
The Backstreet Boys are hanging around the Strip a little longer, quietly stretching their "Into The Millennium" residency at Sphere Las Vegas with a final batch of summer shows that now run deeper into July and through August. The expanded run keeps their immersive Millennium-era tribute lighting up the dome for several more high-demand nights.
In a Feb. 17 announcement, the group added six July dates - July 16, 17, 18, 23, 24 and 25 - and confirmed that fan-club and artist presales would hit first before tickets opened to the general public. According to Backstreet Boys, those July shows were the first of multiple February drops, added in direct response to what they described as overwhelming fan demand.
The residency now lines up as a solid mid-July through late-August block on the Sphere calendar, with the venue listing summer performances across several weekends this year. As laid out on Sphere, the run stretches across July and August with multiple weekend nights, and Stereoboard highlighted the latest additions in a March 16 report.
Tickets and packages
Fan-club and artist presales rolled through late February, with a public on-sale scheduled for Feb. 27, as reported by Billboard. Coverage of the rollout notes that fans can bundle concert tickets with hotel stays through Vibee, and that Sphere is offering premium suite options for anyone looking to turn the show into a full-on Vegas getaway. With demand already strong enough to force extra dates, expect many of the newly added nights to move quickly once they hit public sale.
Residency by the numbers
According to Pollstar, recent box-office reports tied to the residency show roughly 550,620 tickets sold and about $93.5 million in grosses for the headline shows that have been reported so far. Those kinds of numbers make it easy to see why both the band and promoters keep finding room for a few more nights inside the massive venue.
Why Vegas keeps adding dates
Sphere’s 360-degree LED interior and immersive sound setup let the Backstreet Boys mount a production that feels more like a Las Vegas attraction than a standard arena concert, turning each performance into a destination in its own right. The on-site fan activations and the larger spectacle encourage multi-day trips, and promoters are leaning into that by packaging tickets with hotels and VIP upgrades to match the demand.
If you are plotting a trip, check ticket availability and sale windows through Ticketmaster. Travelers can also compare Vibee bundles and Sphere premium suites for hotel-and-show packages with added perks. Either way, keep an eye on official presale and public on-sale timelines, since many nights are expected to sell out fast.









