close
close

Tickets, dynamic prices, venue and everything you need to know

Tickets, dynamic prices, venue and everything you need to know

Oasis have announced the North American leg of their highly anticipated 2025 tour.

Following news of a UK and Ireland tour in August – as brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher ended their once-bitter feud – the British rock band have now revealed they will play a string of US dates next summer.

The concerts will take place 16 years after their last performance in North America.

Oasis commented: “America…Oasis is coming. You have one last chance to prove that you loved us all along.

The North American leg of the tour will begin on August 24 in Toronto and will include the band in stadiums in Chicago, East Rutherford, Los Angeles and Mexico City. The concerts will take place between the performances in Dublin and the final two concerts at Wembley Stadium in London.

Oasis will be joined by the Kentucky-based rock band Cage the Elephant, which will support all US concerts.

Brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher will perform together again next year (Simon Emmett)

Pre-sale registration is currently open until Tuesday, October 1 at 8am EST (1pm BST).

General sales begin on Friday, October 4 at 10:00 local time (15:00 BST) and will be available on Ticketmaster.

A press release about the North American tour revealed that plans are also underway for Oasis Live ’25 to head to continents beyond Europe and North America late next year.

The full tour dates announced so far are as follows:

JULY 2025

July 4 – Cardiff, UK – Princeity Stadium (SOLD OUT)

July 5 – Cardiff, UK – Government Stadium (SOLD OUT)

July 11 – Manchester, UK – Heaton Park (SOLD OUT)

July 12 – Manchester, UK – Heaton Park (SOLD OUT)

July 16 – Manchester, UK – Heaton Park (SOLD OUT)

July 19 – Manchester, UK – Heaton Park (SOLD OUT)

July 20 – Manchester, UK – Heaton Park (SOLD OUT)

July 25 – London, UK – Wembley Stadium (SOLD OUT)

July 26 – London, UK – Wembley Stadium (SOLD OUT)

July 30 – London, UK – Wembley Stadium (SOLD OUT)

The rockers will perform in American cities, including: in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles (PA Wire)

AUGUST 2025

August 2 – London, UK – Wembley Stadium (SOLD OUT)

August 3 – London, UK – Wembley Stadium (SOLD OUT)

August 8 – Edinburgh, UK – Scottish Gas Murrayfield Stadium (SOLD OUT)

August 9 – Edinburgh, UK – Scottish Gas Murrayfield Stadium (SOLD OUT)

August 12 – Edinburgh, UK – Scottish Gas Murrayfield Stadium (SOLD OUT)

August 16 – Dublin, IE – Croke Park (SOLD OUT)

August 17 – Dublin, IE – Croke Park (SOLD OUT)

August 24 – Toronto, ON – Rogers Stadium (just added)

August 28 – Chicago, IL – Soldier’s Field (just added)

August 31 – East Rutherford, NJ – MetLife Stadium (just added)

SEPTEMBER 2025

September 6 – Los Angeles, California – Rose Bowl Stadium (just added)

September 12 – Mexico City, Mexico – Estadio GNP Seguros (just added)

September 27 – London, UK – Wembley Stadium (SOLD OUT)

September 28 – London, UK – Wembley Stadium (SOLD OUT)

News of the North American leg of the tour comes after the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) launched an investigation into Ticketmaster over ticket sales in the UK and Ireland.

Fans were devastated when they spent hours in online queues only to discover they were being charged up to four times the originally advertised prices due to Ticketmaster’s so-called “dynamic pricing” system, which raises fees when demand is particularly high.

Earlier this month, the CMA said it would investigate how Ticketmaster’s “dynamic pricing” was used and whether the sale may have breached consumer protection law.

The CMA said it would engage with Ticketmaster and gather evidence from various other sources, including possibly band management and promoters.

She added that Ticketmaster should not be assumed to have broken consumer protection laws.

Pictured is Liam Gallagher, who has reformed Oasis with his brother Noel Gallagher for the 2025 Oasis shows (David Jensen/PA) (PA Archive)

Formed in Manchester in 1991, Oasis became one of the best-selling bands of their era, a phenomenon even among their Britpop counterparts such as Blur, Pulp and Suede. All seven of their studio albums topped the charts, and this success translated into ticket sales – most famously when 125,000 fans attended each of their two shows at Knebworth in 1996.

They headlined Glastonbury twice, first in 1995 and then again in 2004, and won six Brit Awards and two Ivor Novello novels.

A few days after announcing their comeback, the band topped the UK charts with their 30th anniversary debut album, ‘Definity Maybe’.

Meanwhile, next year will be the 30th anniversary of the release of the second album (What’s the story) Morning?, one of the best-selling British band albums of all time.