Categories: Wrestling News

Cost of Attending WrestleMania 42 Has Dropped Nearly 70% Compared to Last Year

New data from VegasInsider paints a striking picture of how dramatically the cost of attending WrestleMania has shifted in a single year. The total cost of attending WrestleMania 42 in Las Vegas has dropped 68.91% compared to WrestleMania 41 — falling from $5,542 last year to $1,723 in 2026 — driven primarily by a massive correction in ticket prices following last year’s record highs tied to John Cena’s final WrestleMania appearance.

The ticket pricing data is the most dramatic element of the shift. Two tickets to WrestleMania 41 averaged $4,692.98 at the point of purchase — an enormous figure inflated by once-in-a-generation demand for Cena’s retirement tour. That figure has dropped to $1,200.28 for WrestleMania 42, representing a 74.42% decline year-on-year. Accommodation costs have also eased, falling 38.47% from an average of $849.20 in 2025 to $522.56 in 2026.

The data was compiled from 774 ticket listings on Ticketmaster and a combined dataset of 2,071 hotel and Airbnb listings across the WrestleMania 42 weekend period, with year-on-year comparisons made against equivalent datasets from 2025 to ensure methodological consistency.

Las Vegas Accommodation Prices Still Spike 26.69% During WrestleMania 42 Weekend Despite Lower Overall Costs

While the year-on-year numbers show a significant decline, the data also demonstrates that WrestleMania weekend still drives a meaningful demand surge in Las Vegas specifically. Accommodation prices jump 26.69% during the event weekend compared to the week prior — with a two-night stay rising from $425 to $539 — before dropping 11.17% in the week following the event. The pattern confirms that WrestleMania continues to generate a concentrated hotel demand spike even in a year where the overall cost of attendance has corrected sharply.

The broader context of the pricing drop is important. Last year’s figures were genuinely historic — driven by a confluence of factors including Cena’s retirement tour, the return of WrestleMania to Allegiant Stadium, and what was widely described as record demand. The 2026 numbers represent a return to more typical market levels rather than a sign of weakened interest, though the timing does overlap with the ongoing conversation about WWE‘s WrestleMania 42 ticket sales running approximately 19.6% below last year’s pace. The full dataset and breakdown is available at VegasInsider.com.

Andrew Ravens

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