
Tiësto Tour 2026
Next Tiësto Shows
The 8 closest dates from the live Ticketmaster feed.


Tiesto

Breakaway Music Festival

Tiesto
![Tiësto at [UNVRS]](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Fcache%2Ftm%2Fartist-ti-sto.webp&w=1920&q=75)
Tiësto
![Tiësto at [UNVRS]](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Fcache%2Ftm%2Fartist-ti-sto.webp&w=1920&q=75)
Tiësto

Tiesto
![Tiësto at [UNVRS]](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Fcache%2Ftm%2Fartist-ti-sto.webp&w=1920&q=75)
Tiësto
Tiësto Tickets Near You — Shows by City
4 citiesTiësto is playing 4 cities this tour. Tap any city for exact dates, venue info, seat prices, and parking.
Is Tiësto Coming to Your City?
4 / 12 citiesLive tour status for Tiësto across 12 key markets worldwide — refreshed daily from Ticketmaster. Tap any "not yet" city to see the closest confirmed date.
18 upcoming Tiësto concerts across 4 cities in worldwide, with tickets from $28 USD. Live Ticketmaster availability refreshed daily.
- When is Tiësto's next show?
- Sat, July 4, 2026 at LIV Beach At Fontainebleau.
- How much are Tiësto tickets?
- $28–$164 USD, varies by city and seat section.
- Is Tiësto touring near me?
- Playing 4 cities in 2026. See the "Tickets Near You" section below for your city.
- How do I get Tiësto tickets?
- Tap any date below to checkout on Ticketmaster — listings here are official primary tickets, refreshed daily.
- What time does the show start?
- Most Tiësto 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.
Tiësto Ticket Prices 2026— Cheapest Seats & Average Cost
Tiësto ticket prices vary by city, venue size, day of week, and seat section. Live price breakdown across all 2026 tour stops:
Tiësto Concert FAQ
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About Tiësto
TTiësto is the Canadian Club Dance artist touring in 2026. 18 confirmed dates across 4 cities this run. Tickets currently start at $28. This run reaches worldwide, with confirmed stops in Las Vegas, New York, Ibiza, Manchester. Every date links straight to the official ticket page.
Inside Tiësto
Tiësto is the rare electronic artist whose career has outlasted whole sub-genres. He came up in the late 1990s Dutch trance scene as Tijs Verwest, headlined the opening ceremony of the 2004 Athens Olympics — the first DJ ever booked into that slot — and then, instead of riding the trance wave into a quiet legacy career, he rebuilt the show around progressive house, big-room EDM and, in his most recent phase, the radio-friendly future-house style that has produced the singles for which a generation of newer fans know him. The catalogue runs across a quarter century, from the trance-era anthems like Adagio for Strings, Lethal Industry and Traffic, through the album cycles for Just Be, Elements of Life, Kaleidoscope, A Town Called Paradise and The London Sessions, and into the more recent records Drive (released in 2023) alongside the long-running Club Life mix series. Live, the show now sits firmly in the modern festival and arena tradition: a DJ booth elevated on a large LED-clad stage, song-based edits that cycle through twenty-plus years of his own material with single-deep singles and remixes layered in, and a peak-time pacing that holds the room for ninety minutes rather than the four-hour club marathons of his earlier career. He headlines Tomorrowland, EDC and Ultra year after year, sells out arenas across North America, Europe, Asia and Latin America, and has held one of the most durable Las Vegas residencies of any electronic artist — at Hakkasan in the Strip's mid-2010s peak, then later at Zouk Nightclub at Resorts World after the Hakkasan Group rebranded its dayclub footprint, and across various pool and night rooms along the way. He has a Grammy Award for Best Remixed Recording (Non-Classical) for his 2014 reworking of John Legend's All of Me, and he was Forbes-listed for years as one of the highest-earning DJs in the world before the publication retired the chart. If you have only encountered Tiësto on streaming services as the producer behind The Business or Jackie Chan, the live experience and the deeper catalogue are what this page is built around. The Tiësto on stage in 2026 is the same artist who has been performing since the Y2K era, and the show reflects all of it.
