
FISHER Live Tour 2026
Next FISHER Shows
The 3 closest dates from the live Ticketmaster feed.


Fisher - Artist

Fisher - Artist
FISHER Tickets Near You — Shows by City
2 citiesFISHER is playing 2 cities this tour. Tap any city for exact dates, venue info, seat prices, and parking.
Is FISHER Coming to Your City?
1 / 12 citiesLive tour status for FISHER across 12 of the biggest North American markets — refreshed daily from Ticketmaster. Tap any "not yet" city to see the closest confirmed date.
3 upcoming FISHER concerts across 2 cities in North America, with tickets from $121 USD. Live Ticketmaster availability refreshed daily.
- When is FISHER's next show?
- Sun, July 5, 2026 at Seminole Hard Rock Tampa Event Center.
- How much are FISHER tickets?
- $121–$297 USD, varies by city and seat section.
- Is FISHER touring near me?
- Playing 2 cities in 2026. See the "Tickets Near You" section below for your city.
- How do I get FISHER tickets?
- Tap any date below to checkout on Ticketmaster — listings here are official primary tickets, refreshed daily.
- What time does the show start?
- Most FISHER shows start between 7 and 9 PM local, with doors 60–90 minutes earlier. Exact time is on each ticket.
- How long is the concert?
- Roughly 90–150 minutes including the opener and a short encore.
FISHER Ticket Prices 2026— Cheapest Seats & Average Cost
FISHER ticket prices vary by city, venue size, day of week, and seat section. Live price breakdown across all 2026 tour stops:
FISHER Concert FAQ
How much are FISHER tickets in 2026?▼
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About FISHER
FFISHER is on the 2026 live circuit with the full club / festival production — mainstage-grade visuals, custom edits and IDs woven into the set, and the kind of long-form mix you can only get in the room. 3 confirmed dates across 2 cities this run. Tickets currently start at $121. Tour routing typically spans major North American cities, with Canadian stops usually including arena-sized venues in Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, and Montreal, and US stops covering New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Miami, Seattle, and other top metros.
Inside FISHER
Fisher is one of the rare modern dance acts whose breakthrough is genuinely traceable to a single moment. He arrived as a touring DJ in the late 2010s after a previous career as a professional surfer on the World Qualifying Series, signed to Catch & Release, the Anjunadeep- and Confession-adjacent tech-house imprint that Fisher himself co-founded, and in 2018 released Losing It — a stripped-back, tension-and-release tech-house record built around a single repeated vocal phrase, a piano stab and a high-frequency synth line that ratchets up across the breakdown — which broke globally inside a few months of release, charted in multiple countries, picked up a Grammy nomination for Best Dance Recording, and became the unavoidable festival record of the 2018 and 2019 European and North American festival seasons. The Coachella mainstage appearance during the 2019 Coachella weekends in Indio, where he played Losing It in the headline-adjacent slot to a packed Mojave tent and a peak-time crowd that knew the record before he played it, is the moment most commonly cited as the breakthrough — the festival-circuit cosign that took Fisher from "scene-famous tech-house producer with one viral record" to mainstream headline territory. The career since Losing It has been built on a small, deliberate roster of singles rather than on full-length album releases. Stop It, released through Dirtybird in 2018, was the first record that established the formula. You Little Beauty, released in 2019 with the same tension-and-release tech-house template, became a second festival anthem. Atmosphere, released in 2020 under the longer-form Stripped-Down EP cycle, expanded the template into a more melodic and progressive direction. Subsequent releases — Just Feels Tight, World's On Fire, Take It Off, Yeah The Girls, Sip & Sleaze with Aatig — have continued the same approach: small-batch single releases, festival-edit-ready arrangements, vocal phrases or stabs deliberately positioned to land on the drop, and a deliberate refusal to release a full-length artist album. Live, Fisher in 2026 is in an unusual position relative to the rest of the festival headline tier. He plays primarily as a solo DJ rather than as a producer running an audio-visual show — the production rig on his shows is comparatively understated for the tech-house tier, with the focus on the music and the room rather than on cinematic LED installations or laser walls — and the show carries the personality of the artist himself in a way that the more anonymous tech-house and bass headline tier does not match. The Australian surfer-turned-DJ origin story is part of the brand, the stage presence is famously loose and high-energy, and the recurring "FISHER" mainstage interludes — extended breakdowns with vocal samples and live mic work — are the most-quoted moments from a given show. He runs Catch & Release, headlines EDC Las Vegas mainstage and the EDC variants in Mexico and Orlando, plays Coachella and Tomorrowland regularly, holds intermittent Las Vegas residency dates and a touring practice that emphasizes the festival circuit and the warehouse-and-club format over the arena-tour template that most headline EDM acts default to. The rest of this page is built around the actual show, the catalogue and what to expect when buying tickets.
