Loud Luxury Tickets

Loud Luxury—Canadian DJ/producer duo Andrew Fedyk and Joe Depace—roll into 2025 with a high-energy run widely referred to by fans as the Loud Luxury 2025 Tour. The tour showcases their euphoric house sound, festival-tested edits, and brand-new IDs rather than a single album cycle. Built around the duo’s knack for sing-along hooks (“Body,” “Aftertaste,” “If Only I”), the tour emphasizes a “dance together” theme: intimate club nights alternating with big-room spectacles, updated visuals, and live remix moments that turn familiar tracks into fresh drops. While not tied to a new studio album, the itinerary supports a steady stream of singles and collaborations expected throughout 2025, with sets designed to preview unreleased material before it hits streaming.

After years of nonstop chart presence and residencies, this stretch feels like a celebratory comeback to full-scale routing, with refreshed visuals, thicker basslines, and punchier tempos that lean into tech-influenced house while keeping the duo’s pop sensibility intact. Fans can expect tighter transitions, hybrid mashups, and extended versions of crowd favorites, alongside surprise guest vocalists in select markets. Early reactions at late-2024 shows point to packed dance floors and instant singalongs, signaling strong demand as dates continue to be announced.

More than 20 dates are already live across the United States, featuring coast-to-coast stops including Seattle (Showbox SoDo), San Jose (The San Jose Civic), Madison (The Sylvee), Chicago (Radius), Nashville (The Pinnacle at Nashville Yards), Washington, DC (Echostage), Tuscaloosa (Two Dimes), New York (The Rooftop at Pier 17), Denver (Decadence Colorado), and multiple Las Vegas residencies (Omnia, Hakkasan, Marquee). Festival highlights include EDC Orlando and a major international appearance at EDC Thailand in Phuket in early 2026, extending the momentum to Asia as the 2025 cycle evolves.

Expect hands-in-the-air crescendos, laser-forward production, and a communal vibe where the duo work the mic, layer harmonies, and flip their hits into tougher late-night versions calibrated for each venue. Ticketing is dynamic; all prices are presented in USD, and any international box offices are converted to USD at checkout for clarity. Inventory is moving quickly, with several dates flagged as selling fast or low remaining allocation. To secure verified seats and nightclub entries, please go through the link to our website and complete your purchase—Buy today! Official accounts for announcements and drops: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LoudLuxury, Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/loudluxury, YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@LoudLuxury, X (Twitter): https://twitter.com/LoudLuxury. Following these channels ensures first dibs on presales, exclusive upgrades, and newly added dates throughout the year too.

Loud Luxury Concert Tickets & Tour Dates

Where and when: find your city below, then use the GET TICKETS link to secure entry on our website, accessing the opportunity to purchase Loud Luxury concert tickets.