About Tiësto
Tijs Verwest was born in Breda, in the southern Netherlands, in January 1969 and started DJing in local clubs as a teenager in the late 1980s. The Tiësto name — adapted from a childhood nickname — first appeared on club flyers in the mid-1990s, and by the end of that decade he had become one of the central figures in the Dutch trance scene that also produced Armin van Buuren, Ferry Corsten and Paul van Dyk. The In Search of Sunrise compilation series, which Tiësto launched in 1999 and continued under his curation for several volumes, is widely credited with codifying the progressive-trance sound of that era for an international audience. The first full-length artist album under the Tiësto name, In My Memory, arrived in 2001 and produced the singles Lethal Industry, Suburban Train and Flight 643, which became staples of the trance-era festival circuit. Just Be followed in 2004 and contained Adagio for Strings — his reworking of Samuel Barber's classical composition — which became one of the defining peak-time records of the decade and remains one of the songs most associated with him by older fans. The booking that pushed him from scene-famous to globally famous was the 2004 Athens Summer Olympics opening ceremony, where Tiësto performed during the parade of nations and became the first DJ to play a Games opening at that scale. Elements of Life, released in 2007, doubled down on the cinematic trance template and won a Grammy nomination. Kaleidoscope, released in 2009, marked the public pivot away from straight trance toward a wider electronic-pop palette, with vocal collaborations including Tegan and Sara, Nelly Furtado and Sigur Rós's Jónsi sitting alongside the more familiar instrumental material. The pivot was deliberate and was framed in interviews at the time as a refusal to be permanently boxed inside one BPM range and one sub-genre. The Club Life mix-show franchise — running as a syndicated radio show, a podcast and a series of mix compilations — launched in 2007 and is still active, with hundreds of weekly episodes archived. By the early 2010s, with progressive house and big-room EDM ascendant globally, Tiësto's sound had shifted again into the festival-friendly main-stage template that defined the era. A Town Called Paradise, released in 2014, produced Red Lights and Wasted, while his 2014 remix of John Legend's All of Me won the 2015 Grammy for Best Remixed Recording (Non-Classical). The most recent phase has been the future-house and radio-pop chapter that produced Jackie Chan (with Dzeko, Preme and Post Malone) in 2018, The Business in 2020 — which became one of the genuine TikTok-era electronic hits and re-introduced him to a younger audience — and the Drive album, released in 2023, which gathered the singles and a stack of newer collaborations into the first proper Tiësto artist LP in years. Around the records, the touring career has been continuous. Tiësto has headlined Tomorrowland, Ultra Music Festival, EDC Las Vegas, Coachella and Lollapalooza repeatedly across multiple decades, and his Las Vegas residency — which began at the Hakkasan Group's venues during the mid-2010s Strip-EDM boom and shifted later to Zouk Nightclub at Resorts World after the Hakkasan footprint changed hands — is one of the few electronic residencies that has persisted across the full cycle of Vegas dance music. Forbes named him the highest-paid DJ in the world for several years during the early 2010s, and while the magazine has since retired that specific ranking, the broader point — that Tiësto's touring economics sit at the very top of the electronic-music business — remains accurate. He runs the Musical Freedom record label, which he founded in 2009 and which has released material from Hardwell, KSHMR, MOTi and a long roster of producers in the big-room and future-house lanes. Off the road, he is based largely between the Netherlands and the United States and has been a vocal supporter of dance-music infrastructure in the Netherlands, including the Amsterdam Dance Event conference held in Amsterdam each October. The persona on stage is restrained by EDM standards — Tiësto does not throw cakes, does not run pyrotechnics on top of pyrotechnics, and has historically let the music and the visual programming do the work rather than the showmanship of the headliner himself — and that restraint, combined with the willingness to keep updating the sound, is the most plausible single explanation for how a Dutch DJ who started in 1990s trance is still headlining mainstream festivals in his late fifties.
Tiësto tour: festivals, arenas and the Las Vegas residency calendar
A typical Tiësto touring year has three distinct layers rather than a single linear tour. The first layer is the global festival circuit, where Tiësto holds a near-permanent headline booking at the major EDM festivals — Tomorrowland in Belgium each July, Ultra Music Festival in Miami each March, EDC Las Vegas each May and EDC variants in Mexico, Orlando and Korea, plus Lollapalooza in Chicago and its Latin American spinoffs, Creamfields in the UK, and a long list of country-specific dance events across Europe, Asia and Latin America. Festival headline slots usually run 90 minutes on the main stage. The second layer is the routed arena and amphitheater tour, which appears in cycles tied to album releases and is the format that most closely resembles a traditional pop or rock tour. North American arena legs typically book rooms in the 10,000-to-18,000 capacity range — venues such as United Center in Chicago, Madison Square Garden in New York, Kaseya Center in Miami and Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles — with the show built around an LED-heavy production rig that travels with the tour rather than being rented venue-by-venue. European arena legs cover Amsterdam, London, Berlin, Cologne, Paris and the wider Eurozone. Asian legs concentrate on Tokyo, Seoul, Mumbai and Bangkok. The third layer is the Las Vegas residency. Tiësto has held a Strip residency continuously since the early 2010s — first at the Hakkasan Group's venues during the mid-decade peak of Hakkasan Nightclub, Omnia and Wet Republic, and later at Zouk Nightclub at Resorts World Las Vegas after the Vegas EDM-club landscape reshuffled in the early 2020s. Residency nights are typically Friday and Saturday and are sold per-night rather than as a package; in some calendars Tiësto plays a multi-night residency block tied to specific weekends, such as Memorial Day, EDC weekend and Labor Day. We hedge on the specific 2026 venue and 2026 night-count because Vegas residency assignments shift between properties and can be re-announced within a calendar year — the residency exists, but check the venue's own event listing for current dates rather than assuming any single property holds the booking permanently. Across all three layers, the format on stage is the same: Tiësto behind the booth at the front-center of a large LED-clad stage, with the visual programming carrying most of the show's narrative weight and the setlist sequencing through a mix of his own back catalogue, current singles, festival edits and unreleased material previewed live.
