
If you have been waiting to see the Eagles at the Sphere, the clock is pretty much in the red. The band’s Las Vegas residency is scheduled to run through April 11, 2026, with that night currently listed as the final Sphere performance. Strong demand has pushed many face-value seats out of reach and shoved resale prices into the high hundreds and, in some cases, the thousands.
According to the Ticketmaster listing, the group is booked for weekend dates through April, with April 11 showing as the last Sphere show on the calendar. Earlier coverage from Hoodline followed the Eagles’ record-breaking residency as it stacked up dates and fans.
Ticket Prices: Face Value vs. Resale
When the extra shows were first rolled out, face-value seats were advertised starting at about $175. That lower entry point was noted by LouderSound, but the secondary market quickly turned the volume up.
Resale snapshots from Vivid Seats showed the lowest listings for April 11 hovering around $380, with an average near $746 as of Feb. 24. The New York Post also reported prices in roughly the $420 to $658 range, depending on seats and fees. In other words, anyone walking in now should expect more “premium experience” than bargain night out.
What The Sphere Brings
Part of the markup is the venue itself. The Sphere’s wraparound LED screen and its Sphere Immersive Sound system are built to turn classic rock harmonies and big-story visuals into something closer to a sensory onslaught than a standard arena set. The venue’s show page details the technology and visitor logistics that have turned these nights into a bucket-list stop for both die-hard fans and Vegas tourists, according to the Sphere.
Why Fans Think This Could Be The End
There is also the not-so-small matter of the band’s future. Don Henley told “CBS Sunday Morning” that “I think this year will probably be it,” a line that landed with a thud in the pit of fans’ stomachs and was covered by the Las Vegas Review-Journal. That hint of finality is a big reason tickets have become a scramble.
The Eagles are also among the headliners slated for the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival next spring, which runs April 23 to May 3, according to NOLA.com. That post-Vegas commitment only adds to the feeling that the Sphere run is a closing chapter rather than a midpoint.
Where To Buy And One Quick Tip
Official tickets and presales are still handled through Ticketmaster, while the band’s site lists VIP options and presale registration on Eagles.com. If face-value inventory has vanished for your date, stick with verified resale marketplaces and always check the full, all-in price, including service and delivery fees, before you click buy.
For those chasing a last-minute deal, it can pay to set price alerts and keep a few tabs open. Resale numbers can swing quickly as the date approaches and sellers get nervous about being stuck with extras.
Bottom line: treat the April Sphere shows as your best and possibly last realistic shot to see the Eagles in this high-tech setting, and expect to pay for the privilege unless you locked in early. For many fans, combining those harmonies with the Sphere’s wall-to-wall visuals is worth the hit to the wallet, and Henley’s recent comments make this run feel as close to a true farewell as the band has come in years.









