
Bill Burr Ticket Prices 2026 — How Much Do Tickets Cost?
What Do Bill Burr Tickets Cost Right Now?
Bill Burr tickets currently start at $87 USD for Chicago. Top-tier seats for the same show go up to $2527, with VIP packages typically priced separately.
Live Bill Burr 2026 Ticket Prices by City
Sorted from cheapest. Refreshed daily.


Great Outdoors Comedy Festival: Jeff Arcuri - Saturday Afternoon

Great Outdoors Comedy Festival: Bill Burr - Friday Evening

Great Outdoors Comedy Festival: Bill Burr - Sunday Evening

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Bill Burr
Bill Burr Ticket Tiers Explained
- Upper bowl / 300-level: usually the cheapest seats. Best value for the experience.
- Lower bowl / 100-level: mid-range pricing with a closer view.
- Floor / GA pit: standing-room or reserved floor — premium price, premium proximity.
- VIP package: includes some combination of early entry, photo op, soundcheck access, merchandise, or meet-and-greet. Priced separately, often 3 to 6× the cheapest base seat.
- Box / suite: private seating, only at select arenas, listed only when made available.
Why Do Bill Burr Ticket Prices Change?
Ticketmaster uses dynamic pricing — list price adjusts in response to demand. Prices typically peak in the first 24 to 48 hours after on-sale, then settle. Smaller markets and mid-week dates tend to run 15 to 30 percent below weekend stops in major cities. Resale prices, when allowed, vary even more based on proximity to showtime. The cards above show LIVE primary inventory only — no resale markups inflating the number.
Bill Burr Ticket Prices — FAQ
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About Bill Burr
William Frederick Burr was born June 10, 1968 in Canton, Massachusetts, and raised in the working-class Boston suburbs in a large Irish-Catholic family — a detail that anchors a substantial share of his early stand-up material about his father, his mother, his upbringing, Catholic-school discipline, and the particular emotional vocabulary of the New England Irish-American household. He has spoken in interviews about a turbulent childhood, a chaotic emotional home, and the years of work in therapy that eventually pulled into the act as part of the writing — the gradual evolution from a hot-tempered young comic into the older, slightly-self-aware-but-still-furious headliner persona that defines the current era of the show. He attended Emerson College in Boston in the late 1980s and worked as a warehouse loader after graduating before committing to stand-up in his mid-twenties. The first decade was Boston clubs — the Comedy Studio in Harvard Square, the Comedy Connection in Faneuil Hall, Nick's Comedy Stop, the rooms that produced the late-1990s and early-2000s Boston comedy generation alongside Patrice O'Neal (a close friend and mentor whose 2011 death remains a touchstone in Burr's act and podcast) and the broader Opie and Anthony orbit. He moved to New York in the early 2000s, became a Comedy Cellar regular, and broke nationally with a Chappelle's Show appearance and the long-running circuit of Late Show with Conan O'Brien sets. The first hour special, Why Do I Do This?, dropped on Comedy Central in 2008 and locked in the touring brand at a national scale. The Monday Morning Podcast launched on May 1, 2007 as one of the first podcast vehicles in stand-up — a roughly hour-and-a-half free-association rant recorded every Monday and Thursday, no guests for most of its run, ranging across sports, marriage, parenting, current events, the comedy business, and whatever Burr is exercised about the week of recording. The podcast has run continuously for nearly two decades and has consistently sat near the top of the comedy-podcast charts, and its audience is one of the largest direct-to-fan engagement channels in stand-up. In 2012 he co-founded All Things Comedy with Al Madrigal, a comedian-owned podcast network and live-touring company that gave a generation of working comics an alternative to network-controlled distribution. The Netflix relationship started with the animated F is for Family in 2015 — Burr co-created the series with Michael Price, voiced the lead Frank Murphy, and ran it for five seasons through 2021. The Mandalorian role as Migs Mayfeld arrived in 2020 with the second-season episode 'The Believer' and recurred across the broader Star Wars Disney+ universe. He wrote, directed, and starred in Old Dads for Netflix in 2023, his first feature behind the camera. The stand-up specials chart the touring brand: Why Do I Do This? (2008, Comedy Central), Let It Go (2010, Comedy Central), You People Are All the Same (2012, Netflix — Netflix's first stand-up commission), I'm Sorry You Feel That Way (2014, Netflix, shot in black and white), Walk Your Way Out (2017, Netflix), Paper Tiger (2019, Netflix, shot at the Royal Albert Hall in London), Live at Red Rocks (2022, Netflix), and Drop Dead Years (2024, Hulu). He married Nia Renee Hill in 2013; they have two children and live in Los Angeles. The voice on stage is the same voice on the podcast and the same voice on screen: a Boston accent that thickens whenever he gets angry, an everyman frame of reference, a willingness to push past the comfort point on race, gender, marriage, money, and politics that has landed him in periodic controversy without ever shrinking the audience, and the slow-arc self-deprecation that lets him say almost anything because the joke is, ultimately, on him.