BTS will perform four Arirang World Tour concerts at Allegiant Stadium this week, scheduled for May 23, May 24, May 27 and May 28 — each beginning at 8 p.m. Last-minute tickets remain available for every night.
The secondary market shows the lowest single-ticket price found at publication was $114 including fees on SeatGeek; other Las Vegas listings ranged from approximately $116 to $136 including fees. Those figures give a clear sense of the market facing fans trying to get into the stadium on short notice.
These dates mark a return to Allegiant Stadium for BTS after their four 'Permission To Dance' shows there a little over four years ago, and they come as the group is promoting their recently released sixth studio album, Arirang.
Onstage the group is likely to deliver the length and variety fans expect. Set List FM findings show BTS typically performs 23 songs per concert, and live sets commonly pull from big hits such as 'Butter,' 'Spring Day,' 'Fake Love,' 'IDOL' and 'Dynamite.' That breadth—new album material mixed with established singles—is the through-line for these Las Vegas nights.
For audiences, the shows promise spectacle as well as songs. A recent review in the Stanford Daily captured the production shorthand that has become familiar at stadium BTS shows: "Pyrotechnics and fireworks punctuated major moments throughout the evening while an elevated circular stage rotated through the stadium." The same reviewer wrote, "By the time BTS reached a remixed version of “Run BTS,” the third song of the night and unexpectedly one of my personal favorites, the electric energy inside Stanford Stadium had fully settled into place."
The juxtaposition between spectacle and ticket availability creates the story’s main tension. These are stadium-scale productions, tied to a new studio album and a tested, lengthy set list — yet reliable last-minute access remains. That could reflect a number of market realities: some fans holding tickets until closer to showtime, a steady supply on resale platforms, or pricing that leaves room for late buyers. The published data — four shows, all at 8 p.m., with the lowest resale price at $114 — is simple and concrete; how it squares with the scale of the production is the question fans and market-watchers will be watching this week.
Practically, what matters to readers now is straightforward. If you want to see BTS in Las Vegas you still can: all four concerts have last-minute tickets on the market, and the cheapest option discovered at the time of publication was $114 including fees on SeatGeek. The concerts support Arirang and are set up to deliver a full evening — roughly 23 songs — mixing the new album and signature hits.
These Allegiant Stadium dates are not a tentative reappearance; they are a clear staging of BTS’s current era: a sixth studio album driving a world tour, stadium-sized production values and a lengthy set list that blends new material and crowd favorites. For fans who have been waiting since the band's Permission To Dance run here more than four years ago, the answer is plain — the show is back, it is elaborate, and for now it remains within reach for last-minute buyers.




