Oasis have released a ‘third and final’ tour date in Melbourne amid sky-high ticket demand in .
Fans will be able to nab the extra tickets to see Noel, 57, and Liam Gallagher, 52, perform on November 4, 2025.
The brothers released one last date due to ‘phenomenal demand’, after Aussie’s battled to grab tickets for the four other dates on Monday.
Tickets for the extra Melbourne show will go on general sale October 18 on Ticketmaster at 12am.
Sharing the news on social media, the band wrote: ‘Due to phenomenal demand, a third and final Melbourne date has been added on Tuesday 4th November 2025.
Oasis’ Noel, 57, and Liam Gallagher, 52, have released a ‘third and final’ tour date in Melbourne amid sky-high ticket demand in
Fans will be able to nab the extra tickets to see Noel (pictured in August) and Liam perform on November 4, 2025
‘If you weren’t successful in the initial pre-sale ticket ballot, you might have another chance! General onsale this Friday 18 October.’
Fans went wild in the comments after the iconic duo released an extra date, penning: ‘already going to the first two shows in melbourne- is seeing them a third time too much?’
Visiting for the first time in 19 years, Oasis are also slated to take to the stage at Melbourne’s Marvel Stadium on October 31 and November 1.
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The stadium has a capacity of around 55,000, meaning around 110,000 fans will be able to see the legendary band live across the two tour dates.
Oasis will then head to Sydney to perform at the Accor Stadium on both November 7 and 8 to perform for around 167,000 fans across the two shows.
Fans lashed out at the prices of the highly-sought-after concerts, with general admission said to be going for as much as $300 each.
Hitting back at accusations of soaring prices, Live Nation’s chairman Coppel insisted the rise in prices is the same as in any other sector amid the cost of living crisis.
He said: ‘The average ticket price in 2004 was $75 for a live performance in . The average price last year was $128. The reality is, what else hasn’t quadrupled in price in 20 years?’
The brothers released one last date due to ‘phenomenal demand’, after Aussie’s battled to grab tickets for the four other dates on Monday
Tickets for the extra Melbourne show will go on general sale October 18 on Ticketmaster at 12am
‘We have six venues out of 2,700 live venues in . We are in fact the smaller ticketing company. Ticketmaster is a smaller ticketing company than Ticketek in this market,’ he added.
Amid the Oasis presale, fans took to X – formerly known as Twitter – to vent their frustrations over what they claimed was the most expensive ticket pricing they have encountered.
‘Oasis: By far the most expensive tickets I’ve ever bought. That queue for tickets is a high pressure sales tactic,’ journalist Andrew Fenton posted to X.
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‘Did anyone get presale Oasis GA tickets in Melbourne that weren’t $330?’ another person wrote.
One person complained that they went to checkout with two tickets for the Melbourne show and then received an error message that ‘put me back in the queue behind 20K people’.
‘Is this a joke?’ they wrote on X.
Many Oasis fans have already been left empty-handed when the hotly-anticipated 17-date UK reunion tour sold out in a matter of hours in an online fiasco.
Around 14 million fans faced eight-hour queues in a bid to get their hands on the highly-sought-after tickets to see the rock band live, with many still missing out.
Visiting for the first time in 19 years, Oasis are also slated to take to the stage at Melbourne’s Marvel Stadium on October 31 and November 1
Oasis will then head to Sydney to perform at the Accor Stadium on both November 7 and 8 to perform for around 167,000 fans across the two shows (Noel pictured in 2022)
While some managed to nab tickets, many were forced to splash out huge amounts on them after dynamic pricing saw costs soar to almost double the price in a matter of hours.
The Gallagher brothers then made tickets available for another two Wembley shows via a staggered invite-only ballot, but many fans were left disappointed after not being called up for the sale despite queuing for hours in the first sale.
Oasis shot to global stardom in the ’90s, with their 1994 debut album Definitely Maybe becoming the fastest-selling debut album in British history.
The following year (What’s The Story) Morning Glory? was released with smash hits Wonderwall, Don’t Look Back In Anger and Champagne Supernova, with Wonderwall topping the ARIA Top 10 charts for 11 weeks in a row following its release.
During their 90s heyday, Oasis visited in 1998 for the Be Here Now Tour after their chart-topping global success.
They delighted fans by returning Down Under for the 2001 Heathen Chemistry Tour, and again came back in late 2005 for the Don’t Believe the Truth Tour.
The band infamously called it quits after a backstage argument at the Rock en Seine festival in Paris in 2009.