About FISHER
Paul Nicholas Fisher was born in Sydney in November 1985 and grew up on the New South Wales coast. The first career was professional surfing. Fisher competed on the World Qualifying Series in the late 2000s and early 2010s, was sponsored across the standard Australian surf-brand circuit, and reached the QS without ever cracking the World Championship Tour. The pivot to dance music began in the late 2010s as the surfing career wound down, and was rooted in the wider Australian house-and-techno scene that had been quietly building infrastructure across the previous decade — including the Melbourne and Sydney club rooms that have produced Anna Lunoe, Hayden James, Flight Facilities, Cosmo's Midnight, RÜFÜS DU SOL and a broader Australian dance-music export that has translated unusually well to the North American and European markets. The first Fisher releases — small-batch tech-house records released through Dirtybird, Catch & Release and adjacent imprints across 2017 and 2018 — established the template before Losing It made it commercially visible. Stop It, released through Dirtybird in early 2018, was the first record that established the tension-and-release arrangement template that would become the Fisher signature: a stripped-back groove holding a single repeated vocal phrase or sample across a long breakdown, a synth or piano stab marking the build, and a deliberately ratcheting drop that lands with the released vocal hook as the payoff. Losing It, released later in 2018, applied the same template to a peak-time festival-ready record and broke globally inside a few months of release. The record was nominated for Best Dance Recording at the 61st Grammy Awards in 2019, lost to Silk City and Dua Lipa's Electricity, and would have been the festival record of the 2018 and 2019 European and North American seasons regardless of the Grammy outcome. The Coachella mainstage appearance during the 2019 Coachella weekends in Indio, where he played Losing It in the headline-adjacent slot to a packed Mojave tent and a peak-time crowd that knew the record before he played it, is the moment most commonly cited as the festival-circuit breakthrough — the cosign that took Fisher from a scene-famous tech-house producer with one viral record to mainstream headline territory. You Little Beauty, released in 2019, became the second festival anthem and applied the same arrangement template — a stripped-back tech-house groove holding the title phrase as the vocal hook across the breakdown, a synth stab marking the build, and the released vocal landing on the drop. Atmosphere, released as part of the Stripped Down EP cycle in 2020 alongside Just Feels Tight and other cuts, expanded the template into a more melodic and progressive-house direction without abandoning the tension-and-release arrangement spine. Subsequent releases — World's On Fire, Take It Off, Yeah The Girls, Wait A Minute, Take Me Down, Sip & Sleaze with Aatig, and the more recent collaborations with Chris Lake (Take It Off is the most-cited of these), Vintage Culture, MK and other tech-house and house-leaning collaborators — have continued the same approach: small-batch single releases, festival-edit-ready arrangements, vocal phrases or stabs deliberately positioned to land on the drop, and a deliberate refusal to release a full-length artist album. Catch & Release, the label that Fisher co-founded and which has released the bulk of his solo material alongside select catalogue from a small roster of collaborators, operates on a deliberately small-roster model — releases are infrequent, the label brand is heavily tied to Fisher's own touring footprint, and the Catch & Release showcases at Amsterdam Dance Event, Miami Music Week and selected festival routings have become the most reliable single concentration of Fisher-related programming in any calendar year. Off the road, Fisher is based primarily between Australia and Los Angeles, has been a vocal supporter of the broader Australian dance-music export, and surfaces in surf-and-skate brand programming and in occasional Australian sports-tie-in appearances that other tech-house DJs do not pursue. The persona on stage is the loudest part of the brand. Fisher works the mic during his sets in a way most tech-house DJs do not — calling out drops, working call-and-response moments with the crowd, occasionally interrupting the mix to talk over a record, and treating the booth as a performance position rather than a behind-the-scenes mixing station. The on-mic personality, combined with the tension-and-release arrangement template on the records, is the most plausible single explanation for how an Australian tech-house DJ with no full-length album catalogue has become a recurring festival mainstage headliner across the past five years.
