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


The Strokes

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Shaky Knees Music Festival

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How Much Are The Strokes Tickets?
The Strokes ticket prices currently range from $49 (upper level) to $748(floor & VIP), with the average listed seat at around $188 USD. Prices vary by city and day of week — midweek shows often list 15 to 30 percent lower than weekends.
Where to Buy The Strokes 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 The Strokes Tickets Go On Sale?
The Strokes 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 The Strokes 2026 date are listed on the individual event pages above.
The Strokes Tickets — FAQ
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About The Strokes
The Strokes formed in New York City in 1998 when Julian Casablancas (vocals), Nick Valensi (guitar), and Fabrizio Moretti (drums) — three friends from the Dwight School in Manhattan — began writing songs together, recruited bassist Nikolai Fraiture from Lycée Français de New York where Casablancas had also briefly attended, and rounded out the five-piece lineup with rhythm guitarist Albert Hammond Jr., the son of singer-songwriter Albert Hammond Sr., whom Casablancas had met at Le Rosey boarding school in Switzerland years earlier. The five-piece played the Lower East Side and East Village circuit — Mercury Lounge, Arlene's Grocery, the Bowery Ballroom, Don Hill's, Luna Lounge — for roughly two years, sharpened the live show into the lean, suit-and-Converse, Marshall-stacks aesthetic that would define a decade of indie rock, and self-released the three-track The Modern Age EP through Rough Trade in the UK in January 2001. The bidding war that followed was historic: more than 20 labels in the running, the band ultimately signing with RCA in the US and Rough Trade in the UK, and the resulting debut album Is This It released in Australia and the UK in July 2001 and in the US in October 2001 with a revised cover and a substituted track (New York City Cops swapped out post-9/11 in the US edition). Is This It hit number two in the UK, certified platinum in multiple territories, and has since been ranked as the greatest album of the 2000s by Rolling Stone, NME, and Pitchfork among others — a record whose influence on the Killers, Arctic Monkeys, Franz Ferdinand, Interpol, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, the Libertines, Bloc Party, the Kooks, and effectively every guitar band of the next decade is impossible to overstate. Room on Fire (October 2003) doubled down on the formula with 12:51, Reptilia, and Under Control. First Impressions of Earth (January 2006) was the band's most ambitious record — 14 tracks, longer arrangements, the singles Juicebox, Heart in a Cage, and You Only Live Once — but also began the long internal stretch that saw the members pursue solo work: Casablancas with Phrazes for the Young (2009) and the Voidz, Hammond Jr. with multiple solo records starting with Yours to Keep (2006), Valensi with CRX, Moretti with Little Joy. Angles (March 2011) reunited the five-piece after a five-year hiatus and produced Under Cover of Darkness and Taken for a Fool. Comedown Machine (March 2013) closed the band's RCA contract. After a seven-year studio gap and a series of EPs and festival appearances, the Rick Rubin-produced The New Abnormal arrived in April 2020 with At the Door, Bad Decisions, The Adults Are Talking, and Brooklyn Bridge to Chorus — and won the Grammy for Best Rock Album in March 2021, the band's first Grammy in five nominations across a 20-year career. Across the run the Strokes have released six studio albums on RCA and Cult Records, sold an estimated 14 million records worldwide, kept the original five-man lineup intact across every record and tour, and watched their debut record become a permanent fixture at the top of every 21st-century best-of list it appears on.