Joe Rogan Tour 2026
Is Joe Rogan Coming to Your City?
0 / 12 citiesLive tour status for Joe Rogan across the 12 biggest North American markets — refreshed daily from Ticketmaster. Tap any "not yet" city to see the closest confirmed date.
Joe Rogan is currently between tours. No confirmed 2026 North America dates on Ticketmaster right now — this page auto-updates the moment new dates drop.
- How do I get Joe Rogan tickets?
- Tap any date below to checkout on Ticketmaster — listings here are official primary tickets, refreshed daily.
- What time does the show start?
- Most Joe Rogan 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.
About Joe Rogan
JJoe Rogan is the American Stand-up Comedy artist touring in 2026. Live dates auto-populate on this page the moment new 2026 shows are confirmed. 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.
Cheapest Joe Rogan Tickets — 5 Ways to Save on the 2026 Tour
Joe Rogan 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 Joe Rogan 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 $45 to $75 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 Joe Rogan tickets guide for current low-priced dates.
Joe RoganVIP Packages & Meet & Greet Options
When available, Joe Rogan VIP packages are offered directly on Ticketmaster alongside the standard tickets for each tour date. VIP experiences for Joe Roganconcerts 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 Joe RoganVIP & meet and greet guide.
Joe RoganPresale Tickets & Codes
Presale windows for the Joe Rogan 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 Joe Rogantour 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 Joe Rogan presale guide for the current active codes and sign-up deadlines.
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Inside Joe Rogan
Joe Rogan is the Newark-born stand-up comedian, podcaster, UFC color commentator, and Comedy Mothership owner whose touring footprint became, somewhere around the middle of the last decade, one of the most reliable arena draws in American comedy. Most of the audience that books a ticket today found him through The Joe Rogan Experience — the long-form interview podcast he launched out of his garage in late 2009, moved to an exclusive Spotify partnership in 2020, and renewed under a multi-platform deal in 2024 — but Rogan was a working club comic and a network sitcom regular (NewsRadio) and a primetime reality host (Fear Factor) and the cage-side voice of the UFC long before any of that. The stand-up never stopped. Specials trace the arc: Talking Monkeys in Space in 2009, Triggered in 2016, Strange Times in 2018, and Burn the Boats in 2024 — each one taped while the day job (commentary, podcasting, club ownership) ran alongside the touring grind. The act on stage now is the same act that has always been there: long-form, observational, conspiracy-curious, dirty when it needs to be dirty, technical about combat sports and psychedelics and hunting, and built for rooms where the audience came specifically for Joe Rogan and is willing to sit with a forty-minute thought. This page is the catchmovement hub for Joe Rogan tour dates, ticket links, and city-by-city venue notes for every market where he books arenas, theaters, and the rotating Comedy Mothership residency-style runs in Austin. The live schedule above pulls real on-sale dates; the blocks below explain what the room actually feels like and how the ticketing pattern works on his current cycle through the back half of the 2020s.