Fisher tour: festivals, warehouses and the Catch & Release showcases
A typical Fisher touring year has three layered formats rather than a single linear tour. The first layer is the global festival circuit. Fisher holds recurring mainstage headline bookings at EDC Las Vegas at Las Vegas Motor Speedway each May — across kineticFIELD and the wider Insomniac mainstage rotation — at EDC Mexico, EDC Orlando, EDC Korea, Tomorrowland in Belgium each July, Ultra Music Festival in Miami each March, Coachella in Indio across two April weekends in the years he has been booked, Lollapalooza in Chicago, Creamfields in the UK, Parklife in Manchester, and a long list of country-specific dance festivals across Europe, Asia, Latin America and Oceania. The Australian festival circuit has been a recurring touchpoint — Beyond the Valley, Field Day Sydney, the New Year's-week Australian dance festival programming and the wider Australian summer touring window — and the European festival circuit has expanded across the past several years to include Awakenings in the Netherlands, Sónar in Barcelona on occasional appearances, and the wider Continental tech-house festival roster. Festival headline slots typically run 60 to 90 minutes. The second layer is the warehouse, club and theater format, which is where the Fisher touring practice differs most clearly from the rest of the festival headline tier. Rather than booking arenas at 15,000-plus capacity, Fisher's headline routings have focused on warehouse and club rooms in the 2,000-to-8,000 capacity range — Brooklyn Mirage outdoors in New York during the warehouse season, Drumsheds in London on post-Printworks era warehouse dates, the Hollywood Palladium and the Shrine Expo Hall in Los Angeles, Echo Beach and the History venue in Toronto, the Australian club-and-warehouse rooms in Sydney and Melbourne, and similar rooms in the Continental European and South American routings. The warehouse-and-club format produces longer sets (two-plus hours), allows for the deeper tech-house and Catch & Release catalogue material to land properly, and produces a different show than the festival mainstage format. The third layer is the Catch & Release showcases — label nights at Amsterdam Dance Event each October, Miami Music Week each March, the occasional Catch & Release programming at the larger warehouse rooms in Los Angeles, New York and London, and the festival-tied Catch & Release stages that have appeared on Insomniac-produced festival lineups across recent editions. The Catch & Release showcases are the most reliable single concentration of Fisher-related programming in any calendar year and tend to feature longer Fisher sets, b2b appearances with the smaller Catch & Release roster, and the most catalogue-aware setlists of the touring cycle. Las Vegas residency dates are intermittent and sit primarily around EDC week, New Year's Eve and the major US holiday weekends rather than on a fixed weekly residency calendar — Fisher has held Strip residency dates at Tao Group, Hakkasan-era and Wynn Nightlife properties at different points across the past five years.
Fisher tickets: pricing, presales and the warehouse window
Fisher tickets vary widely by format. Festival appearances are priced as part of the festival's day or weekend pass rather than as a Fisher-specific ticket, so the cost depends on EDC, Tomorrowland, Coachella, Ultra or whichever event he is headlining rather than on the artist directly. EDC Las Vegas three-day passes have run $400 to $650 depending on tier and onsale timing; Tomorrowland Global Journey packages and standalone weekend passes vary widely by year; Coachella weekend passes have run roughly $549 for general admission and into the four-figure range for VIP across recent years. Warehouse and theater-format headline tour tickets generally open between $55 and $95 for general admission, $125 to $200 for the pit-access or front-of-stage tiers when those are offered, and $250 to $500 for the VIP packages that have appeared on past Fisher routings — those packages have typically bundled early entry, a dedicated viewing area, a branded merch item and occasionally a soundcheck listen-in rather than a guaranteed meet-and-greet. Brooklyn Mirage outdoor dates and the Avant Gardner warehouse complex run on the standard NYC warehouse pricing of roughly $75 to $150 for general admission and $200-plus for elevated tiers when offered. Drumsheds in London, the Hollywood Palladium in LA and Echo Beach in Toronto run on similar warehouse-and-theater pricing scales. Las Vegas residency nights and Strip nightclub appearances are priced through the venue rather than through a tour promoter — cover charges typically run from around $50 for women and $75 for men at the door on a standard night, climbing to $150-plus for big-weekend nights like EDC week, New Year's Eve, Memorial Day and Labor Day. Table service, which is the dominant economic model for Vegas nightclubs, runs from a roughly $1,500 to $2,500 minimum spend for a standard table on a non-peak weekend up to five-figure minimums for prime locations on event weekends. Presales for the routed warehouse and theater tour follow the standard touring template — Catch & Release fan-list presale, then venue and Live Nation presales midweek, then general onsale on Friday at 10am local time. Verified resale through Ticketmaster gives the cleanest transfer for the theater-and-arena venues; for warehouse and club dates, resale is heavily moderated by the venue and the secondary market is correspondingly thin. DICE handles a meaningful share of the European warehouse and club routings.
