Swifties were spending a lot at the moment when they were getting tickets to the Eras Tour. USA TODAY

Victory , a live event ticketing technology company, released a report comparing the average ticket prices for each of Taylor Swift‘s tour stops. For example, when the tour went live in Glendale, Arizona, before anyone knew the magnitude and magic of the show, the average price was $529.

Here are the Top 10 most expensive locations:

Indianapolis (Lucas Oil Stadium): $3,071

Miami (Hard Rock Stadium): $2,578

Vancouver, Canada (BC Place Stadium): $2,952

Toronto (Rogers Centre): $2,304

East Rutherford, New Jersey (MetLife Stadium): $2,130

New Orleans (Caesars Superdome): $2,023

Cincinnati (Paycor Stadium): $1,808

Chicago (Soldier Field): $1,786

Philadelphia (Lincoln Financial Field): $1,720

Santa Clara, California (Levi’s Stadium): $1,640

…. . ……………………………… Taylor Swift’s record-shattering show has traversed five continents and 51 cities. Fans have valiantly fought the Great War to get tickets, danced outside of open-roofed stadiums, donned elaborate outfits and tuned into grainy livestreams. Now the show is ending with three shows in Vancouver (…err Swift-couver), Canad
Vancouver I love you so very much,” Swift said introducing her final tune. “This has been the greatest last Friday night of the tour that I could have ever imagined with you. Would you give us one more song?”

Skipping back to grab her magenta “Karma” jacket, Swift and her dancers ended Night 1 in BC Place Stadium. And even though she’s sang “Karma is the guy on the Chiefs coming straight home to me” 16 times before (14 times with Travis Kelce in the crowd), she did not sing it Friday.

And then there were two. Confetti fell as the show drew to a close, after 2 a.m. on the East Coast.

If you’re in the central and eastern time zones, you’ve already met at midnight, which is the era Swift is heading into. This is the culmination era of seven songs. During “Midnight Rain,” Swift gestured with two fingers, signaling the final two shows of the tour, while singing her line, “And he never thinks of me except when I’m on TV.” She’s been doing the one-handed countdown since the Toronto shows. Swift admitted her favorite song to perform out of the set list is “Vigilante S***,” which is a spicy, edgy number where she and her dancers perform a chair-assisted dance of seduction.

Taylor Swift’s record-shattering show has traversed five continents and 51 cities. Fans have valiantly fought the Great War to get tickets, danced outside of open-roofed stadiums, donned elaborate outfits and tuned into grainy livestreams. Now the show is ending with three shows in Vancouver (…err Swift-couver), Canada.

Vancouver went all out to welcome Taylor Swift’s final three Eras Tour shows to BC Place Stadium.

“Vancouver I love you so very much,” Swift said introducing her final tune. “This has been the greatest last Friday night of the tour that I could have ever imagined with you. Would you give us one more song?”

Skipping back to grab her magenta “Karma” jacket, Swift and her dancers ended Night 1 in BC Place Stadium. And even though she’s sang “Karma is the guy on the Chiefs coming straight home to me” 16 times before (14 times with Travis Kelce in the crowd), she did not sing it Friday.

And then there were two. Confetti fell as the show drew to a close, after 2 a.m. on the East Coast.

If you’re in the central and eastern time zones, you’ve already met at midnight, which is the era Swift is heading into. This is the culmination era of seven songs. During “Midnight Rain,” Swift gestured with two fingers, signaling the final two shows of the tour, while singing her line, “And he never thinks of me except when I’m on TV.” She’s been doing the one-handed countdown since the Toronto shows. Swift admitted her favorite song to perform out of the set list is “Vigilante S***,” which is a spicy, edgy number where she and her dancers perform a chair-assisted dance of seduction.

Before starting her acoustic set, Swift admitted it’s the one part of the show that makes her kind of nervous because it’s different each night. She started on guitar with “Haunted” from “Speak Now (Taylor’s Version).”

“I have to sing this next song at some point in Canada, eh?” she said before mixing in “Wonderland” from “1989 (Taylor’s Version).” The song’s chorus repeats the sound “eh,” a common Canadian expression that can mean a variety of things.





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