About Joe Rogan
Joseph James Rogan was born August 11, 1967 in Newark, New Jersey, and grew up between Newton (Massachusetts), San Francisco, and the East Coast martial-arts circuit. He was a competitive taekwondo and kickboxing student through his teens — Massachusetts state taekwondo champion at nineteen, an instructor at the dojo where he trained — and the martial-arts background is the through line that connects every stage of his career, from the early stand-up sets at Stitches Comedy Club in Boston to the UFC commentary booth to the podcast's repeated returns to combat-sports technique, training methodology, and the science of getting hit in the head. Rogan started stand-up in Boston in the late 1980s, moved to Los Angeles in 1994, and broke through nationally as Joe Garrelli on the NBC sitcom NewsRadio (1995–1999). The UFC commentary job started in 1997 — early enough that he was in the cage-side seat when the promotion was still essentially a regional curiosity, late enough that he has called the matches of every major fighter from Tito Ortiz and Chuck Liddell forward — and he is still in that chair today, with a multi-year contract that survived every other pivot in his career. Fear Factor on NBC (2001–2006, then a Rogan-hosted MTV revival) made him a primetime celebrity for the broader television audience who did not yet know the stand-up or the podcast. The Joe Rogan Experience launched on December 24, 2009, recorded in his garage in Bell Canyon and uploaded to YouTube and the podcast feeds — long, unscripted, two-to-five-hour conversations with comedians, scientists, fighters, musicians, politicians, and the long tail of guests the cable-news cycle did not have room for. The format, the length, and the willingness to interview almost anyone became the show's identifying features. In May 2020 Rogan signed an exclusive licensing deal with Spotify reportedly worth roughly one hundred million dollars; in early 2024 he renewed and expanded that arrangement under a new multi-platform deal that returned the audio to other platforms while keeping Spotify as the primary distribution partner. The podcast remains one of the most-listened-to in the world. Outside the studio: in 2020 he moved his operation to Austin, Texas, and in 2022 he opened the Comedy Mothership, a stand-up club on Sixth Street built specifically as a comics' room — rotating headliners from his orbit, weekly drop-in sets from Rogan himself when he is in town, and a no-phones policy enforced at the door. The stand-up specials chart the touring brand: Talking Monkeys in Space (Spike TV / DVD, 2009), Triggered (Netflix, 2016), Strange Times (Netflix, 2018), and Burn the Boats (Netflix, 2024). The voice on stage is observational and long-form — psychedelics, evolutionary biology, training, hunting, mainstream-media incentives, technology, comedy itself — and the act runs on density and trust between Rogan and a room that knows exactly what it came for.
Joe Rogan tour dates
Rogan tours on an arena-and-theater pattern with a strong rotating residency at his own club. Headline arena dates have landed at the largest rooms in American touring comedy — Madison Square Garden, Kia Forum, United Center, American Airlines Center, the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas — and the Sober October / Burn the Boats / Strange Times legs scaled into those buildings cycle over cycle. Theater-format dates run at 2,500-to-5,000-seat houses (the Wilbur in Boston, the Beacon in New York, the Wiltern in Los Angeles, the Tower Theatre in Philadelphia). The Comedy Mothership in Austin runs almost every week the room is open: Rogan headlines drop-ins regularly when he is in town, and the club programs a rotating bill of comics from his orbit — Tony Hinchcliffe, Shane Gillis, Ari Shaffir, Brian Redban, Joey Diaz, Tim Dillon, Duncan Trussell, and a long tail of touring acts cycling through Sixth Street. A typical Rogan headline show runs sixty to seventy-five minutes of stand-up plus an opener (often Hinchcliffe, Redban, or a Mothership regular), with a strictly enforced no-phones policy — Yondr pouches at the door, phones sealed from the opener through the end of the headline set. The phone lockup exists because Rogan works new material at almost every show; the policy is what keeps that material off social media before it lands on a special. Arena dates lean on the canonical bits from the current tour brand; theater stops and the Mothership drop-ins are heavier on the workshop material and the long-form observational runs that are still being shaped. The live schedule above pulls directly from the on-sale feed, so once a leg is announced the city, venue, date, and ticketing link appear here automatically.
Joe Rogan tickets
Tickets for Joe Rogan tour dates go on sale through Ticketmaster, AXS, and the relevant venue box offices depending on the building. Mothership shows in Austin clear through the club's own ticketing system and tend to be the fastest sellouts of any Rogan-adjacent on-sale on the route — drop-in headline sets are announced on short notice through the club's social channels and the email list. Arena pricing on the headline tour legs typically lands in the $80–$150 band for upper-bowl seats, $150–$300 for lower-bowl ends and the 100-level, and $300–$800 for the floor on the biggest stops. Theater dates run a tighter $100–$300 across the room, with hometown-Austin and the Las Vegas residency-style dates pricing closer to the top of the band. Mothership tickets are pegged to a club-room price band — typically $35–$75 for general seating, with rare VIP tiers for designated drop-in nights. Secondary inventory on StubHub, SeatGeek, Vivid Seats, and TickPick is heaviest in the first week after on-sale, then settles into the run-up to the show; hometown Austin dates and the biggest arena stops hold price closest to face. VIP, meet-and-greet, and bundled-merch packages, when offered on a given leg, clear on the presale and rarely re-list on the secondary market.
