After weeks of concern about slow ticket sales, WWE has officially entered Configuration Two for WrestleMania 41—at least for Night Two.
According to WrestleTix’s April 5, 2025 update, 51,044 tickets have been distributed for WrestleMania Sunday, with a current seating setup of 53,410 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas. That leaves just 1,982 tickets currently available for the second night of WWE’s biggest show of the year.
For WrestleMania Saturday, WWE has distributed 48,621 tickets with 4,405 still available. Saturday also shares the same current setup of 53,410. Both updates reflect changes made over the past eight days, with Night One gaining 1,064 tickets and Night Two gaining 1,269.
Previously, reports suggested that WWE was struggling to move additional tickets following Jey Uso’s Royal Rumble victory. On the Dirty Sheets Wrestling Informer podcast, Billi Bhatti revealed: “Since the Royal Rumble, I can report that WWE has sold fewer than 500 additional tickets.”
He also addressed misconceptions about ticket sell-through percentages, adding: “These reports stating that 90% of the tickets are sold for WrestleMania are incorrect. The way ticket sales work is that you begin with Configuration Number One, then move onto Configuration Number Two, and if it’s an absolutely sold-out, high-demand event, they move onto Configuration Number Three.”
As of that report, Bhatti noted that WWE had not moved past the first setup, which caps seating at 51,481 per night. That has now changed—at least for Night Two.
Bhatti further explained that WWE’s ticket strategy is more revenue-focused than capacity-driven: “WWE has openly admitted they are overpricing tickets, constantly telling fans on every show that they’re ‘breaking records’ by charging higher prices rather than opening up more seats. They aren’t ashamed to brag about it either.”
He also cautioned that without price reductions, WWE could find itself in the same position AEW did with their Australia show: “The only way I see them achieving that at the moment is by discounting these ridiculous ticket prices. But then you run into the same issue AEW had with their recent show in Australia, where they allocated too many seats, couldn’t sell them, and ended up offering two-for-one tickets—benefiting those who bought late. That’s a situation TKO and WWE don’t want to find themselves in.”
With WrestleMania Sunday now past the 51,000 mark, WWE has proven it can build momentum close to showtime. The real test now is whether Night One can catch up—and whether ticket prices will drop as the event draws near.
Should WWE cut prices to push Night One over the top, or will the star power be enough to get there? Please share your thoughts and feedback in the comment section below.