Fisher setlist trends
A modern Fisher setlist is structured as a continuous tech-house DJ mix rather than as a list of discrete songs, and the published setlist trackers (1001Tracklists, Setlist.fm) capture a different level of detail depending on whether the show was a festival mainstage slot, a warehouse-and-theater date or a Catch & Release showcase. The shape of the set has been broadly consistent for the past several cycles. Opening sections lean on current tech-house material from the Catch & Release roster and from adjacent imprints — Hot Creations, Cuttin' Headz, Repopulate Mars, Solotoko, Diynamic, Confession — sequenced against Fisher's own back catalogue cuts in the deeper tech-house lane (Just Feels Tight, World's On Fire, Take It Off with Chris Lake, Wait A Minute, the Stripped Down EP material). The middle of the set climbs through the harder festival material, including remixes and ID tracks that have not yet been released, with the tension-and-release arrangement template providing the structural spine — long breakdowns holding the vocal hook across multiple bars before the drop releases. The closing section typically lands on Losing It or You Little Beauty as a peak-time anthem, frequently extended with festival-edit reworks and on-mic call-and-response moments rather than playing the original version straight through. Atmosphere appears most commonly in the middle of the set rather than at the close, sequenced as a more melodic moment between the peak-time tension-and-release records. Recent shows have produced guest appearances and b2b moments with Chris Lake, MK, Vintage Culture and the smaller Catch & Release roster when the routing puts them in the same city as Fisher, and those b2b moments are usually the most-shared clips from a given date. Festival sets are tighter than warehouse sets — 60 to 90 minutes versus 100 to 150 minutes — and lean more heavily on Losing It, You Little Beauty and the recognizable peak-time material with less of the deeper Catch & Release catalogue. Warehouse and Catch & Release showcase sets are longer (two to three hours) and look more like a traditional tech-house club mix with deeper edits, longer transitions and more unreleased material than the festival format. ID-spotting culture is highly active around Fisher sets — the producer is known for previewing unreleased material live months before official release, and 1001Tracklists tracklists from major Fisher dates are usually online within a day of the show ending.
Fisher meet and greet: what is actually available
Formal meet-and-greet packages are uncommon for Fisher and uncommon for headline DJs generally. He does not run a Cid Entertainment or Future Beat-style paid VIP meet-and-greet on the standard touring-rock or touring-pop model, and the VIP packages that have appeared on past Fisher routings have typically bundled pit access, early entry, a soundcheck listen-in (when production allows), an autographed item and a branded merch bundle — but rarely a guaranteed photo with Fisher himself. The most realistic path to interacting with him is through the Catch & Release ecosystem rather than through a paid package. The Catch & Release fan-list ecosystem, the label-night showcases at Amsterdam Dance Event and Miami Music Week, and the smaller-room Catch & Release programming at LA, New York and London warehouse rooms produce semi-regular opportunities for casual interactions — fans who consistently show up to Catch & Release-affiliated nights have built recurring informal relationships with Fisher over the years, and that long-tail community presence is the most credible path to meeting him outside of a chance backstage encounter at a festival. The on-mic, crowd-work-heavy Fisher live performance style also makes the standalone shows feel more conversationally connected to the audience than the more anonymous tech-house and bass headline tier, even if those moments are not formal meet-and-greet opportunities. Festival contexts — EDC, Tomorrowland, Coachella, Ultra — produce occasional informal interactions in the backstage and artist-lounge areas for guests with the appropriate credentials, but those credentials are not something you can buy through a public channel. If a third-party site is selling a Fisher meet-and-greet package outside of the official tour VIP bundle, treat the offer with skepticism.