Joe Rogan setlist
There is no fixed Joe Rogan setlist on any given tour — that is the design of the act. A typical show is built around four or five canonical bits from the current tour brand (the Burn the Boats material on the most recent leg, the Strange Times and Triggered carryover bits before that), interleaved with new observational runs, audience moments, and the long-form thought-pieces that the podcast audience recognizes from the show. Recurring themes anyone who has followed him from the JRE or the early stand-up era will recognize: psychedelics and consciousness, evolutionary biology, hunting and food sourcing, combat sports and training, mainstream-media incentives, technology and AI, the absurdity of celebrity, and the running observational material about Austin, Los Angeles, and the move out of California. Because he locks phones at the door and rotates new material in across the run, no two nights inside the same tour are identical, and the bits that land on the next special are workshopped live for months — often years — before the taping. New material typically debuts in drop-in sets at the Comedy Mothership in Austin and the Comedy Store on Sunset in Los Angeles, graduates to the theater stops once the bits land, and lands on the arena floor only after extensive testing. Fan-curated setlist sites and post-show subreddit threads are the best place to track which bits are running on the current leg.
The Joe Rogan Experience and the Spotify deal
The Joe Rogan Experience is the second engine of the touring business and the format that broke Rogan into a non-comedy-fan audience an order of magnitude larger than the stand-up alone ever reached. The podcast launched December 24, 2009 — Rogan and Brian Redban at a desk in a garage with a USB mic — and grew through the mid-2010s into one of the most-listened-to shows in the world. In May 2020 Rogan signed an exclusive licensing deal with Spotify reportedly worth roughly one hundred million dollars, and the show moved off YouTube and the open podcast feeds onto Spotify's platform for the bulk of its run; in early 2024 a renewed multi-platform deal returned the audio episodes to YouTube, Apple Podcasts, and other directories while keeping Spotify as the primary distribution partner. Episodes run two to five hours, recorded mostly at the Austin studio with rotating guests from comedy, combat sports, science, music, politics, technology, and the long tail of subject-matter experts a single-host long-form format can accommodate. Guests have included Elon Musk (multiple appearances), Bernie Sanders, Donald Trump, Mike Tyson, Edward Snowden, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Sam Harris, Jordan Peterson, Kevin Hart, Dave Chappelle, Theo Von, and many more — the catalog is searchable through Spotify, YouTube, and the JRE archives. There are no live JRE tapings on the touring schedule the way some podcasts run live shows; the JRE studio is a closed set. The podcast feeds the stand-up audience directly, and a meaningful share of every arena and theater crowd on the route arrived at Rogan through the show first and the comedy second.
Tour cities
Austin
Austin is the hometown room and the operational center of everything Rogan does. The Comedy Mothership on Sixth Street is the club he built and owns — a 280-seat downstairs room (the Fat Man Room) and a smaller upstairs room (the Little Room) programming nightly bills of comics from his orbit, with Rogan headlining drop-in sets when he is in town. Larger Austin headline dates land at the Moody Center on the UT campus (15,000+ seats) or at ACL Live at the Moody Theater downtown for theater-format bookings (about 2,750 seats). The Austin crowd is the most podcast-coded room on the route — heavy JRE listener density, heavy crossover with the Mothership's rotating bill, and a significant Texas-and-California-transplant component that landed in town across the post-2020 wave. Mothership tickets clear fastest of any Rogan-adjacent on-sale and are announced on short notice through the club's email list and Instagram.
Las Vegas
Las Vegas dates land at the MGM Grand Garden Arena (about 17,000 seats), the Park MGM's Dolby Live theater (about 5,200 seats), or Resorts World Theatre depending on the leg and the routing. Vegas is a near-hometown room on the route — proximity to Los Angeles, the UFC fight-night overlap (Rogan calls major UFC events at T-Mobile Arena directly across the Strip), and the convention-and-tourism audience that books a comedy show as part of a weekend stack into one of the densest crowds Rogan plays. Expect lower-bowl arena pricing in the $200–$500 band; Dolby Live orchestra runs $150–$400. UFC fight-week routing occasionally puts Rogan in town for both a fight commentary booking and a stand-up date on the same weekend.
