Take That ticket prices vary a lot depending on the city, date, and where you sit, but we can pin down some realistic ranges for the current tour.

Quick Scoop

  • For recent UK stadium tours, standard Take That tickets have typically started around ÂŁ60 plus booking fees for the cheapest seats.
  • For the new 2026 dates listed on major resale platforms, the lowest “starts from” prices are showing roughly in the mid‑$50s to just over $100 per ticket (or the local currency equivalent), depending on the city and demand.
  • Premium lower‑bowl or closer floor seats can be significantly higher , especially for big cities like London and Manchester or high‑demand nights.

In simple terms: if you’re looking for the cheapest standard tickets, expect something in the £60+ range before fees in the UK, and resale listings that often start somewhere between about $60 and $100 for many dates.

Typical 2026 “From” Prices by City (Resale)

Below is an approximate look at “starts from” prices shown on a large ticket‑comparison site for the 2026 stadium run. These are resale prices and can change fast with demand.

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2026 Date City Venue From price (approx.)
29 May 2026 Southampton St Mary’s Stadium About $76 for the cheapest listings
30 May 2026 Southampton St Mary’s Stadium About $77 for the cheapest listings
4–6 Jun 2026 Coventry Coventry Building Society Arena Roughly $85–$105 “from” depending on the night
9 Jun 2026 Sunderland Stadium of Light From around $62 on some listings
12–13 Jun 2026 Glasgow Hampden Park From about $57–$78
16 Jun 2026 Cardiff Principality Stadium From around $68
19–21 Jun 2026 Manchester Etihad Stadium Often from roughly $86–$91
25–27 Jun 2026 London London Stadium From about $69–$90, night‑dependent
These “from” prices are a snapshot of current resale markets, not official face value. They can go up or down as demand shifts.

How official prices have looked lately

When tickets first went on general sale for recent UK tours, media coverage and venue info indicated:

  • Standard seated tickets starting roughly around ÂŁ60 plus booking fees for UK stadium dates.
  • Higher tiers for better views, hospitality, or VIP experiences; exact breakdowns weren’t always fully published, but the cheapest bracket was consistently in that ~ÂŁ60+ band.
  • For new 2026 London Stadium shows, outlets have noted that exact prices weren’t fully confirmed yet , but used the 2024 “from ~ÂŁ60” level as the main benchmark.

So if you manage to buy at face value in the next general sale or presale rather than resale, the cheapest tickets are likely to be in that same ballpark, then scaled up for mid‑range and premium sections.

Why prices vary so much

Several factors make a simple “how much are the Take That tickets?” question a bit tricky:

  1. City and date
    • Big cities and weekend shows (London, Manchester, Saturday nights) often have more demand, so both official dynamic pricing and resale prices run higher.
  1. Section and view
    • Upper‑tier or restricted‑view seats are usually the cheapest.
    • Floor / lower‑bowl near the stage can be several times the “from” price.
  1. Official vs resale
    • Official primary tickets (Ticketmaster, venue websites) start from a face value set by promoter and band.
    • Resale platforms show whatever sellers list, so cheap tickets can vanish quickly and be replaced by higher‑priced ones.
  1. Presales and high demand
    • Presales for Take That’s recent tours have seen very high demand , with fans rushing early and some dates effectively selling out quickly at face value, which pushes people to resale.

Tips to get a decent price

If you’re trying to keep costs down:

  1. Check official sites first
    • Look at the band’s official “Live” page and linked ticketing partners to see if any primary tickets remain at face value for your city.
  1. Be flexible on location
    • Compare a few cities: for example, some nights in Coventry or Sunderland have lower “from” prices than peak London or Manchester dates on resale platforms.
  1. Avoid obvious scams
    • Consumer advocates strongly recommend sticking to verified platforms; under‑market deals on social media or unregulated sites are a common source of scams.
  1. Decide your budget by “tier”
    • If your priority is “just be in the stadium,” aim for the cheapest listed seats (often around ÂŁ60+ at face, or ~ÂŁ60–£80 equivalent on resale at today’s levels).
 * If you want a strong view but not VIP, look at mid‑price tiers (often in the £90–£120+ range at face, sometimes more on resale, depending on demand).

TL;DR:
Right now, Take That tickets for the 2026 stadium dates typically start around £60 plus fees at face value for the cheapest seats in the UK, and around $60–$100+ “from” on major resale platforms depending on the city and date, with prime seats costing substantially more.

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