Roddy Ricch Tickets 2026 — Prices, Dates & Where to Buy
All Roddy Ricch 2026 Ticket Listings
Where to Buy Roddy Ricch 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 Roddy Ricch Tickets Go On Sale?
Roddy Ricch 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 Roddy Ricch 2026 date are listed on the individual event pages above.
Roddy Ricch Tickets — FAQ
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About Roddy Ricch
Rodrick Wayne Moore Jr. was born October 22, 1998 in Compton, California, the South Los Angeles County city that has anchored West Coast hip-hop since the late 1980s through N.W.A, Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, the Game, Kendrick Lamar, YG, and the broader Compton rap canon. He grew up on the streets of Compton with extended family ties across the Park Village Compton Crips neighborhood that he has referenced across the Feed Tha Streets mixtape series and the early album material, attended Centennial High School in Compton, and started writing and recording rap as a teenager on a friend's laptop with no formal studio access in the early years. His mother had musical ties — she had recorded gospel and R&B locally — and the household exposure to live performance and recording shaped his approach to melody from the start. Roddy's early mixtape work surfaced on SoundCloud and DatPiff in 2017 and 2018 under the Bird Vision Entertainment imprint he founded, with Feed Tha Streets (October 2017) and Feed Tha Streets II (November 2018) carrying the first traction. Hip-hop journalism noticed quickly — XXL named him to the 2019 Freshman Class, the annual cover feature that has launched the careers of Kendrick Lamar, J. Cole, Travis Scott, and most of the major rappers of the past fifteen years. He signed a joint-venture distribution deal with Atlantic Records in 2018 that kept Bird Vision as the imprint and gave him major-label marketing reach. The breakthrough year was 2019: he featured on Mustard's Ballin' in June, which climbed to number 17 on the Billboard Hot 100, then appeared on Nipsey Hussle's Racks in the Middle (released February 2019 just weeks before Nipsey was murdered in front of his Marathon Clothing store in South LA on March 31, 2019), which won the posthumous Grammy for Best Rap Performance at the 62nd Grammy Awards in January 2020 — a moment that anchored Roddy in the broader West Coast hip-hop dialogue and cemented his tie to Nipsey's legacy. Please Excuse Me for Being Antisocial dropped December 6, 2019 and debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, anchored by the lead single The Box, which had quietly emerged as a buzz cut in the weeks before release and exploded into the most-streamed song of 2020 after the album hit. The Box spent eleven consecutive weeks at number one on the Hot 100 from January through March 2020, became the longest-running number one on the chart that year, and received Grammy nominations for Record of the Year, Best Rap Performance, and Best Rap Song at the 63rd Grammy Awards. Other singles from the album — High Fashion with Mustard, Start Wit Me with Gunna, and the Roy Lee–produced Boom Boom Room — pushed the cycle through 2020. Live Life Fast, the second studio album, arrived December 17, 2021 after pandemic-era touring delays, with features from Future, Kodak Black, Ty Dolla Sign, Fivio Foreign, Lil Baby, and others, debuting at number four on the Billboard 200. Feed Tha Streets III closed out the mixtape trilogy in October 2022 and returned Roddy to the rawer street-rap aesthetic of his early work. The Navy Album in 2024 — referencing the Bird Vision Navy fan community that has anchored his core audience — returned him to the album cycle after the touring pause and the brief 2022 legal matter in New York that was later dismissed. Beyond the music, Roddy operates Bird Vision Entertainment as both a label and creative footprint, has signed early-career artists through the imprint, and maintains an active presence on Instagram and the broader hip-hop social media ecosystem where his core audience tracks every album-cycle drop. His vocal style — the melodic delivery braided with the West Coast G-funk and trap influences, the high-register hooks, the verse-to-hook transitions that don't break tempo — has been widely cited as one of the defining sounds of late-2010s and early-2020s hip-hop and has shaped the broader melodic-rap landscape that runs alongside Lil Baby, Gunna, Lil Tjay, and the streaming-era Atlanta and West Coast catalogues.