Houston
Houston dates land at Toyota Center downtown for arena-tier bookings (about 18,000 seats for end-stage comedy configurations) and at the Smart Financial Centre in Sugar Land (about 6,400 seats) for the larger theater scale. Houston has historically been one of the stronger Texas markets on the route, with a regionally diverse podcast-coded audience pulled from the city, the suburbs, and the broader Gulf Coast. Toyota Center is the Rockets' downtown arena; lower-bowl pricing typically lands in the $180–$450 band. Smaller drop-in sets and surprise theater bookings have landed at the Improv Houston, the Joke Joint Comedy Showcase, and the Bayou Music Center on shorter notice.
Dallas
Dallas dates land at American Airlines Center downtown for arena-tier bookings (about 20,000 seats for comedy configurations) and at the Majestic Theatre or the Music Hall at Fair Park for theater-format dates. The Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex is one of the largest Rogan markets in the country by raw audience size, with a strong combat-sports overlap pulled from the regional MMA scene and a meaningful share of California and northern transplants. American Airlines Center is the Mavericks and Stars building; lower-bowl pricing lands in the $180–$450 band. Theater orchestra runs $150–$350. Fort Worth dates occasionally route to Dickies Arena, which is one of the stronger acoustic rooms in the region for stand-up.
Phoenix
Phoenix dates land at Footprint Center downtown for arena-tier bookings (the Suns building, about 17,000 seats for comedy) and at the Arizona Financial Theatre or the Orpheum Theatre for theater-format dates. Phoenix is a reliable Southwest stop on every Rogan cycle — strong podcast listener density, a regional combat-sports crossover, and a sizable Southern California transplant audience that books the drive over from the West Coast. Footprint Center lower-bowl pricing typically lands in the $160–$420 band; Arizona Financial Theatre orchestra runs $140–$320. Smaller drop-in sets have landed at the Stand Up Live club downtown on shorter notice when Rogan is routing through the region for a UFC weekend or a podcast guest visit.
Los Angeles
Los Angeles is the legacy hometown room — the city Rogan worked out of from 1994 until the Austin move in 2020 — and remains a heavy stop on every cycle. Arena-tier bookings land at the Kia Forum in Inglewood or Crypto.com Arena downtown; theater-format dates run through the Wiltern, the Greek Theatre (outdoor summer scale, about 5,900 seats), or the Hollywood Improv for short-notice drop-in sets. The LA crowd is the densest legacy-comedy room on the route — Comedy Store and Improv regulars, the podcast audience, and the wider Hollywood industry-adjacent crowd all in the same building. Smaller late-night drop-in sets at the Comedy Store on Sunset are still a regular Rogan stop when he is in town. Lower-bowl arena pricing lands in the $200–$500 band; Wiltern orchestra runs $150–$350.
New York
New York dates land at Madison Square Garden or the Theater at Madison Square Garden for headline bookings, and at the Beacon Theatre on the Upper West Side for theater-format dates. New York is a heavier-than-expected market for Rogan given the act's geographic frame — the show's national audience is the show's audience, and the East Coast podcast listener base shows up in force for the rare hometown-of-comedy-itself stops. MSG lower-bowl pricing lands in the $250–$600 band; Beacon orchestra opens around $175 and tops near $400 for centre-front rows. Brooklyn-side arena bookings occasionally land at Barclays Center on bigger legs. Rogan does not currently run a New York club residency the way he runs the Mothership in Austin or the Comedy Store drop-ins in Los Angeles.
Chicago
Chicago dates land at the United Center on the West Side for arena-tier bookings (the Bulls and Blackhawks building, about 21,000 seats for end-stage comedy) and at the Chicago Theatre or the Auditorium Theatre downtown for theater-format dates. The Chicago crowd is regionally diverse — pulling from the city, the suburbs, Milwaukee, Madison, and the broader Midwest podcast audience — and is one of the strongest big-room comedy markets in the country by raw ticket volume. United Center pricing lands in the $180–$450 band for the lower bowl; Chicago Theatre orchestra runs $150–$350. Smaller drop-in sets and surprise theater bookings have landed at the Vic Theatre and Zanies on shorter notice when the routing allows.








