Hayley Williams is hosting a multi-city bachelorette party concert next spring, and everyone is invited, except for… ticket scalpers.
Dubbed “Good Dye Young Presents: Hayley Williams At A Bachelorette Party”, the concert tour will be her first as a solo artist, and also her first huge outing since Paramore’s “This Is Why Tour” in 2023.
It will promote her latest Grammy-nominated studio album, “Ego Death at a Bachelorette Party” – released in August through Williams’ own label, Post Atlantic Records.
The tour will begin in Atlanta on March 27, 2026, before heading to Toronto, Boston, Philadelphia, New York, Baltimore, Silver Spring, Minneapolis, Austin, Phoenix, Oakland, and Los Angeles.
It will also make a stop in Nashville – the world’s bachelorette party capital.
For its European leg, the tour will touch down in Milan, Amsterdam, Cologne, Berlin, Copenhagen, London, Manchester, Glasgow, and Dublin.
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No to bots and scalpers
On Instagram, Williams said she is working with her team to make sure tickets land in the hands of her fans at reasonable prices.
“It’s been tough (to say the least), and unfortunately, there’s just no way to guarantee that zero tickets get scalped. But we’re doing our best,” she wrote in a post dated November 10.
The Paramore lead singer said she is testing Openstage – a ticketing platform used by Oasis, Bruno Mars, and Lana Del Rey – to combat bots and scalpers while giving her fans a better chance to access tickets.
“All registrants will be required to verify both their email address and phone number as a preventative measure against bots and scalpers.”
“Only those registered and verified for the pre-sale will receive a unique code to purchase tickets during the pre-sale period,” the 36-year-old added.
Pre-sales for the “Hayley Williams At A Bachelorette Party” tour will start Friday, November 14, at 10am in the United States (03:00 GMT).
Tickets will be available on a first-come, first-served basis, and registering for the pre-sale is the “best and potentially only chance” at getting one, Williams said.
“You shouldn’t have to jump through hoops to buy tickets to see the show, but unfortunately, it’s a broken and convoluted system,” she said.
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