Venue Date Location Tickets
Showbox Sodo Sep 26, 2025 9:00 PM Seattle, WA, USA GET TICKETS
Tao Beach at The Venetian Sep 27, 2025 11:00 AM Las Vegas, NV, USA GET TICKETS
The San Jose Civic Sep 27, 2025 8:00 PM San Jose, CA, USA GET TICKETS
The Sylvee Oct 2, 2025 8:00 PM Madison, WI, USA GET TICKETS
Radius – Chicago Oct 3, 2025 10:00 PM Chicago, IL, USA GET TICKETS
The Pinnacle at Nashville Yards (Concert Venue) Oct 4, 2025 8:00 PM Nashville, TN, USA GET TICKETS
Omnia Las Vegas Oct 7–8, 2025 10:30 PM Las Vegas, NV, USA GET TICKETS
Marquee Nightclub at The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas – Complex Oct 10, 2025 10:30 PM Las Vegas, NV, USA GET TICKETS
Echostage Oct 11, 2025 10:00 PM Washington, DC, USA GET TICKETS
Hakkasan Nightclub at MGM Grand Hotel & Casino Las Vegas Oct 16, 2025 10:30 PM Las Vegas, NV, USA GET TICKETS
Two Dimes Oct 17, 2025 8:00 PM Tuscaloosa, AL, USA GET TICKETS
Marquee Nightclub at The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas – Complex Oct 24, 2025 10:30 PM Las Vegas, NV, USA GET TICKETS
Omnia Las Vegas Oct 31, 2025 10:30 PM Las Vegas, NV, USA GET TICKETS
Omnia Las Vegas Nov 1, 2025 10:30 PM Las Vegas, NV, USA GET TICKETS
Electric Daisy Carnival Orlando (Tinker Field) – 3 Day Pass Nov 7–9, 2025 12:30 PM Orlando, FL, USA GET TICKETS
Omnia Las Vegas Nov 7, 2025 10:30 PM Las Vegas, NV, USA GET TICKETS
Electric Daisy Carnival Orlando – 1 Day Pass Nov 8, 2025 1:00 PM Orlando, FL, USA GET TICKETS
Omnia Las Vegas Nov 15–16, 2025 10:30 PM Las Vegas, NV, USA GET TICKETS
Hakkasan Nightclub at MGM Grand Hotel & Casino Las Vegas Nov 20, 2025 10:30 PM Las Vegas, NV, USA GET TICKETS
Omnia Las Vegas Dec 13, 2025 10:30 PM Las Vegas, NV, USA GET TICKETS
The Rooftop At Pier 17 Dec 27, 2025 10:00 PM New York, NY, USA GET TICKETS
Decadence Colorado (Colorado Convention Center) – 2 Day Pass Dec 30–31, 2025 6:00 PM Denver, CO, USA GET TICKETS
Decadence Colorado – Tuesday Pass Only Dec 30, 2025 6:30 PM Denver, CO, USA GET TICKETS
EDC Thailand (Rhythm Park) – 3 Day Pass Jan 16–18, 2026 12:00 PM Phuket, Thailand GET TICKETS

How to buy: click GET TICKETS to go to our website, compare sections, and check out securely in USD, then look for a confirmation email that summarizes your order. Buy today! Ticket types and delivery: most listings offer mobile tickets for instant smartphone entry, print-at-home PDFs you can bring on paper, and will-call pickup at select venues, plus limited VIP packages that may include expedited entry, lounge access, or balcony viewing. Pricing and currency: all loud luxury tickets price shown on our site are displayed and charged in USD even for international events, and any local fees or taxes will be converted to USD at checkout so you always know your total before you buy.

Show Tips for a Better Experience

Tips for getting tickets early and avoiding scams:

  • Set an alert on our event pages and join presale lists to receive codes the moment new blocks are released.
  • When choosing seats, use the interactive map on our website rather than third-party screenshots, and complete payment in one browser session.
  • Avoid social media resellers; purchase only through the GET TICKETS links above on our site, where transfers are verified and barcodes are guaranteed valid.
  • If a deal seems too good to be true, compare with adjacent sections on our site and check the seller rating before proceeding.

Venue-specific advice for the best experience:

  • Showbox Sodo: arrive early and post up near the front-of-house soundboard for a balanced mix.
  • Tao Beach and Marquee: cabanas or VIP elevated platforms give the clearest sightlines above the dance floor.
  • The San Jose Civic and The Sylvee: balconies center-left or center-right put you at ear level with the line array.
  • Radius Chicago and Echostage: stand mid-floor slightly behind the lighting tower for punchy bass with less crowd push.
  • Hakkasan and Omnia: mezzanine rails offer great views when the main floor is shoulder-to-shoulder.
  • Festivals like EDC Orlando and EDC Thailand: hydrate, wear ear protection, and identify meet-up points since cell service can be spotty.

Festivals pack shorter, high-energy sets on massive shared stages with stricter entry, bag rules, and bigger crowds, while solo club and theater dates offer longer sets, venue-tailored production, and easier sightlines if you arrive early.

