Noah Kahan fans are up in arms over the cost of tickets to see the singer perform in Dublin and have been making their feelings known online.
After taking to the stage at Electric Picnic, the Stick Season singer is set to light up Marlay Park in the summer of 2025 in what has been hailed his biggest Irish show to date.
With anticipation mounting for days, tickets are set to go on sale on Friday 22 November with the presale happening on Wednesday but many fans have been put out by the high cost of tickets.
Some have even gone as far as to say that that they are refusing to pay the high prices while others are comparing the cost of tickets with those for big blockbuster performances like Taylor Swift’s Eras tour and claiming Noah’s gig isn’t value for money.
Tickets for the gig, which takes place on 1 July, start from €100.90 which fans feel is too much. One person remarked: ‘Ticketmaster, NoahKahan €100 -€120 is a joke to be charging people to essentially stand in an open field. The world has gone mad.’
Someone else outright refused to pay the sun saying: ‘Noah Kahan, I love you but I’m not paying €120 to stand with 40,000 other people in a mucky park where I potentially won’t even be able to see the stage.’
‘One hundred euro for a Marlay Park ticket for Noah Kahan, is that a joke? (I fear if I was a fan I’d buy it anyway) but one hundred euro,’ added a third person.
One fan went even further and blasted the organisers of the gig over the pricey cost of tickets. He said: ‘€120 to go see Noah Kahan, right. Talented artists. Love Stick Season, love that new one that’s going viral on TikTok.
‘Very talented man, but like Sabrina Carpenter literally has a Polly Pocket stage, dancers, outfits,’ reports Extra.
He went on to say: ‘Eras Tour. Three and a half hours, Paramore as the opening, multiple eras, multiple outfits, multiple quick changes, multiple stage things going on.
‘We’re giving male singers too much credit for too little effort. Just putting it out there. That’s why the pop girlies are dominating because they are giving. If I am paying money to go see a concert, I want to be full out. I want it to be a production. I want it to be literally a feast for the eyes, and that’s my take on it.’