Morgan Wallen Still The Problem Tour Tickets: When Prices Drop and Where to Find the Best Seats in 2026

morganwallen on stage

Morgan Wallen Still The Problem Tour 2026 — Ticket Quick Read

  • The 23-date stadium tour runs April 10 – August 1, 2026 across 12 U.S. cities promoted by AEG Presents.
  • Cheapest tickets appear 1–2 weeks before each show, with Pittsburgh entry prices starting as low as $67.
  • Rotating openers include Brooks & Dunn, HARDY, Ella Langley and Thomas Rhett with additional support acts per night.
  • Every ticket sale benefits the Morgan Wallen Foundation, supporting youth sports and music programs nationwide.

Morgan Wallen’s Still The Problem Tour 2026 runs 23 stadium dates from April 10 to August 1. Tickets are available across all 12 cities, but pricing shifts significantly by market, timing, and platform. This guide covers when prices fall, which cities offer the lowest entry points, and how to buy safely.

What Is the Still The Problem Tour?

Morgan Wallen launched the Still The Problem Tour as a direct follow-up to his record-breaking 2025 “I’m The Problem” stadium run. The new run is bigger: 23 dates across 12 cities, all in major NFL and college football stadiums. AEG Presents promotes the full tour, with Live Nation handling the lone Tuscaloosa, Alabama date.

The tour is rooted in Wallen’s fourth studio album, I’m The Problem, which hit No. 1 on the Billboard 200 in both the United States and Canada. Per RIAA data, the album reached 4x Platinum certification within seven months of release. According to Billboard, it made Wallen the first artist ever to have three consecutive albums each spend at least 10 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200.

Still The Problem Tour

That commercial momentum makes this one of the most in-demand stadium tours of 2026. Getting tickets early in many markets is smart. But timing your purchase correctly can save a meaningful amount of money.

When Do Still The Problem Tour Tickets Get Cheapest?

Ticket prices on the secondary market follow a fairly predictable pattern for large stadium tours. For Morgan Wallen shows specifically, three windows tend to produce lower prices.

The 30–60 Day Window

Thirty to sixty days out is usually where you find the best combination of seat selection and price. Resellers have not yet panicked about unsold inventory, so they hold prices but there is still plenty of supply. This window suits fans who want a good seat at a reasonable price and do not want to gamble on day-of availability.

One to Two Weeks Before the Show

This is where prices often drop the sharpest. Resellers know the show is days away and begin dropping asking prices to move remaining stock. For markets with large outdoor stadiums like Ben Hill Griffin Stadium in Gainesville, Florida or Empower Field at Mile High in Denver seat supply is high enough that late-window deals appear regularly.

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Day of the Show

This carries the most risk but can produce the lowest prices. Sellers list last-minute seats aggressively on platforms like Gametime, which often shows inventory listed at near-face-value when the event is hours away. The trade-off is that premium sections are usually gone by then.

A Note on Weekday vs. Weekend Shows

Wednesday and Thursday shows consistently price lower than Friday or Saturday dates. Wallen’s tour is mostly weekend-heavy, but where a date falls mid-week, expect savings of roughly 8–10% compared to adjacent weekend shows in the same market.

City-by-City: Where Tickets Are Cheapest Right Now

Pricing varies significantly across the 12-city route. College football stadium markets tend to run cheaper than NFL domes or coastal cities. Here is a snapshot of estimated starting prices with fees included.

Date(s)VenueCityEst. Get-In Price
Apr 10–11U.S. Bank StadiumMinneapolis, MN~$120–$150
Apr 18Saban Field at Bryant-Denny StadiumTuscaloosa, AL~$95–$115
May 1–2Allegiant StadiumLas Vegas, NV~$177+
May 8–9Lucas Oil StadiumIndianapolis, IN~$145
May 15–16Ben Hill Griffin StadiumGainesville, FL~$100–$130
May 29–30Empower Field at Mile HighDenver, CO~$110–$140
Jun 5–6Acrisure StadiumPittsburgh, PA~$67–$90
Jun 19–20Soldier FieldChicago, IL~$130–$160
Jun 26–27Clemson Memorial StadiumClemson, SC~$95–$120
Jul 17–18M&T Bank StadiumBaltimore, MD~$110–$135
Jul 24–25Michigan StadiumAnn Arbor, MI~$120–$145
Jul 31–Aug 1Lincoln Financial FieldPhiladelphia, PA~$140–$170

Pittsburgh remains the most affordable entry point on the tour. Morgan Wallen’s Acrisure Stadium shows on June 5 and 6 have listed get-in prices as low as $67, making them the clearest value on the full route. Chicago’s Soldier Field dates on June 19–20 and Las Vegas at Allegiant Stadium command the highest premiums, given market size and venue prestige.

morgan wallen cheapest tickets

Where to Buy Morgan Wallen Tickets in 2026

Each platform has a different strength. Knowing which one to use for your situation matters.

