Tickets for the Last Night of the Proms range from very cheap Promming standing tickets to much more expensive seated and hospitality options, depending on how you buy and where you sit.

Short answer

  • Day Promming (standing) tickets: about £8 including fees, usually limited to 2 per person and released on the day of the concert.
  • Standard seated tickets (face value): examples from a recent BBC Proms season include Centre Stalls seats around £145 and Front Circle seats around £98 (plus booking fees) for the Last Night, allocated via special ballots.
  • Premium / hospitality or secondary-market tickets: packages sold by official hospitality agents and resellers for the Last Night can run from roughly £1,000+ per person for reserved seats or box deals, sometimes much higher depending on inclusions and demand.

Prices change each season and vary by seat location, ballot/general sale vs hospitality, and whether you are buying at face value from the BBC/Royal Albert Hall or via a secondary seller.

Typical ways to get in (and what you might pay)

  1. Day Promming (cheapest, standing)
    • Standing in the arena or gallery.
    • Tickets released on the day, usually online mid‑morning for that evening’s concert.
    • Price is about £8 including fees, with up to 2 tickets per booker, and some extra £8 tickets reserved for people who have already “prommed” at several other concerts that season.
  1. Ballot and standard seated tickets (face value)
    • Because demand is huge, a chunk of Last Night seats is allocated via:
      • An Open Ballot (e.g., 100 Centre Stalls seats around £145 each and 100 Front Circle seats around £98 each, plus booking fee).
   * Other special schemes such as the Five‑Concert Ballot or Whole Season Passes.
 * Any unsold seats then go into **general sale** , with a limit of around 2 tickets per booker for the Last Night.
  1. Hospitality & premium packages
    • Hospitality providers offer:
      • Reserved Stalls or Rausing Circle seats, and
      • Private box packages with Champagne, canapés, waiter service, etc.
    • Recent examples list:
      • Rausing Circle reserved seat around £1,075,
      • Premium Stalls around £1,475,
      • Higher‑end or box‑based options from roughly £1,675–£1,850+ per person.
 * These are aimed at corporate or luxury buyers and sit far above face value.
  1. Secondary ticket marketplaces
    • Some sites specialise in sourcing hard‑to‑get Last Night tickets and clearly state that their prices can be above or below face value , depending on demand and how hard the tickets are to obtain.
 * As with most high‑demand events, prices on these platforms can fluctuate significantly, typically trending higher for the Last Night.

Quick price snapshot (illustrative)

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Type of ticket Approximate price Notes
Day Promming (standing) ~£8 incl. feesBought on the day; limited numbers.
Front Circle (ballot) ~£98 + booking feeAllocated via Open Ballot.
Centre Stalls (ballot) ~£145 + booking feeAllocated via Open Ballot.
Premium Rausing Circle seat ~£1,075 package priceHospitality/agent package, not face value.
Premium Stalls seat ~£1,475 package priceHospitality/agent package, not face value.
High-end/box packages ~£1,675–£1,850+ per personOften includes box, drinks, canapés, waiter.

What this means if you’re planning to go

  • If you want budget‑friendly and don’t mind standing, aim for Day Promming at about £8.
  • If you want a guaranteed seat at face value , your best bet is to follow the BBC Proms announcements in spring, enter the relevant ballot(s), and be ready for general sale if you miss out.
  • If you want comfort, hospitality, or to avoid the scramble , expect to pay into the hundreds or over a thousand pounds per person via hospitality agents or resellers.

Because prices and schemes can change each season, always check the current BBC Proms and Royal Albert Hall pages for the exact figures and sales dates for this year’s Last Night.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.