Loud Luxury Tickets Price & VIP Packages

General Admission and Seating Tiers

Most Loud Luxury dates are general-admission, standing-room shows at clubs and mid-size halls like Showbox SoDo and Echostage. Some civic centers or amphitheaters (San Jose Civic or The Rooftop at Pier 17) add balcony or mezzanine areas, occasionally reserved. Las Vegas clubs (Omnia, Hakkasan, Marquee, Tao Beach) sell timed-entry GA and expedited-entry options instead of seats; tables are separate. Festivals on the show schedule (EDC Orlando, Decadence Colorado, EDC Thailand) use GA, GA+/Enhanced GA, and VIP tiers with distinct amenities.

Price Ranges and Key Drivers

Typical U.S. GA presales run about $35–$85 USD for club nights, rising to $90–$150 USD as inventory tightens or dates approach. Major-market weekends can push door pricing to $120–$200 USD. Balcony or premium-view tickets, when offered, usually add $20–$60 USD over GA. Vegas venues use dynamic pricing tied to demand, date, and capacity; early GA can be $40–$70 USD, while holiday weekends may exceed $150 USD for expedited entry. Festivals vary widely: single-day GA often ranges $140–$220 USD; three-day GA $300–$600 USD depending on tier; VIP can span $250–$450 USD per day or $700–$1,200 USD for multi-day. International shows price in local currency but are comparable after USD conversion; taxes and fees apply at checkout.

Premium Options: VIP, Meet & Greet, Bundles

Concert VIP commonly includes priority entry, dedicated viewing, private bars or restrooms, and a laminate; specifics vary by venue. In Las Vegas, “VIP” generally means table service with a minimum spend—about $500–$2,500+ USD before tax and gratuity—scaling with location and party size, not a separate ticket. Festivals offer GA+ or Enhanced GA for faster entry and upgraded restrooms, and VIP for lounge access, raised platforms, and concierge; VIP is often 21+ in the U.S. Meet-and-greet opportunities for DJ acts are limited and promoter-run, typically $100–$250 USD when available, and usually exclude the show ticket. Merch bundles—such as posters or limited apparel—appear as add-ons, typically adding $25–$100 USD.

Group Rates and Student/Military Savings

Some promoters release four-pack or six-pack bundles that discount GA by roughly 10–20% in slower markets; these are uncommon on peak dates and may be limited to early tiers. Student or military discounts sometimes appear through verified services like ID.me or Student Beans on select venue box offices, but availability varies and is not tour-wide. Nightclubs may offer RSVP guest lists with early, reduced-cost entry windows, which act like soft discounts but depend on capacity, dress code, and arrival time.

Refunds, Exchanges, and Ticket Insurance

Most tickets are final sale. If one of the upcoming events is postponed, the original tickets are honored; cancellations prompt automatic refunds to the original payment method. Some platforms allow paid upgrades (e.g., GA to balcony or GA+ to VIP) when inventory exists. Name changes and transfers depend on the ticketing provider. Optional insurance—usually $8–$25 USD per ticket—can reimburse for covered events like illness or travel disruption, but it excludes schedule conflicts or change-of-mind. Always read event pages for exact inclusions, age limits, and fees before purchase.

Show Preview for Loud Luxury Tickets 2025

Headliners in the Mix

Expect the duo to anchor every night with their breakout “Body (feat. Brando),” typically saved for a euphoric finale or an encore sing‑along. “Love No More (feat. anders)” should deliver a hands‑in‑the‑air early peak, while “I’m Not Alright (with Bryce Vine)” brings a punchy pop crossover that cuts through big rooms. Deeper fan favorites like “Cold Feet” and the Craig David–tipped “Fill Me In” (with Ryan Shepherd) add contrast, and 2020’s “Nights Like This” provides a moody, late‑night glow.