SeatGeek

SeatGeek’s Deal Score feature rates individual listings on a 1–10 scale for value. It is useful for quick comparison and setting price alerts when you are watching a specific city. Entry prices here start around $96 on select dates.

Gametime

Gametime is the strongest platform for last-minute purchases. It specializes in close-in inventory and some listings drop to $99 or lower within days of the show. The app is built around mobile delivery and fast checkout.

TickPick

TickPick shows no-fee pricing upfront, which makes comparing across sections more accurate. On most platforms, fees add 25–30% to the listed price. TickPick’s all-in display removes that surprise at checkout.

Vivid Seats

Vivid Seats carries broad inventory and frequently offers discount codes for first-time buyers, which can bring the effective price noticeably lower than other platforms on a first purchase.

What to Expect at the Show

The Still The Problem Tour setlist runs 27–30 songs across a full production. Wallen opens with cuts from I’m The Problem  including “20 Cigarettes,” which reached No. 1 on the Country Airplay chart in February 2026, making it his 20th career leader on that ranking before moving through fan favorites like “Whiskey Glasses,” “Last Night,” and “Sand in My Boots.”

The production includes a B Stage in the back of the floor section and a walkout path that brings Wallen close to general admission fans. He has been known to bring out openers for special moments, including “Up Down” collaborations with Gavin Adcock and Vincent Mason on select nights.

Every show features three rotating opening acts. Direct support rotates between Brooks & Dunn, HARDY, Ella Langley, and Thomas Rhett depending on the date. Secondary and opening support slots pull from Gavin Adcock, Hudson Westbrook, Flatland Cavalry, Jason Scott & The High Heat, Zach John King, Vincent Mason, and Blake Whiten.

VIP Packages and Premium Options

VIP packages for the Still The Problem Tour include the Ultimate Morgan Wallen VIP Experience, which can include pre-show venue access, exclusive merchandise bundles, and themed cocktail experiences. Prices for VIP options vary by city and availability. Check the official tour site for current package details, as inventory is limited and sells out well before general seats.

Floor GA tickets remain a strong alternative to VIP for fans who want to be close. They tend to sell out in the first wave but occasionally resurface on resale platforms 2–3 weeks before the show.

Your Ticket Supports More Than the Show

Every ticket sold on the Still The Problem Tour directs a portion of revenue to the Morgan Wallen Foundation, which funds youth sports and music programs. In 2025 alone, the Foundation contributed over $600,000 worth of instruments to schools in touring cities. Since the Foundation launched, total giving has surpassed $5 million distributed to date.

The Foundation’s Tour Give Back initiative has contributed more than $1 million in instruments to schools in cities where Wallen has performed. Buying a ticket to this tour puts money into those programs, regardless of which platform you use to purchase.

Frequently Asked Questions

When do Morgan Wallen Still The Problem Tour tickets get cheapest?

Tickets typically reach their lowest prices one to two weeks before the show date, as resellers drop prices to offload remaining inventory. The 30–60 day window before each date usually offers the best balance of price and seat selection. Day-of pricing can go lower still, but premium sections are often gone by then.

Which city on the tour has the cheapest Morgan Wallen tickets?

Pittsburgh at Acrisure Stadium has the lowest entry prices, with get-in prices starting as low as $67 with fees. Indianapolis at Lucas Oil Stadium and Gainesville at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium also offer relatively affordable starting points. Las Vegas at Allegiant Stadium and Philadelphia at Lincoln Financial Field command the highest premiums on the route.

Is buying Morgan Wallen tickets on the day of the show worth it?

It can be a smart move for outdoor stadium markets where large capacity means sellers are motivated to move seats. Platforms like Gametime specialize in last-minute inventory and have listed seats close to face value in the hours before showtime. The risk is that your section options may be limited. If a specific seat location matters to you, buying 1–2 weeks out is safer.

Does every Still The Problem Tour ticket benefit charity?

Yes. A portion of every ticket sold benefits the Morgan Wallen Foundation, which supports youth sports and music programs. The Foundation has contributed over $1 million in instruments to schools in touring cities, and total giving has surpassed $5 million since the Foundation launched.

Who are the opening acts on the Still The Problem Tour?

Direct support rotates between Brooks & Dunn, HARDY, Ella Langley, and Thomas Rhett across different dates. Secondary and first support slots feature Gavin Adcock, Hudson Westbrook, Flatland Cavalry, Jason Scott & The High Heat, Zach John King, Vincent Mason, and Blake Whiten. The specific lineup changes night to night, even within the same city.

For background on stadium concert touring economics and how pricing models evolved for large-scale country acts, Wikipedia’s overview of concert touring provides useful context on how the industry structures ticketing and production costs.