Tiësto tickets: pricing, presales and the Vegas door
Tiësto tickets vary widely by format. Arena and amphitheater headline tour tickets generally open between roughly $55 and $85 for upper-bowl general admission, $95 to $160 for floor general admission or lower-bowl reserved seating, and $200 to $500 for the VIP packages that the tour has typically included on recent cycles — those packages usually bundle pit access, early entry, a branded merch item and occasionally a soundcheck experience. Festival appearances are priced as part of the festival's day or weekend pass rather than as a Tiësto-specific ticket, so the cost depends on Tomorrowland, EDC, Ultra or whichever event he is headlining rather than on the artist directly. Las Vegas residency nights are priced through the venue rather than through a tour promoter. Cover charges at Zouk Nightclub at Resorts World — or whichever Strip room the residency sits in during the calendar year you are reading this — typically run from around $50 for women and $75 for men at the door on a standard night, climbing to $150-plus for big-weekend nights like EDC week, New Year's Eve, Memorial Day and Labor Day. Table service, which is the dominant economic model for Vegas EDM nightclubs, runs from a roughly $1,500 to $2,500 minimum spend for a standard table on a non-peak weekend up to five-figure minimums for prime locations on event weekends; those figures should be treated as indicative rather than current, since Strip venue pricing moves with demand and with the property's own promotional calendar. Presales for the headline arena tour follow the standard touring template — fan-list presale, then venue and Live Nation presales midweek, then general onsale on Friday at 10am local time. Verified resale through Ticketmaster gives the cleanest transfer for arena tickets. For Vegas, the cleanest reservation path is through the venue's own platform — Zouk Group, Tao Group, Hakkasan Group depending on which property is hosting the residency in the relevant year — rather than third-party resale sites, since nightclub admission is heavily tied to guest-list and table-host workflows that resale tickets do not replicate.
Tiësto setlist trends
A modern Tiësto setlist is structured more like a continuous DJ mix than a list of discrete songs, and the published setlist trackers (1001Tracklists, Setlist.fm) capture a different level of detail depending on whether the show was a festival headline slot or an arena date. The shape of the set has been broadly consistent for the past several cycles. Opening sections lean on current radio singles and recent productions — The Business, Hot in It, 10:35 with Tate McRae, Drifting and selected cuts from the 2023 Drive album — sequenced against current festival hits from his Musical Freedom label roster. The middle of the set climbs through the harder festival material, including remixes and ID tracks that have not yet been released, and a stretch of throwback edits that reach back into the 2010s big-room and progressive-house catalogue, including reworks of Red Lights, Wasted, Adagio for Strings (frequently included as a callback) and his Grammy-winning remix of John Legend's All of Me. The closing section typically lands on a peak-time anthem or a current single — recent shows have closed on Jackie Chan, The Business or one of the more recent Tiësto-produced hits — and the encore, when there is one, often pulls in an unexpected throwback edit. Adagio for Strings, in particular, has been a consistent fan-favorite call-back across the past two decades of touring and is the song most likely to mark a Tiësto show as connected to his trance-era catalogue rather than the more recent radio chapter. Festival sets are tighter than arena sets — 75 to 90 minutes versus 100 to 120 — and lean more heavily on the peak-time material with less of the slower opening run. Las Vegas residency sets are longer (two to three hours) and look more like a traditional club mix, with deeper edits, longer transitions and more unreleased material than the festival or arena format. ID-spotting culture is active around Tiësto sets, and tracklists from major dates are usually online within a day on 1001Tracklists.
