Why Are Take That London Stadium Tickets Available from £3? Best Deals Explained
- Last Updated On
- Mark Apostolou
Take That are bringing The Circus Live to the London Stadium for three nights in June 2026, and resale tickets are available right now from as little as £3. If that sounds too good to be true for a stadium show by one of Britain's biggest pop acts, we explain exactly why prices vary so dramatically — and how to use that to your advantage.
SeatPick is currently showing Take That tickets across all three London dates, with availability ranging from budget picks to premium hospitality. Here's everything you need to know.
Key Takeaways
- Take That play London Stadium on 25, 26 and 27 June 2026 as part of The Circus Live tour
- Resale tickets for the 25 June show start from £3 on SeatPick
- Prices rise across the three nights: 26 June from £49, 27 June from £57
- Thursday 25 June is the best-value date with the most availability
- Support acts are The Script and Belinda Carlisle on all three nights
- London Stadium holds 60,000 fans — larger capacity events tend to produce more resale variety
Take That at London Stadium June 2026: The Three Dates and What to Expect
Take That will perform at London Stadium on Thursday 25, Friday 26 and Saturday 27 June 2026. All three shows are part of The Circus Live, the revival of their iconic 2009 stadium production.
The original Circus Live broke UK records as the fastest-selling tour in history, with over 600,000 tickets sold in under five hours and more than one million fans attending across the UK and Ireland. The 2026 version brings back the full theatrical spectacle — including the 30-foot mechanical elephant — alongside the original setlist, with a few new surprises added.
Support on all three London nights comes from The Script and Belinda Carlisle, both of whom supported Take That on the original 2009 run. Gates open at 5pm on each date.
Browse Take That London Tickets →
Take That London Stadium Ticket Prices: All Three Nights Compared
Prices differ significantly across the three dates. Thursday 25 June is the cheapest night by a wide margin, while Saturday 27 June commands the highest prices — typical of weekend premium on the resale market.
All prices below are from SeatPick resale listings and have been converted from euros at €1 = £0.87.
| Date | Event + Venue | Starting Price (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Thu 25 June 2026 | Take That – The Circus Live, London Stadium | £3 |
| Fri 26 June 2026 | Take That – The Circus Live, London Stadium | £49 |
| Sat 27 June 2026 | Take That – The Circus Live, London Stadium | £57 |
Ticket prices are based on resale listings available on SeatPick at the time of writing. Availability and pricing may vary.
Why Are Take That Tickets Available for Just £3?
The short answer: the resale market sets its own prices, and some sellers price listings very low to guarantee a sale rather than risk ending up with unsold tickets close to the date.
There are a few specific reasons why this happens at a show like Take That at London Stadium.
High capacity creates more supply. London Stadium holds 60,000 fans. A larger venue means more tickets in circulation on the resale market, and with more supply comes greater price variation. Some sellers are willing to accept a minimal return just to recoup something.
Thursday nights are less desirable. The 25 June show falls on a Thursday. Weeknight shows consistently attract lower demand on the resale market than Friday or Saturday, which is reflected in both the floor price and overall availability. The gap between Thursday (from £3) and Saturday (from £57) on this tour illustrates that clearly.
Sellers price to move. On an aggregator platform like SeatPick, sellers compete directly with hundreds of other listings. If a seller bought multiple tickets and only needs to cover their costs on one, they may list others at a steep discount.
General Admission listings. SeatPick data shows the cheapest tickets for this run sit in the General Admission zone. GA tickets in large outdoor venues often have the widest price range on the resale market, as they're less tied to a specific seat location.
The Circus Live 2026: Why This Tour Is a Big Deal
This isn't just another Take That tour. The Circus Live is the band's most celebrated live production, and it hasn't been seen in 17 years.
When the show originally ran in 2009, it rewrote the rulebook for UK pop concerts. Fire-breathers, stilt-walkers, acrobats, tap dancers and a 30-foot mechanical elephant made it closer to a theatrical event than a pop gig. It's one of the most ambitious live productions any British band has ever staged.
The 2026 version brings back the original production in full, with the original setlist — plus some new surprises — alongside support from The Script and Belinda Carlisle. For fans who were there in 2009, it's a genuine reunion with one of the best concerts of that era. For those who missed it, this is the only chance to see it.
