Moms Are Spending Big On Harry Styles
From the moment Harry Styles announced that his 2026 tour would be a string of residencies in just seven international cities, mayhem ensued.
With fans across North America battling it out for tickets to the singer’s 30-night Madison Square Garden residency, his six Mexico City shows, or opting to go abroad to destinations including London and Amsterdam, the cost for a spot in Styles’ audience involved more than just an exorbitant ticket price. Whether it’s flights, hotels, gas, or buying a dinner for the friend who lets them crash at their New York City apartment, fans of Styles are bleeding money for his Together, Together tour.
For parents, though, these costs are multiplied, with many spending big to get themselves and their kids face-to-face with Styles.
Kristin, a mom of three based in Alabama, waited in long online queues for two days before securing tickets for her and her 7-year-old daughter to one of Styles’ New York shows. She documented the wait on TikTok, noting that Ticketmaster was selling tickets that cost up to $1180. “Which is fine,” she said. “I am willing to pay.”
Another mom, Molly, surprised her 6-year-old with tickets to her first concert in a TikTok video. The mom and daughter will be traveling from South Carolina to New York for an October show.
Indiana mom Jonna documented the lengths her adult daughter went to get tickets to a London show, including signing up for an AMEX card with an annual fee of $895 dollars.
A UK-based mom, Faye, took her daughter to see Styles perform when he was still a part of One Direction. Now a teen, her daughter will see the former boybander in London this year with her mom after the pair tag-teamed with two AMEX cards to secure presale tickets. “I might be one of the older people at Harry Styles, but I’m so excited,” Faye wrote on TikTok.
Styles, whose new album, Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally, released on March 6, faced backlash over the choice to limit his tour to residencies; even from former bandmate Zayn Malik who joked to concertgoers at one of his recent shows, “Hopefully the ticket prices weren’t too high. Just saying.” But online criticism didn’t slow ticket sales. On Ticketmaster, shows sold out within hours of each drop, and reselling websites are offering tickets starting at $300 for nosebleed seats. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg.
The Standard reports that in London, the average cost of local accommodation on a night of one of Styles’ Wembley shows is $1244, which is a $728 markup compared to a regular night. The New York Times, meanwhile, reports that online travel agency Priceline saw flight searches to the New York area skyrocket 1,273% in the days following Styles’ tour announcement. Hotel searches in New York rose 414%. The New York Times also spoke to a mom who paid $700 for tickets and expects to pay $6000 once flights and hotels are added to the mix.
Styles has yet to respond to the backlash over the cost of his tickets and related expenses. He has, though, promised that in exchange for making fans come to him, he’ll deliver something in return. “I think it makes the show better. I think you can build something that doesn’t have to travel every night. I think the show itself is better,” he said in a interview with Apple Music’s Zane Lowe. “I think there’s something in this that allows me to, like, stay in my life while I’m doing it, and therefore I think allows me to take care of myself better, which I think makes me better at doing the thing.”