Tiësto meet and greet: what is actually available
Formal meet-and-greet packages are uncommon for Tiësto and uncommon for headline DJs generally. He does not run a Cid Entertainment or Future Beat-style paid VIP meet-and-greet on the standard touring-rock or touring-pop model, and the VIP packages that have appeared on past Tiësto arena tours have typically bundled pit access, early entry, a soundcheck listen-in (when production allows), an autographed item and a branded merch bundle — but rarely a guaranteed photo with Tiësto himself. The most realistic path to meeting him is through the Las Vegas residency table-service ecosystem. Booking a table at Zouk Nightclub, or at whichever Strip room is hosting the residency in the year you are reading this, places guests in the section closest to the booth, and the residency format generally allows table guests to come up to the booth area in a way that arena production rigs do not. Festival contexts — Tomorrowland, EDC, Ultra — produce occasional informal interactions in the backstage and artist-lounge areas for guests with the appropriate credentials, but those credentials are not something you can buy through a public channel. If a third-party site is selling a Tiësto meet-and-greet package outside of the official tour VIP bundle or the venue's own table-service workflow, treat the offer with skepticism. The Musical Freedom label nights at events like Amsterdam Dance Event also occasionally produce informal artist interactions, and those nights are a more credible long-tail path than third-party meet-and-greet listings.
Tour cities
Las Vegas
Las Vegas is effectively Tiësto's North American home market. He has held a continuous Strip residency since the early 2010s — beginning during the Hakkasan Group's mid-decade run with appearances at Hakkasan Nightclub, Omnia and Wet Republic, and shifting later to Zouk Nightclub at Resorts World Las Vegas after the broader Strip EDM-club landscape reshuffled around 2021. Residency nights are typically Friday or Saturday and are sold per-night through the venue's own platform rather than through a tour promoter. The big revenue weekends — EDC Las Vegas weekend in May, New Year's Eve, Memorial Day, Labor Day, the AmFAR-adjacent weekends in fall — get the highest production budgets and the deepest unreleased-material setlists. EDC Las Vegas itself, held at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, is a separate booking from the residency, and Tiësto has played the festival's main kineticFIELD stage in most recent editions. Travelers should treat the residency listing on Zouk Group's own site as the source of truth for which nights he is actually playing, since posted lineups change and resale-platform "residency tickets" sometimes refer to nights that did not get confirmed.
Miami
Miami is the second-most-reliable Tiësto market in North America. Ultra Music Festival, held each March at Bayfront Park downtown, has booked Tiësto on the main stage repeatedly since the late 2000s, and his Ultra closing sets are among the most-quoted dates on his touring record. Miami Music Week — the wraparound week of programming around Ultra — typically brings additional Tiësto appearances at Strip-style nightclub rooms downtown and on South Beach, including LIV at the Fontainebleau and the larger warehouse spaces in Wynwood and Hialeah. III Points, Rolling Loud and the Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix concert programming have also occasionally pulled him in for one-off appearances. The local dance audience treats him as a permanent headliner regardless of which room he plays, and primary sellouts on the standalone dates are common. Routing usually pairs Miami with Atlanta or Orlando the night before or after, and the Miami International Airport-to-South-Beach drive can stretch to two hours during Music Week traffic, which is worth building into the night.
New York
New York routing usually splits between Madison Square Garden for the arena-cycle headline date and the rotating slate of large electronic-friendly rooms — Brooklyn Mirage outdoors in the summer, Brooklyn Steel, Terminal 5 and the Hammerstein Ballroom on theater-scale appearances. Tiësto has played MSG on most of his post-2014 album cycles and the room fits the modern arena-EDM production rig comfortably. Brooklyn Mirage and the Avant Gardner complex in East Williamsburg have hosted Tiësto across the summer warehouse-and-outdoor season, and those nights tend to be longer-format sets that more closely resemble the Las Vegas residency template than the festival headline format. Electric Zoo on Randall's Island, held over Labor Day weekend, has booked Tiësto multiple times across the years. Expect to compete with a fan base that travels in from across the wider tri-state area and into New England for the bigger New York dates, and check whether the show is the arena production rig or the warehouse-and-club format before assuming the show length.
Los Angeles
Los Angeles is split across multiple touchpoints. The headline arena tour books either Crypto.com Arena or the Kia Forum depending on the cycle, with the show running its full LED-and-lighting production rig at arena scale. The amphitheater format — Hollywood Bowl, Greek Theatre, FivePoint Amphitheatre in Irvine and Toyota Pavilion at Concord on northbound routing — gets used on shoulder-season legs. Coachella, held in Indio across two April weekends, has booked Tiësto in different formats over the years, including a Sahara tent appearance and a main-stage slot, and Coachella weekends typically generate ancillary Tiësto dates at LA nightclubs and warehouse rooms during the wraparound week. Beyond Wonderland in San Bernardino, the Insomniac-produced festival in March, has also hosted him on its kineticFIELD-equivalent main stage. The local audience is large, the demand is consistent, and the secondary market for LA-area arena dates typically runs at 150 to 220 percent of face for the higher-profile cycles.
