgrade.

The Cotton Bowl has been the most volatile example of that journey. Prices dropped dramatically after Texas A&M was eliminated, flooding the market with affordable upper-level and standing-room options. As kickoff has approached, pricing has firmed back up — not into panic territory, but into a more balanced range that reflects Ohio State’s national pull, Miami’s momentum, and the reality of remaining supply.

Across the rest of the quarterfinal slate, the story is similar but less extreme. The Rose Bowl and Orange Bowl have trended steadily in buyers’ favor, while the Sugar Bowl has held firmer as demand concentrates in better seating tiers. The result is a market that, taken as a whole, still rewards patience.

For fans making last-minute decisions, this is a rare window where marquee playoff games and rational pricing overlap. The sections below break down how each matchup arrived at this point — and what the current market says about where value still exists.

Quarterfinals: Early resets, not late squeezes

The Cotton Bowl is the clearest example of how this phase of the market has played out. The sharp drop between 12/19 and 12/22 was driven by a flood of upper-level and standing-room inventory after Texas A&M fell out of the picture. That reset pulled the average price down dramatically and created one of the most buyer-friendly entry markets of the quarterfinal round.

What’s notable is what did not happen after that point. Prices did not snap back aggressively as kickoff approached. Instead, the market stabilized. With the corrected average now sitting in the low-$900s, the Cotton Bowl reads as a balanced market — Ohio State’s national draw keeping demand intact, Miami adding intrigue, and enough remaining supply preventing a true late-stage squeeze.

Ticket Club Cotton Bowl “Get-In” Prices by Stadium Section:

The Rose Bowl followed a similar but less extreme pattern. Even with Alabama officially in the field, prices softened by the 12/22 checkpoint and continued drifting lower into New Year’s Eve. Entry pricing has remained approachable for a New Year’s Day Rose Bowl, reinforcing the idea that brand power alone doesn’t guarantee pricing pressure when capacity is large and supply is deep.

Ticket Club Rose Bowl “Get-In” Price by Stadium Section:

The Orange Bowl also settled quickly and never really deviated. Prices eased modestly by 12/22 and continued sliding, a classic neutral-site dynamic where the market finds its level early and sellers stay competitive right up to kickoff. For a matchup featuring Texas Tech’s playoff debut against Oregon, this has quietly become one of the most value-oriented games on the board.

Ticket Club Orange Bowl ‘Get-In” ticket prices by Stadium Area:

The Sugar Bowl remains the outlier among the quarterfinals. While it reset early like the rest of the field, it has held firmer than most. The entry tier has stayed manageable, but buyers have clearly competed for better sections. That concentration of demand in the middle and upper-middle of the seating map explains why this game has resisted the broader softening seen elsewhere.

Ticket Club Sugar Bowl “Get-In” Ticket Prices by Stadium Area:

Semifinals and championship: Pricing on expectation, not urgency

The semifinal markets have behaved exactly as expected at this stage. Both the Fiesta Bowl and Peach Bowl found stable ranges by 12/22 and have largely held them. Entry points remain accessible relative to the stakes, while club and hospitality inventory continues to live in a completely different price universe.

That’s not hesitation — it’s anticipation. These games are being priced on who might advance, not who is locked in. Once the quarterfinal field narrows, semifinal pricing is typically where directional movement shows up fastest.

The National Championship remains in its own category. Even during the 12/22 reset window, pricing barely moved. The title game doesn’t need urgency to stay expensive, and it doesn’t need matchup certainty to maintain a high floor. Historically, it’s the market that waits the longest — and then reacts the quickest once finalists are known.

The table below shows where average pricing stands now relative to the 12/22 reset. Rather than a story of volatility, it confirms which markets found their footing early and which ones have continued to drift in buyers’ favor.

Date Game Avg. Price (12/31) Change since 12/22
12/31/2025 Cotton Bowl: Ohio State vs. Miami (Quarterfinal) $916 +56.8% Buy Tickets
1/1/2026 Orange Bowl: Texas Tech vs. Oregon (Quarterfinal) $174 -59.9% Buy Tickets
1/1/2026 Rose Bowl: Indiana vs. Alabama (Quarterfinal) $291 -46.9% Buy Tickets
1/1/2026 Sugar Bowl: Georgia vs. Ole Miss (Quarterfinal) $537 -17.4% Buy Tickets
1/8/2026 Fiesta Bowl (Semifinal) $799 +4.3% Buy Tickets
1/9/2026 Peach Bowl (Semifinal) $742 -5.4% Buy Tickets
1/19/2026 CFP National Championship $5,529 -6.6% Buy Tickets