Phoebe Bridgers Presale Leads Lost Tour Phone-Free Across Fall Run

Phoebe Bridgers Presale Leads Lost Tour Phone-Free Across Fall Run

phoebe bridgers presale now points to a stricter live format: Phoebe Bridgers said every stop on the Lost Tour will be phone-free after the final pop-up show at Madison Square Garden. The move turns a spring run of secret shows into a formal fall tour policy, with the same no-recording rules now extended across the full itinerary.

Madison Square Garden sets the rule

Bridgers made the announcement after the final pop-up show at Madison Square Garden, tying the Lost Tour to the no-phones approach she used this spring. That earlier run used locations revealed just days in advance, with tickets sold through a randomized lottery and prices as low as a dollar. For the fall leg, the restriction becomes the baseline rather than a one-off experiment.

Cell phones and other recording devices were prohibited at the secret shows, and the new policy keeps that setup in place for the entire Lost Tour. Bridgers’ team said there will be medical exemptions made in accordance with ADA compliance, and disabled concertgoers will be allowed to access their phones for non-recording purposes. That leaves the rule broad, but not absolute, which is the part venues and ticket buyers will need to track closely.

Alex G joins North America

Alex G will support the North American leg of the Lost Tour, while former Black Country, New Road frontman Isaac Wood is set to support the European dates. The support lineup gives the tour a clearer live identity as it moves from pop-up secrecy to a standard routed run, and it gives the fall booking a profile beyond Bridgers alone.

More professionally filmed live performances are expected from both the pop-up show tour and the fall run, and that matters because the phone-free policy limits what audiences can post themselves. Bridgers has already shown that scarcity can drive demand: secret-show locations were held back until just days in advance, and the cheapest tickets were priced at a dollar. The result is a tour built around controlled access, not constant sharing.

Lost Tour access rules

Fans heading to the Lost Tour should expect the phone ban to apply at every stop unless they qualify for the ADA-related exceptions Bridgers’ team laid out. That makes the practical takeaway straightforward: the fall run is not just a tour name, it is a live-event format built around the same restrictions that defined the secret shows.

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