How To Get J. Cole ‘4 Your Eyez Only’ Tour Tickets

J. Cole is hitting the road this summer in support of his fourth studio album, “4 Your Eyez Only.” Kicking off on June 1 in Columbia, South Carolina, the 57-stop tour will include dates in the United States through August before ending up in Europe in September and Australia in December.

Some tickets are currently on pre-sale now for select markets and will continue to be sold until Feb. 23, while tickets for the public will go on sale Friday, Feb. 24. Depending on the venue, ticket prices start as low as $25. Members of J. Cole’s fanclub should have already received pre-sale codes, and American Express cardholders can use the code INGOLD to buy tickets.

J. Cole
J. Cole

Find out how you can get tickets to J. Cole’s “4 Your Eyez Only” tour. Pictured: J. Cole on Jan. 30, 2015 in Scottsdale, Arizona. Photo: Getty Images

June 1 – Columbia, South Carolina – The Music Farm

June 2 – Jacksonville, Florida – Mavericks Live

June 3 – Tallahassee, Florida – Potbelly’s

June 5 – Jackson, Mississippi – Hal & Hal’s

June 6 – Birmingham, Alabama – Avondale Brewing Company

June 7 – Baton Rouge, Louisiana – Varsity Theatre

June 9 – Little Rock, Arkansas – Metroplex Event Center

June 11 – Kansas City, Missouri – Arvest Bank Theatre @ the Midland

June 13 – St. Louis, Missouri – The Pageant

June 14 – Memphis, Tennessee – The New Daisy Theater

June 15 – Louisville, Kentucky – Mercury Ballroom

June 17 – Norfolk, Virginia – The Norva

June 18 – Greensboro, North Carolina – Cone Denim Entertainment Center

July 6 – Phoenix, Arizona – Talking Stick Resort Arena

July 8 – Las Vegas, Nevada – MGM Grand Garden Arena

July 9 – Anaheim, California – Honda Center

July 11 – Inglewood, California – The Forum

July 15 – Oakland, California – Oracle Arena

July 17 – Seattle, Washington – Keyarena

July 18 – Vancouver, British Columbia – Pepsi Live @ Rogers Arena

July 21 – St. Paul, Minnesota – Xcel Energy Center

July 23 – Auburn Hills, Michigan – The Palace of Auburn Hills

July 24 – Chicago, Illinois – United Center

July 28 – Toronto, Ontario – Air Canada Centre

Aug. 1 – Brooklyn, New York – Barclays Center

Aug. 4 – Boston, Massachusetts – TD Garden

Aug. 5 – Uniondale, New York – Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Aug. 6 – Baltimore, Maryland – Royal Farms Arena

Aug. 8 – Washington, D.C. – Verizon Center

Aug. 9 – Charlotte, North Carolina – Spectrum Center

Aug. 11 – Duluth, Georgia – Infinite Energy Arena

Aug. 14 – Miami, Florida – American Airlines Arena

Aug. 16 – Orlando, Florida – Amway Center

Aug. 18 – Houston, Texas – Toyota Center

Aug. 19 – Austin, Texas – Frank Erwin Center

Aug. 20 – Dallas, Texas – American Airlines Center

Sept. 29 – Copenhagen, Denmark – Tap 1

Sept. 30 – Oslo, Norway – Spektrum

Oct. 1 – Stockholm, Sweden – Annexet

Oct. 3 – Cologne, Germany – Palladium

Oct. 5 – Amsterdam, the Netherlands – Ziggo Dome

Oct. 6 – Berlin, Germany – Columbiahalle

Oct. 7 – Frankfurt, Germany – Stadthalle Offenbach

Oct. 9 – Zurich, Switzerland – Samsung Hall

Oct. 10 – Paris, France – Le Zénith

Oct. 12 – Nottingham, England – Motorpoint Arena

Oct. 14 – Birmingham, England – Barclaycard Arena

Oct. 15 – London, England – The O2 Arena

Oct. 18 – Dublin, Ireland – 3Arena

Oct. 20 – Cardiff, Wales – Motorpoint Arena

Oct. 21 – Manchester, England – Manchester Arena

Oct. 22 – Leeds, England – First Direct Arena

Dec. 1 – Auckland, New Zealand – Vector Arena

Dec. 2 – Brisbane, Australia – Riverstage

Dec. 5 – Sydney, Australia – Hordern Pavilion

Dec. 6 – Melbourne, Australia – Margaret Court Arena

Dec. 9 – Perth, Australia – HBF Stadium

Released on Dec. 9, 2016, “4 Your Eyez Only” became J. Cole’s fourth consecutive No. 1 album, selling 492,000 copies in its first week. The album has since been certified gold. Upon the release of the project, Cole found himself in hot water when he released the songs “False Prophets” and “Everybody Dies.” While the two songs were not featured on “4 Your Eyez Only,” the subject matter of the records had hip-hop fans assuming Cole was taking shots at Kanye West, Wale, Lil Uzi Vert and Lil Yachty.

According to the rapper’s manager, Ibrahim “Ib” Hamad, the songs were set to appear on the album but taken off last second. Hamad told Billboard the songs didn’t fit the overall theme of the album. “It was a great song. It was an album-worthy song, but it just didn’t make sense in the story that we were trying to tell.”

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