Classics Versus New Material

Loud Luxury sets usually balance familiarity with freshness; expect roughly a 60/40 split between proven hits and new cuts. Alongside the staples above, anticipate recent 2024–2025 singles, club edits, and a few “IDs” they have been teasing in Vegas rooms and on festival stages. New material tends to lean bass‑house and piano‑house, with crisp toplines and call‑and‑response hooks that translate well from theaters like The San Jose Civic to cavernous spaces such as Radius Chicago.

Special Performances and Covers

The duo often builds “acoustic‑style” breakdowns by stripping the kick and bass under “Body” or “Love No More,” inviting the crowd to carry the chorus before a confetti‑laced drop. They also sprinkle cheeky throwback moments—quick teases of “Mr. Brightside,” 2000s R&B hooks, or a classic house riff—glued together with custom mashups. Don’t be surprised by a fresh take on Craig David‑era UK garage during “Fill Me In,” or a tempo flip that pivots a pop chorus into a thumping four‑on‑the‑floor payoff.

Stage Production and Visuals

Production scales to the room. Club dates at Omnia, Marquee, and Hakkasan emphasize laser canopies, CO2 jets, strobes, and tightly synced LED backdrops featuring neon‑washed brand visuals. Theater and arena shows—Echostage, The Sylvee, or The Rooftop at Pier 17—layer in wider LED walls, pyro hits on the biggest nights, and panoramic camera cuts for crowd‑on‑screen moments. Expect color‑coded looks: cool blues for introspective tracks like “Cold Feet,” warm ambers on “Love No More,” and full‑spectrum blasts on drops.

Flow and Pacing Across Venues

Afternoon beach‑club sets favor breezier rhythms and vocal‑heavy selections, with “Nights Like This” and newer piano‑house IDs shining in daylight. Late‑night festival slots ramp energy with quicker transitions, snappier bootlegs, and heavier bass edits, often closing on “Body.” Throughout, they maintain a narrative arc—warm‑up grooves, sing‑along core, peak‑time fireworks, and a feel‑good finale—while swapping in local crowd favorites and timely edits. It adds up to a polished, high‑energy journey that still leaves room for surprise.

Crowd interaction and personalization:
Andrew and Joe keep the mic work upbeat but measured, using clean count‑ins and call‑and‑response moments to lock the room before big drops. Expect city‑name flashes and venue‑specific shout‑outs baked into the visuals, plus “lights up” cues that turn thousands of phones into a canopy during choruses. They’ll occasionally tailor a quick edit—swapping a local sports chant or regional classic into a build—to spark a unique pop. The result is a party that feels dialed‑in, not cookie‑cutter. Fans leave satisfied. Loud Luxury’s live shows feel like a turbo-charged dance party built around big singalong hooks and sleek house drops. As a DJ-producer duo, they move fast between tracks, blending their hits with remixes and surprise throwbacks so the energy never dips. Expect hands-in-the-air buildups, chest-thumping bass, and cue-perfect transitions that make the room move as one.

Engagement is a defining feature. They’re on the mic to hype the crowd, lead call-and-response chants, and time “hands up” moments with the beat. They’ll often pull the volume to let the audience sing a chorus, then slam the drop with added low-end and strobing. Visually, sets lean on LED walls and lasers at theaters and festivals, with strobes, CO2 cannons, confetti bursts, and, on large stages, pyro accents that punctuate the biggest moments.

You’ll see different flavors of the show across venues. Nightclubs (like marquee Las Vegas rooms) usually start late—often around 10:30 p.m.—and can run 90 to 120 minutes depending on the slot, with the DJ booth close to the floor, bottle-service tables, and a dense, high-energy crowd. Theater venues and big halls typically schedule earlier evenings with opening DJs; Loud Luxury’s headline window there lands near 75 to 90 minutes. Festival appearances are tighter—about 45 to 60 minutes—but pack maximum highlights, quick transitions, and extra-large production.

