Oasis have released three more dates in Manchester, London and Edinburgh for their reunion tour next year.
Noel Gallagher posted on X that “due to unprecedented demand” shows had been added in Heaton Park, Manchester, on 16 July, Wembley in London on 30 July and Murrayfield, Edinburgh, on 12 August.
Tickets for the tour will start at £74.25 for seated tickets at their Wembley shows, with the most expensive option being a £506.25 pre-show party, exhibition and seated ticket package.
In the band’s home city of Manchester, tickets start from £148.50, with only standing available alongside a number of hospitality and luxury offerings.
Standing tickets at Wembley will cost fans £151.25, with the same tickets in Cardiff and Edinburgh priced slightly cheaper at £150 and £151 respectively. The cheapest seats in Scotland will be £74 while in Cardiff they will cost £73.
The cheapest seated tickets for the band’s gigs at Dublin’s Croke Park were revealed to start at €86.50 (£72.80).
Tickets have not yet gone on sale, but the Manchester band invited fans to apply for a pre-sale ballot, which has now closed, before Saturday’s general release, and said they had received “an unprecedented volume” of entries.
Liam and Noel Gallagher announced their long-awaited reunion with a worldwide tour in 2025 on Tuesday, saying: “The guns have fallen silent. The stars have aligned. The great wait is over. Come see. It will not be televised.”
The tour is their first run of gigs since they broke up backstage at the French music festival Rock en Seine in 2009.
The UK and Ireland tour will kick off at Cardiff’s Principality Stadium and visit Heaton Park, Wembley, Murrayfield and Dublin’s Croke Park throughout July and August next year.
The original dates announced were Principality Stadium – 4 and 5 July; Heaton Park – 11, 12, 19 and 20 July; Wembley – 25 and 26 July, 2 and 3 August; Murrayfield – 8 and 9 August; and Croke Park – 16 and 17 August.
There are also plans for dates outside Europe.
Spotify reported a 690% increase in Oasis streams globally, along with a “significant increase” in UK streams, with The Shock of the Lightning, Bag It Up and Turn Up the Sun recording some of the biggest increases.
Despite speculation that a Glastonbury slot could be in the works, the band has confirmed it will not be playing Glastonbury or any other festivals next year.
Noel, 57, quit the Manchester rock group on 28 August 2009, saying he “simply could not go on working with Liam a day longer”, and the brothers have made negative comments about each other for more than a decade.