Post Malone Toronto tickets fall to $88.80 before June 16 show
Post Malone Toronto tickets have dropped to $88.80 for his June 16 show at Rogers Stadium, giving last-minute buyers a cheaper entry point than the original nosebleed price of $105.63. The concert begins at 7 p.m., and the biggest price swing is happening in resale rather than the initial sale.
Rogers Stadium price spread
The cheapest resale ticket now starts at $88.80 in North 118, while west side seats begin at $108 and east side seats at $130.63. That leaves a wide spread across the building: special deals in the D1 and D5 floor sections sit at $105.63, front-row tickets are listed at $230.63, and the most expensive ticket has dropped to $1,560.
Original pricing was higher across the board. Nosebleed seats opened at $105.63, floor tickets were around $268, and VIP packages reached $2,583. For buyers watching resale inventory, the gap between the cheapest and premium options is now wide enough to make the lower sections look less distant than they did at launch.
Ontario resale rules
Ontario’s ticket resale rules changed before this concert, preventing platforms and resellers from selling above face value. That shift sits behind the lower ask on the resale market, and it has made late buying a more realistic tactic for fans willing to wait until the final days before the show.
Rogers Stadium also adds a wrinkle of its own. Stadium concerts can release extra inventory closer to show day as production holds come off, sightlines get finalized, and seating is adjusted, which helps explain why a June 16 ticket can cost less now than it did earlier in the cycle.
Third headliner at Rogers Stadium
Post Malone will be the third major headliner at Rogers Stadium this year, after Luke Combs and Bruno Mars already played the venue this summer. That makes this date part of an active run for the building, not a one-off booking, and it gives buyers a live comparison point for how quickly prices can soften near event day.
Instagram comments around the tour posts have already turned that pricing pressure into a blunt demand signal. One user wrote, “When are you dropping Jelly Roll so we can get tickets?” Another added, “Drop jelly roll, and you’ll sell more seats,” while others posted, “The people want old posty,” “I love Post Malone, but I hate Jelly Roll,” and “Jelly Roll kills the vibe.”
For anyone trying to get in on June 16, the practical move is simple: check the lowest resale sections first, then compare them with the $105.63 floor deals before the cheaper inventory disappears. The market is already telling buyers that patience has become the cheaper seat strategy in Toronto.