Stray Kids sell out 5-night KSPO Dome RUN IT opener, and this ticket rule has US fans rethinking resale

Stray Kids have officially sold out all five nights of their new world tour opener at Seoul’s KSPO Dome, turning Stray Kids RUN IT KSPO Dome tickets into pure gold for STAY. More than 70,000 seats across July 25, 26, 29 and August 1 and 2 vanished through presales and a single general sale.

The sellout, confirmed by JYP Entertainment on July 2, comes before the full RUN IT world tour schedule is even revealed, and ahead of the EP THIS & THAT in August. For international fans, especially in the U.S., the big question now is not just how huge this era will be, but whether chasing Seoul tickets on resale is even worth the risk.

Stray Kids RUN IT KSPO Dome Tickets Are Completely Sold Out

The Stray Kids World Tour RUN IT opens with a five-show run at KSPO Dome, one of Seoul’s largest indoor arenas, with around 15,000 seats per night. All five dates sold out after STAY 6th generation fanclub presales on June 29 and 30, followed by a global general sale on NOL World on July 1.

This is the group’s fourth world tour and their first since dominATE, which wrapped in October after 56 shows in 35 cities. The fact that they leveled up straight into a multi-night dome run, then immediately step into stadiums in Japan, signals that demand for RUN IT era shows is already beyond their last tour.

The music cycle is locked in too: digital single RUN IT, produced by 3RACHA, arrived June 24, and EP THIS & THAT lands August 7 with the track included. All of that momentum is feeding directly into ticket pressure.

Why Resale For RUN IT Seoul Is So Risky

For Seoul, every official ticket ran through NOL World at a flat 154,000 KRW, about 99 dollars, regardless of seat type. Buyers were capped at two tickets per person per date, and tickets are strictly name based, with on-site ID checks allowed.

That anti-scalping setup changes the entire resale game. Once NOL shows sold out, there was no official fan-to-fan exchange listed, and JYP has not announced any extra batches like production seats.

  • Price: 154,000 KRW face value for all seats
  • Limit: 2 tickets per person per show
  • Tickets: name based, no transfer to third parties

Secondary sites already using the RUN IT branding, such as brokers that state they are not affiliated with Stray Kids or JYP, are offering listings at heavy markups. Because the name on the NOL ticket must match the person entering, anyone who flies to Seoul with a resold ticket under a different name is taking a real risk of being turned away at the door, even if the QR code scans.

That mix of sky high demand and strict rules means prices on unofficial resale can climb while the actual chance of using the ticket stays uncertain. For most international STAY, especially those in the U.S., gambling on nonofficial Korean resale for KSPO Dome is more danger than reward.

What This Sellout Signals For Future RUN IT Tour Stops

The Seoul outcome hints at what is coming for the rest of the RUN IT world tour. Stray Kids are already booked for massive shows across Asia, including seven Japanese dates projected to pull roughly 370,000 fans, plus festival stages like Governors Ball in New York and Rock in Rio.

At the time of writing, there are no RUN IT dates officially announced for the U.S. or Europe, but the scale of the tour and their recent global festival run make new legs very likely. When those tickets arrive, fans should expect tight presale systems, heavy fanclub priority and fast sellouts.

The smart move now is preparation: join or renew the official STAY membership, follow Stray Kids and JYP channels closely, set up accounts on the ticketing platforms usually used in your region, and keep time zones in mind so you are logged in the second presales open. If Seoul proved anything, it is that in the RUN IT era, every minute in the queue will matter.

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