
BTS is playing three nights at Stanford Stadium in the Bay Area — May 16th, 17th, and 19th, 2026 — as part of the “ARIRANG World Tour”. All three dates sold out, but resale tickets are still available through a few trusted platforms.
This is BTS’s first tour back together as a full group after military service, and the Bay Area has one of the largest Korean-American communities in the country: demand was always going to outpace what a 50,000-seat stadium could hold. The good news is that three nights means three chances to find a ticket, and the Tuesday date (May 19th) is generally the cheapest of the three.
Below, find more details on how to secure last-minute tickets from legitimate buyers.
Where Can You Still Get Tickets?
May 16th, 2026 — Stanford Stadium, Stanford, CA — Tickets on StubHub | Ticketmaster Verified Resale
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May 17th, 2026 — Stanford Stadium, Stanford, CA — Tickets on StubHub | Ticketmaster Verified Resale
May 19th, 2026 — Stanford Stadium, Stanford, CA — Tickets on StubHub | Ticketmaster Verified Resale
StubHub is one of the primary resale platform for all three Stanford nights. Every purchase is backed by their FanProtect guarantee — if your tickets don’t work out, you get replacements or a 120% refund. StubHub is a secondary market ticketing platform, and prices may be higher or lower than face value, depending on demand. With three dates in the market, it’s worth comparing all three before buying — the Tuesday night show tends to run cheaper than the weekend.
Fans can also look for tickets via Ticketmaster’s Verified Resale platform and SeatGeek, where you can use promo code SEATGEEK10 to save $10 off your first order of over $150. Browse the May 16th, May 17th, and May 19th shows on Ticketmaster separately — prices and availability differ across all three dates.
reddit’s r/bangtan occasionally has fans selling tickets at face value when their plans change. There’s no buyer protection with these trades, so be cautious and only deal with accounts that have a real track record on the subreddit.
What Are Tickets Going For?
Stanford is on the pricier side compared to other US stops — the venue is smaller than most stadiums on the tour, and Bay Area demand is high. That said, the added third night has helped bring prices down from where they were when only two dates were confirmed. Here’s roughly what you’re looking at before service fees (expect 20–40% added on top):
- Upper/entry-level seats: $165–$400
- Mid-level seats: $400–$700
- Floor/pit/premium: $700–$1,300
- VIP packages: $900–$2,200 (when available)
The Tuesday night show (May 19th) is the most affordable of the three. If you have flexibility on which night you attend, start there.
The Stanford Show Details
Stanford Stadium is on the Stanford University campus in Palo Alto. Showtime is 8:00 PM for the May 16th and 17th dates and 7:00 PM for May 19th. Doors typically open 90 minutes to two hours before the show. No openers have been announced for the North American run. You can get there via Caltrain — the Palo Alto station is the closest stop, with service from both San Francisco and San Jose. On-site parking is available but limited on a campus setting, so transit or rideshare is the better option. Plan extra time for getting out after the show — a sold-out stadium on a college campus creates bottlenecks.
Should You Consider a Nearby City Instead?
Las Vegas has shows at Allegiant Stadium on May 23rd, 24th, 27th, and 28th — about a week after the Stanford dates. It’s roughly nine hours by car (or a cheap flight), and with four nights at a bigger venue, there are more tickets available and prices are comparable. If the Stanford dates don’t work schedule-wise, Vegas is worth a look. Browse the Las Vegas shows on StubHub.
Los Angeles is about five and a half hours south, with four nights at SoFi Stadium on September 1st, 2nd, 5th, and 6th. That’s a much later date, but SoFi holds 70,000 and four nights means more tickets to go around — upper-level seats there start around $177–$330, which is cheaper than Stanford. If you can wait until September, the LA shows are more affordable. Browse the LA shows on StubHub.
Strategic Tips for Buying
- Check StubHub and Ticketmaster Verified Resale a few times a day. New listings show up regularly — sellers adjust prices, buyers back out, and last-minute drops happen, especially in the final week before a show.
- Compare prices across all three nights before buying. The Tuesday show (May 19th) is typically the cheapest, but check all three — sometimes the gap is bigger than you’d expect.
- Set up price alerts on StubHub for this event. Pick a price you’d be happy with, and StubHub will notify you when something hits that number instead of you refreshing the page all day.
- When you find a price that works, buy it. Good listings move fast in a market like this, and waiting for a slightly better deal can mean losing what was already a solid option.
- Stick to platforms that protect you if something goes wrong. StubHub’s FanProtect covers every order at 120% if the tickets are invalid; Ticketmaster Verified Resale authenticates tickets before listing them. If you’re browsing r/bangtan for peer-to-peer deals, only deal with accounts that have real history in the community, never pay through Venmo, Cash App, or Zelle, and if a price looks way too good to be true, it probably is.
About the Tour
The “ARIRANG World Tour” is BTS’s biggest tour yet, supporting their fifth studio album Arirang, which came out on March 20th, 2026. It’s the group’s first tour back together as all seven members — RM, Jin, Suga, J-Hope, Jimin, V, and Jungkook — after everyone finished their mandatory military service. The run covers 82 shows across 34 cities and 23 countries through early 2027, with a 360-degree in-the-round stage built so every section of the stadium has a clear view of all seven members.
The tour kicked off on April 9th, 2026, at Goyang Stadium in Goyang-si, South Korea, where BTS performed a career-spanning setlist that leaned heavily on ARIRANG material. The opening night featured album cuts “Hooligan,” “Aliens,” “Like Animals,” “SWIM,” “2.0.,” “NORMAL,” “FYA,” and “Body to Body” alongside live debuts of “they don’t know ‘bout us,” “Merry Go Round,” “Please,” and “Into the Sun.” Catalog staples filled out the rest of the set: “Run BTS,” “FAKE LOVE,” “Not Today” (performed for the first time since 2021), “MIC Drop,” “Fire,” and “IDOL,” with the encore closing on “Butter,” “Dynamite,” “Mikrokosmos,” and “I Need U.” Expect a similar structure at US stops, though BTS has historically rotated select songs across legs of a tour.




























