TNA’s Slammiversary Ticket Prices Are Getting Absolutely Cooked (And They Deserve It)
Look, I’ve been one of the most consistent defenders of TNA for the last 8 years on the Discuss TNA podcast with “The Horror King” Gary.
We’ve hyped up their comebacks, praised the roster rebuilds, and argued they still had something special to offer. But even WE (Gary agrees, check it above) have to call it when the company starts acting like TKO Group/WWE with none of the star power to back it up.
Cheapest tickets for Slammiversary 2026 in Boston? $61–$62.
Yes, really. The IWC (especially r/SquaredCircle, where I’m not allowed, so FU Cassidy Haynes, Chasyn Rance-loving creep) is having a field day with it, and honestly?
Here are some of the best burns from the thread:
“Lil bro thinks they are TKO”
“I am NOT spending $60 on TNA in 2026 lmao”
“$61 for cheap seats is ridiculous no matter how you slice it.”
“61 USD for a TNA show as the cheapest tickets is diabolical.”
“Add a 0 to the end of that number and bam now WWE even agrees with you.”
One fan pointed out they went to Slammiversary in the same building (Agganis Arena) back in 2013 for the equivalent of about $30.
Very recent TNA Taping
Oof and Yup!
And if you’ve seen the crowd shots floating around from recent events… yeah, it’s not exactly a packed house vibe. Empty upper decks don’t lie.
When you’re charging premium prices but delivering midcard booking (EC3 putting over Eric Young’s tired “Cleanse” gimmick before bouncing, Hardy nostalgia acts, and questionable use of Tessa), fans notice.
TNA wants to be treated like a major player. Cool. Then stop pricing like one while the building looks half-empty and the “who are we actually paying to see?” conversation keeps coming up.
I still want TNA to succeed. I really do. But charging $60+ for nosebleeds while the product and attendance don’t match that energy is a great way to kill whatever momentum they’ve built.
Lower the prices, give people a reason to show up, and maybe stop booking like it’s still 2012.