Tour cities
Las Vegas
Las Vegas is Fisher's primary North American festival anchor through EDC Las Vegas, held over three nights in May at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Fisher has played the festival's kineticFIELD mainstage and the wider Insomniac mainstage rotation across most recent EDC editions, and his EDC mainstage sets — with Losing It and You Little Beauty as the closing anthems and the recurring on-mic crowd-work that is the Fisher live signature — are among the most-quoted dates on his touring record. EDC weekend in Las Vegas generates a dense cluster of ancillary Fisher-related programming at Strip and off-Strip rooms during the wraparound days. Fisher has held intermittent Strip residency dates at Tao Group, Wynn Nightlife and Hakkasan-era venues across the past five years; the residency calendar shifts between properties depending on the year, and exactly which property holds the booking at any given time has moved across cycles. Off-EDC Vegas dates typically include appearances at XS and Encore Beach Club at Wynn, at LIV Las Vegas at the Fontainebleau and at Strip nightclub rooms on weekend nights. We treat any specific 2026 Vegas residency claim with skepticism unless it's confirmed on the venue's own event listing, since the Strip nightclub landscape continues to reshuffle and Fisher's Vegas calendar moves more reactively than the major Vegas residency holders.
Los Angeles
Los Angeles is one of Fisher's most active North American markets. He is based partly in the city, the Catch & Release label has run programming and label-night infrastructure out of LA across recent years, and the local audience treats Fisher as a recurring mainstage-tier headliner. The headline warehouse and theater tour books either the Shrine Auditorium and Expo Hall, the Hollywood Palladium, the YouTube Theater at SoFi Stadium or the Wiltern depending on the cycle, with the show running its full LED-and-laser production rig at theater scale. Hard Summer in San Bernardino and Beyond Wonderland in San Bernardino — both Insomniac-produced festivals — book Fisher on the main stage on most years he is touring, and Coachella in Indio across two April weekends has hosted him on the Mojave and Sahara tents repeatedly since the 2019 breakthrough appearance. Coachella appearances typically generate ancillary Fisher dates at LA-area warehouses and Catch & Release pop-up rooms during the wraparound week between weekends. EDC Orlando and EDC Mexico anchor the Insomniac routing layer beyond the Vegas mainstage, and the LA Catch & Release showcases have produced some of the deepest tech-house Fisher sets of the past several touring cycles. Local presales typically route through DICE, the Catch & Release fan list, the venue's own platform and Ticketmaster depending on which room is hosting the date.
New York
New York is among Fisher's most active routings. The headline warehouse-and-theater tour typically books Brooklyn Mirage outdoors during the May-to-October warehouse season — with the Mirage's outdoor LED installation suiting the Fisher production setup particularly well — and the Avant Gardner Great Hall and Kings Hall indoors during the colder months. Brooklyn Steel, Terminal 5 and the Hammerstein Ballroom have hosted theater-scale appearances on different cycles. Electric Zoo on Randall's Island over Labor Day weekend has booked Fisher on the main stage multiple times across the years and is the most reliable single-day Fisher New York date. The Catch & Release showcases at the larger NYC warehouse rooms — particularly during Brooklyn-warehouse season — have produced some of the deepest tech-house Fisher sets of the past several cycles. Public Records in Gowanus and Nowadays in Ridgewood have hosted occasional smaller-format Fisher and Catch & Release-adjacent appearances. Expect to compete with a fan base that travels in from the wider tri-state area and into New England for the bigger New York dates, and check whether the show is the warehouse-and-club format or the theater format before assuming the show length. Local presales typically route through DICE, RA and the venue's own platform rather than exclusively through Ticketmaster.
