Tags: price

money

Concert Ticket Prices are Outrageous

Concert ticket prices are outrageous. I was reminded of this several days ago when Hawk looked up the prices to see a recording artist she likes who's on tour. The cheapest tickets were over $500. And those were for nosebleed seats. Floor seats were over $2,000.

Everyone agrees that concert ticket prices are outrageous. Let me put the level of outrageousness into perspective. I'll do the math with a comparison on what I paid to see major-name concerts years ago.

1992 was when I first attended concerts on my own, as a young adult. I saw 2 or 3 shows that year in two different cities. The tickets ranged from $19.50 to $23. Yes, I remember the prices after all these years.... These were the first concerts I saw on my own!

As a first pass comparison, government inflation statistics show that average prices are 2.4x higher now than than. So in today's dollars those tickets would be $47 - $55... if they followed the Consumer Price Index (CPI). Instead they are 10x higher than the CPI.

Oh, but wait— those tickets I bought cheaply in 1992 were floor seats. Buying similar seats in 2006 are 40x the price adjusted for inflation.

But here's an even more salient comparison: How much does a young adult have to work to afford a concert ticket?

In 1992 the minimum wage was $4.25. A young adult working a min-wage job in 1992 could buy a concert ticket—floor seats, not nosebleed— with about 5 hours of labor, give or take 30 minutes. That was something a young adult, even a college student, working part-time in food service or retail or light office work, could afford. Attending a concert was a "Let's have a nice night out" proposition.

Today, in 2026, the federal minimum wage is $7.25, buying a floor seat ticket costs 276 hours of labor. Even the nosebleed seats cost 69 hours of work. This takes attending a concert out of the realm of, "Let's have a nice night out" and puts it into the realm  of, "I'm saving up to go on an overseas vacation."

But local min-wage is often higher, you might object. That's true. The two places I lived & worked in 1992 now have min-wage laws of $13 ~ $16. In the area I live now various cities have minimums around $19/hour. Even using the higher figure means those floor seats are the equivalent of 105 hours of work. And that's not even counting taxes!