The atmosphere is upbeat and social. Expect bright, melodic singalongs (think “Body” and “Love No More”), friendly dance circles, and frequent flashes of phones lighting the room. Security checks are standard, re-entry rules vary by venue, and hydration stations are common at festivals. Ear protection is smart if you’re close to the subs.

Past reactions capture the vibe: “Never stopped dancing for the entire set.” “It felt like a giant singalong with drops that shook the floor.” “They kept it fun and fast—no dead air, just banger after banger.”

Merch is usually available at theaters and festivals, with branded tees, hoodies, caps, and occasional limited-run tour pieces; sizes can sell out before the headliner finishes. Lines are shortest right after doors open or just after the set ends. Payment is typically cashless (cards and mobile wallets). Nightclubs may have limited or no onsite merch, so check the venue page; if you miss something, the duo’s online store generally carries core designs.

Arrive early, pace yourself, and be ready to dance—Loud Luxury’s sets reward enthusiasm with momentum, color, and feel-good community energy all night and beyond.

Loud Luxury Concert Tickets FAQ

1) How much areloud luxury tickets?

For club residencies in Las Vegas (Omnia, Hakkasan, Marquee) or dayclubs like Tao Beach, general admission typically ranges $35–$95 before fees, with holiday weekends reaching $120–$180. Headline theater/civic shows (e.g., The San Jose Civic, The Sylvee, The Pinnacle at Nashville Yards) often list from $39–$99 for standard tickets, with premium balcony or VIP packages $125–$250. Festival passes vary widely: EDC Orlando three-day from about $229–$399, single-day $109–$189.

2) Where can I buy Loud Luxury tickets safely?

Purchase through trusted primary sellers or verified resale. For the fastest, safest checkout, use the link on our website that routes you to official and vetted listings for every date, including Seattle’s Showbox SoDo, Chicago’s Radius, DC’s Echostage, and Vegas residencies. To lock seats before low-inventory notices hit, go through our link and Buy today!

3) When should I buy to get the best price for Loud Luxury tickets?

Prices are dynamic. For club dates and theaters, buying early usually secures the lowest tier; for some shows, prices dip again 48–72 hours before showtime as sellers adjust. If a listing displays “Less than 1–4% of tickets left” (seen on certain Omnia dates), don’t wait. Check our live listings frequently, and when you spot a good drop via our site, complete checkout and Buy today!

4) Are VIP and meet & greet options available for loud luxury upcoming events?

Yes, but offerings vary by venue. Vegas nightclubs and dayclubs sell VIP table packages with dedicated entry, seating, and a spend minimum; prices can start near $500–$1,500 and scale with table location. Theaters sometimes offer balcony boxes or premium lounges. Formal meet & greets are uncommon for DJ acts, and Loud Luxury typically do not sell guaranteed photo-op packages; any artist interaction is usually through promotional contests or venue-hosted experiences.

5) What are the best seats at Venue Name for Loud Luxury tickets?

For GA dance floors (Showbox SoDo, Radius Chicago, Echostage), the sonic “sweet spot” is near the front-of-house sound booth. At The San Jose Civic, first ten rows center or front-balcony center deliver excellent sightlines; aisles ease movement. Rooftop at Pier 17 favors centered mid-floor for stage elevation, while Vegas clubs prioritize VIP tables along the main dance floor for sightlines.

6) What is the setlist for Loud Luxury’s 2025 tour?

DJ sets change nightly, but fans can expect core hits like “Body (feat. Brando)”, “Love No More (with anders)”, “I’m Not Alright (with Bryce Vine)”, “Cold Feet”, “Like Gold (with Stephen Puth)”, and “Aftertaste”, mixed with new releases, mashups, and high-energy house edits. They often weave in vocal anthems, tech-house drops, and throwback singalongs to keep momentum. Festivals skew faster and banger-heavy; club residencies lean groovier with longer transitions and crowd-led moments.

7) Are there any age restrictions at the show?