Miami
Miami is one of Fisher's most reliable East Coast markets. Ultra Music Festival, held each March at Bayfront Park downtown, has booked Fisher on the mainstage and the Resistance tech-house stage repeatedly across recent editions, and his Ultra closing sets are among the most-discussed dates on his touring record. Miami Music Week — the wraparound week of programming around Ultra — is the densest concentration of Fisher-related programming in any North American city outside Las Vegas, with Catch & Release showcases at downtown Miami warehouse rooms, label nights at Club Space (the long-running 24-hour Miami room that has been a recurring Fisher touchpoint), one-off appearances at LIV at the Fontainebleau and at the larger warehouse spaces in Wynwood and Hialeah. III Points, the December festival in Wynwood, has hosted Fisher in years he has been booked, and Rolling Loud Miami has occasionally pulled him in for the cross-over tech-house-and-hip-hop billing. The local dance audience treats him as a recurring mainstage-tier headliner, and primary sellouts on the standalone dates are common. Routing usually pairs Miami with Atlanta or Orlando the night before or after.
London
London is Fisher's primary UK touchpoint and one of the most catalogue-aware Fisher audiences globally. The O2 Arena and the OVO Arena Wembley handle the arena-scale dates on cycles where the routing supports it; Drumsheds in the post-Printworks era, the Eventim Apollo Hammersmith, Brixton Academy and the Alexandra Palace handle the theater-and-warehouse-scale formats. Creamfields in Daresbury, Cheshire, held each August, has booked Fisher on the main stage repeatedly and remains the most reliable UK festival touchpoint. Parklife in Manchester, All Points East in London, We Are FSTVL on the outskirts of London and Junction 2 have also pulled him in across different cycles. Fabric, the Ministry of Sound and the longer-format club rooms have occasionally hosted Fisher on warehouse-and-club appearances during UK routings, and the Catch & Release showcases at London warehouse rooms (during the years they have been programmed) have produced some of the deepest tech-house Fisher sets globally. The UK dance audience is among the most catalogue-aware on the global circuit, and London dates frequently include deeper tech-house and Catch & Release material rather than just the recognizable peak-time anthems. Presales typically come through Ticketmaster UK and DICE, with venue presales midweek and a general onsale on Friday at 10am UK time.
Sydney
Sydney is Fisher's home market and the city he came up in before the dance-music career launched. He grew up on the New South Wales coast, competed on the World Qualifying Series as a professional surfer through the late 2000s and early 2010s out of the Sydney and Northern Beaches surf scene, and has maintained strong touring connections to the Australian summer dance-music calendar across his entire DJ career. Field Day Sydney, held each New Year's Day at the Domain, has booked Fisher on the main stage repeatedly. Beyond the Valley, held over New Year's Eve at Lardner Park in Victoria, has booked him across multiple cycles. The Australian summer festival circuit — Beyond the Valley, Field Day, Falls Festival (in the years it has run), the Hardware Australian tour dates, the broader Australian New Year's-week dance programming — is the densest concentration of Fisher-related programming outside of EDC weekend in Las Vegas. Standalone Sydney dates typically book the Hordern Pavilion, Qudos Bank Arena and the larger warehouse rooms in Alexandria and Marrickville on the warehouse-and-club format. The Australian dance audience treats Fisher with the deepest hometown energy of any city on the global circuit, and the on-mic Australian-flavored crowd-work — which is a recurring Fisher live signature globally — lands at maximum intensity at Sydney dates. Local presales typically route through Ticketmaster Australia, the venue's own platform and the Catch & Release fan list.
Melbourne
Melbourne is Fisher's second Australian anchor and one of the most active tech-house and house markets in the wider Australian dance-music export. The headline warehouse and theater tour typically books Rod Laver Arena, Margaret Court Arena, the Sidney Myer Music Bowl and the larger warehouse rooms in Brunswick, Collingwood and the broader Melbourne inner-north on different cycles. Beyond the Valley, held over New Year's Eve at Lardner Park in Victoria within driving distance of Melbourne, has booked Fisher across multiple cycles. The Pitch Music & Arts Festival in central Victoria has hosted him in years he has been booked. Standalone Melbourne dates typically pair with Sydney the weekend before or after on Australian touring legs, with Brisbane occasionally added on the same routing. The Melbourne dance audience is among the most catalogue-aware globally and tends to support the deeper Catch & Release and tech-house material more heavily than the festival-edit-only material that other markets prioritize. The Australian summer touring window — December through early March — is the densest concentration of Australian Fisher programming in any calendar year, with the broader Australian New Year's-week dance festival circuit producing the most reliable single concentration of Fisher main-stage and warehouse appearances across the year.
