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Oasis Tickets Resale For 800% More Than Face Value

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The Oasis reunion has sent fans into a frenzy, as the public look to get their hands on tickets and prices for resale have skyrocketed by 800%.

After announcing their return to the stage, Oasis confirmed that they would be playing in Cardiff, Manchester, London, Edinburgh and Dublin.

The demand to attend just one of these shows is through the roof, as Ticketmaster struggled to handle the number of people in queues for Oasis tickets.

Some waited for half a day just to be told there were no tickets available – including queues of nearly 500,000 at 8am for Dublin dates.

Highlights from the data:

  • Cardiff sees the highest increase in resale ticket price from face value (827%)
  • Manchester has the highest singular resale ticket (non VIP) at £11,806
  • One ticket seller told us they are reselling at 10x the face value

Oasis Ticket Resale Statistics For Each Venue

Dublin isn’t included as it is illegal to resell tickets for above face value in Ireland.

Cardiff

The band will begin their return in Cardiff, as they open their tour with shows at the Principality Stadium – holding a capacity of 74,500.

Performing on the 4th and 5th July 2025, the Manchester-born band will end their long absence from the stage in Wales.

The cheapest ticket for the opening night show in Cardiff was sold for £151 and the average resale is now at £1,400 – showing a staggering 827% increase.

However, the sheer rise in price does not stop there, as one non VIP ticket has resold for 2540% more than its initial value at an astonishing £3,986.

Manchester

From the 11th-20th July 2025, Oasis will perform at Heaton Park in Manchester for the first time in over 15 years – last performing there in June 2009.

The venue holds 80,000 people and covers over 600 acres, making it one of the biggest shows in the tour.

Tickets sold for £148 when they were originally put up for sale and are now at an average resale of £800 after a 441% increase.

Manchester has also seen the most expensive purchase for a non VIP Oasis ticket so far, as one fan paid £11,806 to see the iconic band play – a 7877% increase from its original value.

London

England’s capital will be graced by the presence of Oasis from July 25th – August 3rd, as the band perform at a sold-out Wembley Stadium.

Wembley has been the home to some of England’s biggest events and around 90,000 people are expected to be in attendance come July 25th.

A non VIP ticket has resold for £4,726 (a 3030% increase) and the average price for a ticket has gone up by 695%, after reaching £1200 – despite being sold for £151 on Ticketmaster on release day..

Edinburgh

Oasis will then travel up to Scotland for the penultimate stop of their tour, as they perform at the Murrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh.

The stadium has a capacity of 67,144, which is expected to be sold out when Oasis come to town from the 8th-12th August.

Resale tickets have sky-rocketed, being sold for around £900 on average, which is a 496% increase from the original price of £151.

Furthermore, someone has paid £7,536 for a non VIP ticket, which means they have paid 4891% more than the initial fee.

An Oasis ticket reseller told CasinoApps…

We contacted a ticket reseller – who is selling a ticket for 10x the face value but believe ‘it’s a no brainer’ to do so (The reseller wished to remain anonymous);

“So me and a few of my mates all queued up looking to get five tickets for the Oasis gig in Manchester and after waiting what felt like an age to get through somehow two of us managed to get tickets.

“Through us both panicking we ended up buying six tickets all together. After talking between us all we decided we would split the cost of the extra ticket and then resell it for a higher amount, then splitting the profits.

“I didn’t feel too great about it but after seeing all the other tickets up for thousands it seemed like a no brainer.”

Methodology

We tracked price rises from reseller sites Viagogo, VividSeats, StubHub & Gigsberg – scraping data to determine the % increase of tickets following the initial release on Ticketmaster. We calculated the average cost of a ticket at face value and then compared that to the average cost of a ticket being resold via a ticket app.

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