BTS at SoFi Stadium: How to Get Tickets for Their Sold-Out Los Angeles Shows

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BTS will out the North American leg of their “ARIRANG World Tour” with four massive concerts at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood: September 1st, 2nd, 5th, and 6th, 2026. SoFi Stadium, holds roughly 70,000 for concerts, making it one of the larger venues scheduled as part of the group’s North American leg. Nevertheless, all four shows sold out instantly during the initial wave of ticket sales in January.

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Even still, plenty of tickets are still available to all four shows remain available via the secondary market. Below, you can find legitimate, buyer-protected links, along with tips on how to get access in the door.

The Inglewood Show Details

September 1st, 2026 — SoFi Stadium, Inglewood, CA — Tickets on StubHub | Ticketmaster Verified Resale

September 2nd, 2026 — SoFi Stadium, Inglewood, CA — Tickets on StubHub | Ticketmaster Verified Resale

September 5th, 2026 — SoFi Stadium, Inglewood, CA — Tickets on StubHub | Ticketmaster Verified Resale

September 6th, 2026 — SoFi Stadium, Inglewood, CA — Tickets on StubHub | Ticketmaster Verified Resale

Showtime is 8:00 PM for all four dates. SoFi Stadium is located in Inglewood, accessible from the 405 freeway. The Metro K Line (Crenshaw Line) connects to SoFi Stadium Station and is the recommended option from much of LA. Rideshare drop-off is available. On-site parking is available but expensive and fills quickly.

Where Can You Still Get Tickets?

StubHub aggregates resale inventory for all four Inglewood dates and covers every order with FanProtect: if tickets are invalid at the gate, you get replacements or a 120% refund. Browse available Los Angeles BTS tickets on StubHub here. With four nights in the same market, listing volume is high — compare prices across all four dates before deciding.

Ticketmaster Verified Resale has seller-authenticated listings for all four nights. Browse the September 1st show, September 2nd show, September 5th show, and September 6th show. Prices and availability differ night to night — reviewing all four gives you the best picture of the market.

reddit’s r/bangtan has a substantial Southern California presence and regularly sees face-value and near-face-value ticket listings when fans’ plans change. As with any peer-to-peer transaction, there is no formal buyer protection here — but the LA ARMY community is active enough on r/bangtan that this is worth monitoring as a supplemental channel.

What Are Tickets Going For?

Los Angeles runs at a mid-range level for this tour. Four nights of supply at a 70,000-seat venue keeps the floor lower than Chicago or New York, despite the enormous market. Estimated pricing ranges, before service fees (20–40% added on top):

  • Upper/entry-level seats: $177–$330
  • Mid-level seats: $330–$600
  • Floor/pit/premium: $600–$1,150
  • VIP packages: $800–$2,000 (when available)

Weekend nights (September 5th–6th) may carry slightly higher prices than the Saturday/Tuesday shows (September 1st–2nd). If your schedule allows, comparing midweek and weekend pricing is worth doing. The September 2nd date (Tuesday) has historically been the more accessible night.

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Should You Consider a Nearby City Instead?

Las Vegas is about four hours east by car, with four nights at Allegiant Stadium taking place in late May (May 23rd, 24th, 27th, and 28th). Secondary pricing in Las Vegas has been running comparably to LA — starting around $150–$280 for upper-level seats versus $177–$330 in Inglewood. If you can travel a month earlier, the Las Vegas shows on StubHub are worth comparing. The timing difference (May vs. September) is the bigger consideration.

Stanford Stadium is approximately 5.5 hours north in the Bay Area, with shows May 16th and 17th. Stanford’s smaller capacity (around 50,000) means higher secondary prices than SoFi, so it is not a cost-saving alternative. But if you’re based in Northern California and willing to travel south, LA’s four-night inventory is the better deal.

Strategic Tips for Buying

  1. Check StubHub and Ticketmaster Verified Resale multiple times each day. Inventory on the secondary market shifts constantly — sellers drop prices, holders re-list, and cancellations push new seats into the market, especially in the final days before each show.
  2. If this run has multiple nights, compare prices across all dates before committing. Midweek shows often carry lower secondary-market prices than weekend nights. Even a $40–$80 per-ticket difference is meaningful when you are already paying above face value.
  3. Set up price alerts on StubHub for this specific show. The platform will notify you when prices drop below a threshold you choose, so you are not manually checking all day.
  4. When you find a price that fits your budget, move quickly. The secondary market for a show of this demand moves fast. Over-shopping in search of a slightly better deal can result in losing a good listing entirely.
  5. Stick to platforms with formal buyer-guarantee programs. StubHub’s FanProtect covers every order at 120% if tickets are invalid; Ticketmaster Verified Resale authenticates inventory before listing it. If you’re exploring peer-to-peer trades on r/bangtan, only deal with accounts that have an established history in the community, never pay through Venmo, Cash App, or Zelle, and treat any listing priced dramatically below market rate as a red flag.

About the Tour

The “ARIRANG World Tour” is BTS’s largest concert tour to date, supporting their fifth studio album Arirang, released on March 20th, 2026. The tour marks the group’s return as a full seven-member act — RM, Jin, Suga, J-Hope, Jimin, V, and Jungkook — following the completion of mandatory military service by all members. The run spans 82 shows across 34 cities and 23 countries through early 2027, and features a 360-degree in-the-round stage designed to give every section of a stadium an unobstructed 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.

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