Getting Jon Bon Jovi Forever Tour tickets for Dublin is your gateway to one of summer 2026’s most significant stadium shows. On Sunday 30 August, the band takes Croke Park for an evening of classic rock that spans four decades of hits, deep cuts, and the kind of arena energy that only Bon Jovi commands. This guide covers how to buy Jon Bon Jovi tickets in Dublin, where to sit at Croke Park, how to get there, where to stay, and how to build a proper Dublin weekend around the show.
Dublin’s show falls on Sunday 30 August 2026 at Croke Park, one of Ireland’s most iconic sporting and cultural venues. Jon Bon Jovi is a band that built stadiums, not just filled them — every song on the setlist is something millions have sung along to. The Forever Tour is exactly what the name suggests: a celebration of a catalogue that does not age, delivered with the polish and energy of a band that has earned the right to headline anywhere on Earth. This is going to be one of those shows.
Jon Bon Jovi Forever Tour · Croke Park
Sunday 30 August 2026
Doors 5:00 PM
A full stadium show from a band at peak power — classic hits that defined generations, delivered with the energy and professionalism that only four decades of arena touring can create.
Get Jon Bon Jovi Dublin Tickets Now →Tickets guaranteed valid or fully refunded · Prices shown upfront

What Makes the Forever Tour Special
Jon Bon Jovi did not just write songs that people listen to. He wrote songs that people sing along to in stadiums, in cars, at weddings, at funerals, at every threshold of a human life. “Livin’ on a Prayer,” “You Give Love a Bad Name,” “Wanted Dead or Alive,” “Shot Through the Heart” — these are not songs you hear. They are songs you become.
The Forever Tour is a celebration of that fact. It is not a nostalgia lap dressed up as a victory tour. It is a band that knows exactly what they mean to people and is giving that meaning the full stadium production it deserves. The setlist spans every era of the band, from their arena-rock beginnings through their later work, with the kind of precision and energy that comes from a band that has done this thousands of times and still means every note.
Dublin is a one-night event, which means Sunday 30 August gets exactly one chance to feel the full weight of that catalogue live in one room. You either get it or you do not. And if you are here, you want to get it.
The Venue: Croke Park
Croke Park is not a concert hall that sometimes hosts sports. It is one of the world’s most storied sporting venues — the heart of Irish Gaelic games for over a century — that opens its doors for the biggest international events. With a capacity of 82,300, it is Ireland’s largest stadium and one of Europe’s finest. The pitch is world-class, the facilities are modern, and the atmosphere is built into the walls themselves.
For a concert, Croke Park is transformed into a 360-degree experience. The stage is typically centered on the pitch with seating wrapped around it, meaning no matter where you sit in the stadium, you have a direct sightline to the band. The acoustics are good — the bowl shape helps — and the production design can go as big as needed. For a band like Bon Jovi that values both technical precision and crowd connection, Croke Park is an ideal match.
The venue sits in North Dublin, on the edge of the city but with excellent public transport links. It feels contained and purposeful — you are not wandering through a sprawling sports complex, you are walking into a specific, significant space.

The Night: What Happens
Doors open at 5:00 PM. The show is listed to start at 6:00 PM, but Bon Jovi typically takes the stage closer to 6:30 or 6:45 depending on crowd energy and opening setup. You can expect a 2.5 to 3-hour set with no intermission. Jon Bon Jovi is known for generous, well-paced shows that give the audience everything they came for and then some.
August 30 in Dublin means the sun is still high in the late afternoon and early evening. By the time the band hits the stage, you will have that long, golden-hour light across the stadium. As the show progresses and darkness falls, the lighting rig becomes more dramatic and the energy intensifies. That shift from daylight to night to full production is part of what makes a stadium concert in a place like Dublin work — it feels like the city is part of the show.
After the show, the crowd will disperse relatively smoothly. Croke Park has multiple exits, and Dublin’s public transport system is designed to handle large stadium events. Most people will head to the city centre, about a 20-minute journey by Luas (Dublin’s tram system) or taxi. Either way, the post-show logistics are straightforward and stress-free.
Getting Tickets: What You Need to Know
For a Jon Bon Jovi show at an 82,000-capacity stadium, demand is substantial. The best seats sell out quickly. Secondary markets then fill as the event approaches, with prices fluctuating based on tour reviews, weather forecasts, and momentum in the lead-up.
We recommend Ticombo for concert resale. Listings are real, prices are upfront, and every purchase comes with a buyer guarantee — if the ticket does not arrive or is invalid, you get a full refund. For a show this significant, that guarantee matters.
Three things to consider:
1. Seat type matters. At Croke Park, stage-side lower bowl seats give you proximity and a direct angle on the band. Mid-level seats (rows 15–30) offer elevation with still-solid sightlines — you see the stage without craning your neck, and the energy reaches you clearly. Upper bowl seats are the budget option but still valid at a venue this size; the bowl is tight enough that you are not miles away.
2. Stadium maps are your friend. Use the seat map before you buy to know exactly which side of Croke Park you are on and what angle you have on the stage. The pitch-centered setup means there are no truly bad seats, but some positions offer better sightlines than others. North, South, East, and West stands all work — it depends on your preference for proximity versus elevation.
3. Do not wait for a price crash. As August approaches, demand usually increases rather than decreases. The best-value decent seats can disappear weeks out. If you want to go and you have found a seat that works for your budget, buy it.
Check Jon Bon Jovi Dublin Ticket Availability on Ticombo

