FISHER Tickets 2026 — Prices, Dates & Where to Buy
All FISHER 2026 Ticket Listings
Where to Buy FISHER Tickets
- Ticketmaster (primary). Official face-value seats. Always start here before resale.
- Live Nation. Same inventory as Ticketmaster for most tours, sometimes with a different presale.
- Venue box office. Day-of tickets without resale fees if the show isn't sold out.
- Reputable resale (StubHub, Vivid Seats). For sold-out dates — buyer-protected, but expect markups.
- Fan-to-fan transfers. Ticketmaster lets original buyers resell at face value — worth watching 24–48 hours before the show.
When Do FISHER Tickets Go On Sale?
FISHER tickets typically go on sale on a Friday at 10:00 am local time for each tour stop, with Verified Fan, Live Nation, and credit-card presales opening 1 to 3 days earlier. Exact on-sale times for each FISHER 2026 date are listed on the individual event pages above.
FISHER Tickets — FAQ
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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.
