Hannah Gadsby Ticket Prices 2026 — How Much Do Tickets Cost?
What Do Hannah Gadsby Tickets Cost Right Now?
Hannah Gadsby ticket prices vary by city, venue, and seat tier. Live pricing from the Ticketmaster Discovery API appears on every confirmed date as soon as the show goes on sale — the cards below carry the current 2026 pricing.
Hannah Gadsby 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 Hannah Gadsby 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.
Hannah Gadsby Ticket Prices — FAQ
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About Hannah Gadsby
Hannah Gadsby was born January 12, 1978 in Smithton, on the rural north-west coast of Tasmania, the youngest of five children in a working-class family in a deeply conservative regional community — a setting Gadsby has returned to in the act for two decades because homosexuality was a criminal offence in Tasmania until 1997, when she was nineteen, a fact that anchors a significant portion of the writing on Nanette and Ten Steps to Nanette. She studied art history and curatorship at the Australian National University in Canberra, completing a degree in the field in 2003, before drifting through a series of low-paid jobs across regional Australia in her twenties — bookshop, cinema projectionist, farmhand — while undiagnosed autism and ADHD shaped a working life she has since described in detail across the act and the memoir. Stand-up came almost by accident: in 2006, on a dare from a friend, she entered the Raw Comedy national amateur competition and won it the same year, an unusually fast path from first open mic to national title. Within a year she had taken Best Newcomer at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival and joined the Australian touring circuit full-time. The early years were club and theater dates across the Australian and UK festival circuits — Melbourne International Comedy Festival, Edinburgh Fringe, Soho Theatre in London, the New Zealand and Adelaide festivals — alongside television work in Australia: the sketch series Adam Hills Tonight, the panel show Please Like Me with Josh Thomas (in which she also acted across four seasons), and the ABC art-history series Hannah Gadsby's Oz and Hannah Gadsby's Nakedy Nudes, both of which she wrote and presented and which drew on her ANU training. The pivot came with Nanette, first performed at the 2017 Melbourne International Comedy Festival and the Edinburgh Fringe that August, where it won both the Melbourne Festival's Barry Award and the Edinburgh Comedy Award for best show. A filmed taping at the Sydney Opera House landed on Netflix in June 2018 and made Gadsby the most-discussed stand-up in the world for the rest of that calendar year — the special's structural argument (that comedy's self-deprecating reflex had cost her, as a queer woman, more than it was worth, and that she would no longer trade the trauma for the laugh) became a reference point inside and outside the comedy industry. The Emmy for Outstanding Writing for a Variety Special followed in 2019, along with a Peabody Award. Douglas, the deliberate stylistic counterweight, debuted live in 2019 and landed on Netflix in 2020; the act traded the Nanette structural argument for autism-anchored visual-art lectures, dog-park observational material, and a wry meta opening that told the audience exactly what jokes were coming next. Body of Work arrived on Netflix in 2023 as a marriage-and-domestic-life hour built around her wife Jenney Shamash, and Woof! It's Hannah Gadsby followed on Netflix in 2024. Alongside the touring, she curated the 2021 Brooklyn Museum exhibition It's Pablo-matic: Picasso According to Hannah Gadsby and published Ten Steps to Nanette in 2022, a memoir that hit the New York Times bestseller list. The voice on stage is dry, structurally rigorous, lecture-room precise, queer in framing rather than punchline, and built on a refusal to separate the comic from the curator — a stand-up who treats the hour as an essay you laugh through rather than a string of bits.
