David Byrne hits the Coachella stage on Saturday, Apr. 18, as the former Talking Heads frontman continues a spring-and-summer run across the United States that now stretches to Monday, May 18, at the Hippodrome Theatre in Baltimore.
The tour first went on sale through Live Nation and Ticketmaster, and many of Byrne’s dates have already sold out or are close to it. That has pushed fans toward third-party resale sites, where StubHub has tickets available, Vivid Seats lets buyers search by price, location and Super Sellers, and offers a credit on the 11th ticket after 10 online purchases. SeatGeek has tickets starting at $50, while TicketNetwork lists all-in pricing with fees included up front. Other resale options mentioned for Byrne include Event Tickets Center and Gametime, and Ticketmaster’s Face Value Exchange remains another way for fans to resell tickets at face value.
That mix leaves Byrne’s run in an unusual spot: a sold-out-feeling tour still open enough for bargain hunters, with prices ranging from $30 to $300 depending on the site and seat. For fans trying to catch david byrne coachella or one of the remaining stops, the practical answer is simple — buy early, compare the fees, and expect the cheapest inventory to disappear fast.
Byrne’s Coachella appearance gives the run fresh visibility, but the harder-to-ignore story is the inventory squeeze behind it. With dates running only through May 18, the last stretch of the tour is where the remaining tickets are likely to thin out first.