Toronto
Toronto is on essentially every Tiësto North American arena routing. He has played Scotiabank Arena, Coca-Cola Coliseum, Echo Beach and the Budweiser Stage in different formats and on different cycles, and the city has a deep dance-music audience that supports both the festival edits and the longer-form club appearances. Veld Music Festival, held at Downsview Park each August, has booked Tiësto on the main stage repeatedly and is the most reliable single-day Tiësto Toronto date. Beyond Wonderland Toronto (during years it has been programmed) and one-off appearances at Rebel and CODA on the longer-format club nights round out the local touchpoints. Toronto dates almost always fall on a Friday or Saturday because the routing puts the city between Montreal and the US Midwest. Local presale codes generally arrive through Live Nation Canada and Ticketmaster Canada, with venue presales on Wednesday and the general onsale on Friday at 10am Eastern.
Amsterdam
Amsterdam is Tiësto's home-country anchor and the city where his career sits inside a much broader Dutch dance-music infrastructure that includes Armin van Buuren, Hardwell, Martin Garrix, Afrojack and the wider Spinnin' Records and Musical Freedom rosters. Amsterdam Dance Event (ADE), held each October across hundreds of venues, has booked Tiësto for keynote appearances, conference panels and headline DJ sets in different years, and ADE is the most reliable single concentration of Tiësto-related programming in Europe — including label nights from Musical Freedom and adjacent showcases. The Ziggo Dome, Johan Cruyff ArenA and the AFAS Live host the larger-scale headline appearances on arena-cycle tours, while club-scale dates appear at Escape, Paradiso and the wider Amsterdam venue network. The local dance audience expects a deeper, more catalogue-aware set than the festival circuit produces, and Tiësto's ADE appearances in particular tend to include longer formats and more unreleased Musical Freedom material than a Tomorrowland or EDC slot would.
London
London is Tiësto's primary UK touchpoint. The O2 Arena handles the arena-cycle headline date, and the smaller-scale rooms — Printworks (in the years it was operating), Drumsheds in the post-Printworks era, Brixton Academy and the Eventim Apollo Hammersmith — host the club-style longer-format appearances. Creamfields in Daresbury, Cheshire, held each August, has booked Tiësto on the main stage repeatedly and remains the most reliable UK festival touchpoint. Parklife in Manchester and We Are FSTVL on the outskirts of London have also pulled him in across different cycles. The London Sessions, which Tiësto released as an album-length project in 2020, was named for the city's role in shaping a chunk of his UK-house and garage-leaning material, and London dates frequently include selections from that record alongside the broader Drive and pre-Drive catalogue. Presales typically come through Ticketmaster UK and DICE, with venue presales midweek and a general onsale on Friday at 10am UK time.
Chicago
Chicago is a reliable Midwest anchor. United Center and Allstate Arena cover the arena-cycle stops, while the Aragon Ballroom, the Riviera Theatre and the Radius Chicago handle theater-scale and club-scale formats. Lollapalooza in Grant Park, held each late-July or early-August weekend, has booked Tiësto on the festival's main and Perry's stages on multiple cycles, and Lollapalooza appearances often generate one-off Tiësto-branded after-shows at downtown Chicago nightclubs during the festival weekend. North Coast Music Festival, held over Labor Day weekend at SeatGeek Stadium in Bridgeview, has also hosted him on its main stage. Chicago dates draw heavily from the surrounding Midwest cities — Milwaukee, Indianapolis, the Twin Cities, Detroit — so plan parking and arrival timing accordingly, particularly at United Center on event weekends. Local presales generally route through Ticketmaster US and the venue's own platform, with codes emailed through the Tiësto fan list a day or two ahead of the onsale window.
Cheapest Tiësto Tickets — 5 Ways to Save on the 2026 Tour
Tiësto 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 Tiësto 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 $28 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 Tiësto tickets guide for current low-priced dates.
TiëstoVIP Packages & Meet & Greet Options
When available, Tiësto VIP packages are offered directly on Ticketmaster alongside the standard tickets for each tour date. VIP experiences for Tiëstoconcerts 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 TiëstoVIP & meet and greet guide.
TiëstoPresale Tickets & Codes
Presale windows for the Tiësto 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 Tiëstotour 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 Tiësto presale guide for the current active codes and sign-up deadlines.
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