Amsterdam
Amsterdam is Fisher's most active Continental European market outside the UK. Amsterdam Dance Event (ADE), held each October across hundreds of venues, has booked Fisher for keynote appearances, label-night showcases and headline DJ sets in different years, and ADE is the single most reliable concentration of Catch & Release-related programming in Europe — including Catch & Release label nights and showcases at the larger Amsterdam warehouse rooms. The Ziggo Dome and the AFAS Live host the larger-scale headline appearances on touring cycles that route through the Netherlands, while club-scale dates appear at Shelter, the post-De-School-era rooms, Paradiso and the wider Amsterdam venue network. Awakenings, the longer-running Dutch techno-and-house festival, has booked Fisher on its tech-house-leaning programming across different editions. Dekmantel and Lowlands have occasionally pulled him in for festival appearances. The local dance audience expects a deeper, more catalogue-aware set than the festival circuit produces, and Fisher's ADE appearances in particular tend to include longer formats and more deeper Catch & Release and tech-house material than a Tomorrowland or EDC slot would. Routing typically pairs Amsterdam with Berlin or Paris the night before or after on European legs.
Chicago
Chicago is a reliable Midwest anchor for the Fisher touring footprint. The Aragon Ballroom, the Riviera Theatre, Radius Chicago, the Salt Shed and the Cermak Hall warehouse rooms handle the theater-and-warehouse-scale formats, with the post-Losing-It cycles leaning heavily on the warehouse rooms rather than full arena production. Lollapalooza in Grant Park, held each late-July or early-August weekend, has booked Fisher on the festival's main and Perry's stages on multiple cycles, and Lollapalooza appearances often generate one-off Fisher-branded after-shows at downtown Chicago warehouse spaces during the festival weekend. North Coast Music Festival, held over Labor Day weekend at SeatGeek Stadium in Bridgeview, has also hosted him on its main stage. Spring Awakening, held in earlier years at Soldier Field and later at SeatGeek Stadium, has occasionally booked Fisher on its main lineup. Chicago has a deep house-music heritage — the city is one of the birthplaces of house music itself, and the local audience tends to be more catalogue-aware around the tech-house tier than most Midwest markets — and Fisher dates in Chicago frequently include deeper Catch & Release and tech-house material than the festival-edit-only material that other Midwest cities prioritize. Local presales typically route through Ticketmaster US, DICE and the venue's own platform.
Cheapest FISHER Tickets — 5 Ways to Save on the 2026 Tour
FISHER tickets can move fast, especially for big-city dates, but there are a few reliable ways to land the best price.
- Buy during the official on-sale window. Face-value primary tickets on Ticketmaster are almost always cheaper than resale — the listings above show primary availability first.
- Consider mid-week shows. Tuesday and Wednesday FISHER dates often list 15 to 30 percent lower than weekend stops in the same city.
- Go upper-level. Upper 300-level or balcony sections typically start near $121 and still offer a strong view of the stage.
- Watch last-minute drops.Resellers often slash prices 24 to 48 hours before doors open, especially for mid-week dates that haven't sold out.
- Compare nearby cities. It can be cheaper to drive 2 to 3 hours to a smaller market — check the full cheap FISHER tickets guide for current low-priced dates.
FISHERVIP Packages & Meet & Greet Options
When available, FISHER VIP packages are offered directly on Ticketmaster alongside the standard tickets for each tour date. VIP experiences for FISHERconcerts often include early venue entry, a premium seat or pit access, an exclusive tour merchandise item, and occasionally a pre-show soundcheck or photo opportunity. Meet and greet packages, when offered, sell out fastest — if you see one listed on the show page above, it's worth grabbing immediately. For the full breakdown of current VIP and meet and greet options on this tour, see the FISHERVIP & meet and greet guide.
FISHERPresale Tickets & Codes
Presale windows for the FISHER 2026 tour typically open 1 to 3 days before the general on-sale and are the best way to lock in seats before inventory drops. The most common presales for FISHERtour stops are Ticketmaster Verified Fan, Live Nation presale, the artist's official newsletter or fan club, and credit-card presales from Citi, American Express, or Capital One in North America. Sign-up links usually go live from the artist's official site 1 to 2 weeks before the on-sale. See the FISHER presale guide for the current active codes and sign-up deadlines.
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