
LE SSERAFIM Tickets 2026 — Prices, Dates & Where to Buy
All LE SSERAFIM 2026 Ticket Listings
4 live shows — tap any card for the official Ticketmaster checkout.


Le Sserafim

Le Sserafim

Le Sserafim
How Much Are LE SSERAFIM Tickets?
LE SSERAFIM ticket prices currently range from $165 (upper level) to $319(floor & VIP), with the average listed seat at around $272 USD. Prices vary by city and day of week — midweek shows often list 15 to 30 percent lower than weekends.
Where to Buy LE SSERAFIM 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 LE SSERAFIM Tickets Go On Sale?
LE SSERAFIM 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 LE SSERAFIM 2026 date are listed on the individual event pages above.
LE SSERAFIM Tickets — FAQ
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About LE SSERAFIM
LE SSERAFIM were assembled inside Source Music in early 2022 as the first girl group HYBE built post-merger, with Min Hee-jin's then-rival in-house production teams watching closely and the company's senior leadership treating the debut as a proof-of-concept for the next generation of HYBE girl groups. The group launched in May 2022 with the FEARLESS mini-album, a six-member lineup that included Sakura, Chaewon, Yunjin, Kazuha, Eunchae, and Garam — Garam exited the group within weeks of debut following a personal-history controversy, and the project re-anchored as the five-member lineup it has been ever since. Sakura arrived with arguably the highest pre-debut profile in K-pop history: a former member of AKB48 in Japan and IZ*ONE in Korea, she brought a decade of stage experience and a built-in transnational fanbase. Chaewon, also a former IZ*ONE member, took the leader role and carries the rapper-vocalist split on most of the material. Yunjin, born in the US and trained at the Professional Performing Arts School in New York with Broadway-musical-theatre background, handles the most demanding vocal runs and the English-language writing credits that have shaped the group's crossover singles. Kazuha came up through the Dutch National Ballet Academy before pivoting to K-pop, and her dance fluency anchors the group's choreography-heavy live shows. Eunchae, the youngest, joined as a teenager and has grown into a central performance role across the cycle. The 'Antifragile' philosophy — borrowed from Nassim Taleb's term for systems that grow stronger under pressure — has been the brand's organising idea since the second EP: every controversy, every line-up change, every Western-press skirmish has been folded back into the project's identity rather than fought against. Their fandom, FEARNOT, is one of the most organised in fourth-generation K-pop, with global fan-bases that have mobilised everything from streaming campaigns to coordinated venue projects across Asia, North America, and Europe. The 2024 Coachella run — which drew both record-breaking viewership numbers and an unusually public debate about live-vocal expectations in K-pop choreography — became a watershed cultural moment for the group, cementing them as the first Korean girl group to play the Indio main stages and pulling LE SSERAFIM into mainstream Western festival conversations that had previously been reserved for BLACKPINK and a handful of soloists. The musical output since has continued to push outward — 'EASY' leaning into a sparser, more confident R&B-pop register, 'CRAZY' built around a Eurodance-inflected club drop that lit up TikTok choreography pages worldwide, and 'HOT' anchoring the most recent release cycle as the project's hardest-hitting single to date.