Getting to Croke Park: The Logistics
Croke Park is in North Dublin, about 3 km from the city centre, and it has excellent public transport connections. The Luas (Dublin’s tram system) serves the venue directly — the Red Line stops at Drumcondra, a 5-minute walk from the stadium entrance. From anywhere on the Luas network, you can reach Croke Park in 15–20 minutes. Alternatively, buses 3, 11, 16, 40A, and 103 all serve the area with regular service.
From the Drumcondra Luas stop or bus stop, the walk to the stadium is straightforward, well-signposted, and takes about 5–10 minutes. The surrounding neighbourhood is busy, safe, and well-lit, even late into the evening.
Driving is possible but not ideal. Parking in the immediate area is limited, and the roads around Croke Park become very congested after major events. Public transport will be faster, less stressful, and cheaper. Plus, you can enjoy a drink or two without worrying about driving home.
Where to Stay: Two Approaches
Stay near Croke Park or in North Dublin for convenience. Hotels around Drumcondra, Clontarf, or Ballymun are cheaper than city centre rates, the Luas connection is direct and fast, and you can be back at your hotel within 20 minutes of the show ending. The neighbourhood around Croke Park has developed significantly in recent years — good restaurants, pubs, independent shops, and a strong local feel. For a show-focused night with minimal stress, this is the smart choice.
Stay in central Dublin for the full city experience. Temple Bar, the Southside, Grafton Street, Stoneybatter, the Quays — these areas have museums, galleries, restaurants, traditional pubs, nightlife, and classic Dublin sightseeing. The Luas Red Line from the city centre to Drumcondra takes 15–20 minutes, so the commute on the night of the show is manageable even after a full day exploring. You get the Bon Jovi night AND a proper Dublin weekend.
Book early for good rates. Summer in Dublin is busy, and a major stadium show pushes demand across the entire city.
Beyond Sunday: A Dublin Late Summer Weekend
If you are staying near Croke Park, the neighbourhood itself has enough going on — the area around the stadium is increasingly vibrant, with good restaurants, bars, and that authentic Dublin feel that tourists sometimes miss. But honestly, most of your energy will go to the show and recovery the next day.
If you are staying central, build the weekend around what Dublin does best: the Guinness Storehouse (just a bus ride away), the Literary Pub Crawl (a Dublin institution), the Cliffs of Moher as a day trip (about an hour’s drive), Trinity College and the Book of Kells, the National Museum, Temple Bar for the buzz and atmosphere, Grafton Street for shopping and people-watching, the Jameson Distillery for a tour and a proper Irish whiskey experience. August means good weather and long daylight — it does not get dark until nearly 9:30 PM — so you have time for proper exploration before and after the show.
A Jon Bon Jovi night at an 82,300-capacity stadium in a city like Dublin is a headline event. The city is context, but a genuinely good one.
Questions People Ask
What is the Forever Tour?
Jon Bon Jovi’s global stadium tour celebrating the full catalogue of the band — a celebration of decades of hits delivered with the production and energy of a band that has earned the right to headline anywhere on Earth. Shows typically run 2.5 to 3 hours.
When exactly is the Dublin show?
Sunday 30 August 2026. Doors 5:00 PM, show starts around 6:00–6:45 PM depending on crowd settling.
How long is the show?
2.5 to 3 hours with no intermission. Jon Bon Jovi is known for generous, well-paced setlists that give the audience everything they came for.
What songs will they play?
The Forever Tour features songs from across the band’s catalogue — from their arena-rock classics like “Livin’ on a Prayer” and “You Give Love a Bad Name” to deeper cuts and later material. Setlists vary slightly by night and by region.
What are the best seats?
Lower bowl, stage-side, or mid-level seats (rows 15–30) on any stand. Croke Park’s pitch-centered stage design means there are no truly bad seats, but proximity and elevation matter for your experience. Choose based on whether you prefer to be close or elevated.
Is this suitable for families?
Jon Bon Jovi shows are energetic and loud, aimed at broad audiences. Families can attend, and many do. Be aware of noise levels and crowd energy. Age restrictions may apply depending on ticketing policies.
How do I get to Croke Park?
Luas Red Line to Drumcondra (5-minute walk), or buses 3, 11, 16, 40A, 103 to the stadium area. From central Dublin, the journey takes 15–20 minutes.
Should I drive?
No. Parking is limited and expensive, roads become gridlocked after major events, and public transport is faster, cheaper, and more reliable. Plus, you can enjoy the post-show atmosphere without worrying about driving.
Are tickets still available?
Availability changes regularly. Resale marketplaces like Ticombo offer updated listings with buyer guarantees.

