
Charlie Puth is locking in a summer date with Austin, bringing his Whatever's Clever! world tour to the Moody Center on Thursday, June 11, 2026, for a 7:30 p.m. show. The stop, featuring special guests Daniel Seavey and Ally Salort, is one of several North American dates on a spring and summer run. General tickets are set to go on sale next week, following a round of presale opportunities.
Tickets and presales
According to Ticketmaster, multiple presales begin Jan. 13, including Citi/AAdvantage and other partner presales. An artist presale follows on Jan. 14, with the general onsale opening Friday, Jan. 16, at 10 a.m. local time.
The Ticketmaster event page also lists VIP packages and a standard ticket limit for the Austin date, so fans will want to decide in advance which presale they qualify for and how much they are willing to spend before the digital queue starts moving.
Venue and lineup
The June 11 date, 7:30 p.m. start time, and openers are confirmed on the Moody Center's event listing, per the Moody Center. The venue page also points to a Moody Center presale window and links out to box office information, parking details, and entry policies, which are worth a look before you show up at the doors.
Why this matters for Austin
The Austin tour stop was first flagged for Central Texas fans by KVUE, giving locals an early heads-up on the Moody Center date. The run supports Puth's forthcoming album Whatever's Clever!, which carries a March 6, 2026, release date on Apple Music, so Austin will catch the tour shortly after the new record lands.
How to prepare for the sale
Ticketmaster recommends having your account set up, logging in ahead of time, and making sure payment details are current before tickets go live. In its presale FAQs, the company also suggests turning off VPNs and browser extensions that might be flagged as bot activity.
Fans aiming for better seats should look closely at presale options, venue presale sign-ups, or VIP packages. Once the general on-sale opens, expect resale prices to climb quickly, so procrastinating could be an expensive strategy.