Yes, policies are venue-specific. Las Vegas nightclubs and dayclubs (Omnia, Hakkasan, Marquee, Tao Beach) are strictly 21+. Many theaters and civic centers are all-ages or 18+, but always check the event page. Major U.S. festivals like EDC Orlando are typically 18+; New Year festivals such as Decadence Colorado are often 18+. International events may have different legal age requirements, so verify the listing details and bring a valid, government-issued photo ID for entry.

8) Can I get a refund or exchange Loud Luxury concert tickets?

Ticket sales are generally final. If a show is postponed, your ticket is normally valid for the new date; if canceled, primary sellers offer refunds to the original payment method within a stated window. Verified resales follow platform policies. Optional ticket insurance can help cover certain emergencies. Always review the terms during checkout, keep confirmation emails, and if plans change, list tickets through the same verified marketplace to transfer them safely.

9) Will Loud Luxury perform at festivals or solo dates?

The schedule mixes headline shows—like The San Jose Civic, The Rooftop at Pier 17 in New York, The Pinnacle at Nashville Yards—with festival and residency plays. Notable festival appearances include EDC Orlando at Tinker Field and international stops like EDC Thailand. Multiple Las Vegas dates at Omnia, Hakkasan, and Marquee punctuate the calendar alongside club one-offs and theater nights across major U.S. cities.

10) What time do doors open, and how long is the set?

Doors commonly open 60–90 minutes before showtime. In theaters and civic centers, local support DJs may run 30–60 minutes, with Loud Luxury playing 75–105 minutes. Festival slots are usually tighter, around 60–75 minutes, aligned to stage schedules. Always check your ticket or the venue’s announcement on the day of show for final set times.

11) Any tips to save money and avoid surprises for loud luxury tickets price?

Buy early tiers, target midweek Vegas dates, and choose GA over VIP when view and sound matter most. Compare all-in totals after fees, not list prices. Set alerts on our website’s link, watch 48–72 hour drops, and split orders to dodge per-ticket service minimums sometimes. Behind the scenes and video previews are the fuel of Loud Luxury’s tour cycle, turning dates from Seattle’s Showbox SoDo and Las Vegas pool clubs to Chicago, DC, and Orlando’s EDC into must-see moments. The duo’s official YouTube channel, Loud Luxury, anchors this effort with polished music videos, aftermovies, and Shorts that freeze the instant a drop detonates, while venues such as Omnia, Marquee, Hakkasan, and Echostage publish multicam live clips the group often reposts. Sneak peeks arrive as quick Stories or Reels: soundcheck snippets from Showbox SoDo, sunrise gear checks at Tao Beach, lighting tests at The Sylvee, and booth angles in San Jose, revealing fader moves, cue juggling, and last‑minute transitions. Before heavy weekends—like Indigenous Peoples’ Day shows in Las Vegas and DC—or major festival stops at Tinker Field, a compact tour trailer stitches crowd waves, slow‑motion CO2 blasts, and skyline b‑roll with bold date stamps such as “Seattle Tonight” or “Chicago Friday,” ending with a link‑in‑bio prompt. Fan recaps keep the loop spinning: vertical phone POVs from the rail, balcony singalongs, and Vegas pans, often compiled into credited aftermovies that spotlight new IDs or a fresh flip of Body. These videos intensify hype by combining proof and promise: proof that rooms are packed and energy is high, and promise that the next stop will crest even higher. Humanizing rehearsal clips—missed cues, laughs, and setlist tweaks—build parasocial trust, while premieres on YouTube with live chat transform a trailer drop into an event. Platform‑native edits for Shorts, Reels, and TikTok earn algorithmic boosts through saves and shares, geotarget fans with “Madison tonight” or “Nashville Saturday,” and convert attention with countdown stickers and pinned ticket links. Finally, post‑show aftermovies create rolling FOMO, as Madison relives last night, Nashville buys in, and momentum carries straight into Decadence Denver and EDC Thailand.

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