Beyond London, the tour also takes in Southampton, Manchester, Glasgow, Cardiff, Coventry and Sunderland before finishing in Dublin.
Browse Take That Manchester Tickets →
Who Are Take That? The Band Behind One of Britain's Biggest Ever Tours
Take That formed in Manchester in 1990, originally as a five-piece with Gary Barlow, Mark Owen, Howard Donald, Jason Orange and Robbie Williams. They became the defining British boyband of the early 1990s, scoring hits including Pray, It Only Takes a Minute and Back for Good before splitting in 1996.
Robbie Williams departed acrimoniously in 1995, going on to become one of the UK's biggest solo artists. The remaining four reunited in 2005 — initially without Williams — and picked up exactly where they left off, topping the charts with Patience and selling out arenas across the UK. A full five-member reunion followed in 2010 with the Progress album and tour, which became the fastest-selling UK tour since records began.
Jason Orange left the group in 2014, leaving the current trio of Barlow, Owen and Donald. The band released their ninth album This Life in 2023 and toured the world in 2024. Gary Barlow is widely regarded as the primary songwriter, with Rule the World, Shine and Greatest Day among the most recognisable tracks from their later catalogue.
Across their career, Take That have sold over 45 million albums worldwide, won eight BRIT Awards and performed to tens of millions of fans. The Circus Live in 2026 is their first stadium tour since the Progress Live in 2011.
How to Find the Best Value Take That London Tickets on SeatPick
SeatPick searches across multiple trusted resale platforms simultaneously, so you can compare every available listing in one place rather than checking StubHub, Viagogo and Vivid Seats individually.
Here are a few tips for getting the best deal:
Target Thursday 25 June. The floor price is dramatically lower than Friday or Saturday. If your schedule allows a weeknight show, this is by far the best-value date.
Sort by price. Use SeatPick's price filter to surface the cheapest listings first. The platform updates in real time, so what you see reflects current market pricing.
Check the GA zone. General Admission tickets at London Stadium offer a standing experience in front of the stage. For many fans this is actually the better experience — and the price data backs it up as the cheapest entry point.
Act quickly on low-priced listings. Sub-£10 listings at a show of this scale don't stay available for long. Once a seller shifts their stock, the next cheapest listing may be considerably higher.
With nearly 30,000 listings across the three London dates, SeatPick has one of the largest inventories for this tour. You can browse all upcoming concert tickets or head straight to the Take That London page to compare current prices across all three nights.
London Stadium: What to Know Before You Go
West Ham United's home ground, London Stadium sits in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford. It holds 60,000 fans and is one of the most accessible major venues in London, with Stratford station served by the Elizabeth line, Jubilee line, DLR, London Overground and National Rail — all within a 15-minute walk of the stadium.
Driving is not recommended on concert days due to road closures and very limited parking. Public transport is strongly advised. With gates opening at 5pm across all three nights, arriving via Stratford early gives you time to explore the park before the show.
Check the official London Stadium website for up-to-date bag policy information before you attend.
Take That London Stadium Tickets: Frequently Asked Questions
Why are some Take That tickets so cheap?
The resale market allows sellers to price their own listings. At a 60,000-capacity venue like London Stadium, there are thousands of listings competing against each other. Sellers on a weeknight date in particular often price low to guarantee a sale, which is why the 25 June date has tickets from as little as £3.
Are cheap resale tickets legitimate?
Yes, when purchased through a trusted platform. SeatPick only lists tickets from verified resale sellers, and every purchase comes with a 100% money-back guarantee. Low price does not mean fraudulent — it simply reflects the seller's decision to discount.
What is The Circus Live?
The Circus Live was Take That's landmark 2009 stadium tour, widely regarded as one of the greatest live productions by a British pop act. It featured a full circus-themed production including a 30-foot mechanical elephant, acrobats, fire-breathers and stilt-walkers. The 2026 tour revives the show in full, with the original setlist and production.
Which night is cheapest for Take That at London Stadium?
Thursday 25 June is the cheapest night, with resale tickets from £3 on SeatPick. Friday 26 June starts from £49, and Saturday 27 June from £57. If budget is your priority, Thursday is by far the best option.










