How to buy Enter Shikari tickets for UK arena tour | Music | Entertainment
Enter Shikari have dominated festivals around the world, taken over Wembley Arena, and now they’ve set their sights on arenas around the rest of the country. The iconic British band have just confirmed a seven-date tour taking place this November at some of the country’s biggest and best arenas. Included on the list is Cardiff’s Utilita Arena, Nottingham’s Motorpoint Arena, Manchester’s Co-op Live and two shows at London’s Alexandra Palace.
The band’s frontman, Rou Reynolds, has stated this is the band’s “biggest arena tour ever”. And, as a result, it’s got some massive names on the docket, as well. Welsh wonders Holding Absence are supporting, with The Callous Daoboys on the list as well. Tickets for this enormous tour are going on sale very soon, with limited presale events before then. Below, we’ve got everything fans need to know.
Enter Shikari tickets will be released on general onsale from Friday, January 30, 2026, at 10am.
These tickets will be fans’ last and best chance to secure tickets for the upcoming shows.
And there are a couple of different websites fans can buy their access from.
First and foremost is Live Nation, the company which handled the presale event.
After that, fans can try out Ticketmaster.
Here are both the links fans need now:
Speaking out about the upcoming tour, Reynolds gushed: “November will bring our biggest arena tour ever. With a completely new show. I cannot say much yet but I can tell you now it will be our most thrilling. To get to play Ally Pally two nights in a row is going to be something of a fantasy.
“I b***dy love that building and we will make sure we have the variety and theatrics to do the place justice. The tour also includes our biggest ever Belgian show, and first ever German headline arena show, which we’re all buzzing for.”
He went on: “We’re happy to once again be supporting the Music Venue Trust with donations from our ticket sales. We will always support and fight for grassroots venues. They mean so much to us not just because we wouldn’t have made it to where we are now without them, but because they are the great bastions of community and creativity, without which, UK culture would decay dramatically.
“And we’d all be left drowning in the most mind-numbing corporate pop music and pointless, AI-produced drivel.”









