
aespa Merch 2026 — Tour Shirts, Prices & Booth Tips
aespa Tour Dates With Official Merch Stands
Official merch is sold inside the venue on show night. Tap a date for the verified ticket listing.


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aespa Tour Merch Prices
aespa, the South Korean girl group act, currently has 21 confirmed live dates across 21 cities — the most recent routing points at Movistar Arena in Santiago, and merch tables, currency, and city-exclusive prints change from stop to stop on a girl group tour of this scale.
Official aespa merch prices vary by venue and currency, but most arena tours follow a familiar range: shirts around $40-$55 USD, hoodies around $80-$110, hats around $35-$50, posters around $25-$45, and limited city-specific items above that. If the next show is at Movistar Arena, expect card-only checkout at most stands and longer lines after the opener finishes.
Best Time to Buy aespa Merch
- Before the opener: best size selection, longest pre-show line.
- During the opener: shorter line, but you may miss part of the support set.
- During the encore: fastest exit strategy, weaker size selection.
- After the show: convenient, but popular sizes and city posters may be gone.
How to Avoid Fake aespa Merch
Buy inside the venue or through aespa's official store. Street vendors outside the arena often sell unlicensed shirts with low-quality prints, misspelled dates, or old tour art. Official merch usually has cleaner print registration, proper neck tags, and pricing posted on the booth signage.
aespa Merch — FAQ
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About aespa
aespa were assembled by SM Entertainment after the company's longest girl-group development gap in years — Red Velvet had debuted in 2014, and the years between were spent restructuring SM's training pipeline, building out the NCT system, and preparing what would become the most conceptually ambitious launch in the label's modern history. The lineup that emerged in late 2020 brought together Karina, the Korean leader, lead dancer, and main rapper who had been training at SM since 2016 after being scouted in Seoul; Giselle, the Japanese-Korean rapper raised in Tokyo who joined SM in 2019; Winter, the Korean lead vocalist and dancer who trained alongside Karina from 2016; and Ningning, the Chinese main vocalist from Harbin who joined SM Rookies as a child trainee in 2016 after being scouted at a vocal competition. The debut single Black Mamba landed on November 17, 2020, alongside a launch-day music video that introduced the KWANGYA worldbuilding and broke the 24-hour view record for any K-pop group debut at the time. The follow-up singles Forever and Next Level through the first half of 2021 cemented the visual identity — Next Level in particular, originally written for the A Quiet Place: Part II soundtrack and reworked by SM into the group's own breakthrough single, became one of the defining K-pop songs of the year and the cornerstone of every subsequent setlist. The mini-album Savage in October 2021 was the first proper EP and shipped with the title track and the digital single Iconic. The Girls EP in 2022 added the title track Girls and the introspective B-side Illusion. My World in May 2023, led by the single Spicy, became the group's first K-pop chart million-seller and pushed the album body of work into stadium-tour territory. Drama followed in November 2023, and the first full-length studio album Armageddon dropped in May 2024 with the title track of the same name plus the pre-release Supernova, which became aespa's biggest commercial single yet — a Hot 100 chart entry, a Spotify global hit, and the song that effectively crossed the group from the K-pop core audience into the broader Western pop conversation. Whiplash followed as a year-end EP in late 2024 and pushed the group's discography deeper into the dance-pop territory the Supernova era had opened. The tour catalogue has expanded in lockstep with the recorded one. SYNK: Hyper Line, the first headline tour, ran from February through September 2023, opening with a four-night stand at Seoul's Jamsil Indoor Stadium, then routing through Tokyo, Osaka, Singapore, Bangkok, Jakarta, Macau, Taipei, and then to the United States for the group's first solo North American shows at Newark, Chicago, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and Houston. The SYNK: Parallel Line tour followed in 2024 with stadium-tier rooms in Seoul and Tokyo and a larger North American arena footprint. The Live Tour 2025 cycle pushed the group to multi-night arena and small-stadium dates across Asia, North America, and Europe. The fandom — MY, pronounced mai, official Korean fandom name — has built one of the most coordinated light-stick programmes in modern K-pop, with the SYNK Stick programmed to Bluetooth-synchronise to the stage production at every show.
