Dolly Parton’s “rescheduled” Las Vegas residency has turned into a high-priced ticket scramble—where the safest way to buy is also the easiest to get overcharged.
Quick Take
- The six-show “Dolly: Live in Las Vegas” run at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace was moved from December 2025 to September 2026, with tickets still being sold across multiple platforms.
- The official primary path runs through Ticketmaster/Live Nation, while resale marketplaces list the same dates—often at steep, fluctuating prices.
- Resale listings commonly show “Rescheduled from” the original 2025 dates, and existing tickets are generally honored for the new dates.
- Ticket prices on secondary markets have been advertised in the roughly $1,700–$2,200 range, reflecting heavy demand and dynamic pricing.
What changed: new 2026 dates and what “rescheduled” means for buyers
The Colosseum at Caesars Palace is still the venue, but the schedule is not. Dolly Parton’s limited six-night residency—originally listed for December 2025—now sits on the calendar for September 17, 19, 20, 23, 25, and 26, 2026, with showtimes listed at 8:00 p.m. Ticket platforms label the events as rescheduled and typically indicate the original 2025 date associated with each listing.
That “rescheduled from” language matters for regular Americans trying to plan travel and avoid being burned. It signals the event listing you’re seeing may have originated with a prior on-sale, and it helps you verify you’re buying for the correct night. The reason for the move has not been consistently detailed across the ticketing pages in the provided research, so shoppers should treat unofficial explanations carefully and rely on what the primary seller posts.
Start with the official route: Ticketmaster and Live Nation
Ticketmaster is the official primary ticketing channel referenced in the research, with Live Nation serving as the promoter and partner listing. For conservative families budgeting real dollars in a high-inflation era, the key advantage of primary purchase is clarity: you are buying a ticket issued through the event’s official pipeline, not a speculative resale. Ticketmaster listings also promote digital ticket delivery timing and “collectible” digital add-ons tied to online purchase.
Primary buying is not a magic wand against sticker shock, but it does reduce the chances of ending up with the wrong date, an invalid transfer, or unclear delivery terms. The research notes digital “Hello, Dolly!” themed ticket collectibles and indicates that ticket delivery may occur closer to the show date. That means buyers should read the delivery window, understand whether tickets are mobile-only, and avoid making last-minute travel plans without confirming how and when entry credentials appear.
Resale sites can work—but know the price mechanics and the risk tradeoffs
SeatGeek, Vivid Seats, StubHub, and Vegas.com all appear in the research as places where these rescheduled 2026 dates are listed for purchase. That’s useful for sold-out sections or specific seat hunts, but it is also where price inflation shows up fast. The provided research summarizes secondary-market “lowest price” ranges around $1,777 to $2,228, with some variance between sites and across dates, consistent with dynamic pricing and shifting inventory.
Conservatives frustrated by corporate gatekeeping will recognize the pattern: when access is controlled by a few big players and inventory is limited, regular people compete with resellers and pricing algorithms. The research also points to price discrepancies between platforms, including cheaper advertised options on Vegas.com compared with higher “get-in” prices elsewhere at certain moments. Because these numbers move, shoppers should compare total checkout cost—fees included—and confirm the listing is explicitly for the 2026 date, not the original 2025 date.
Practical steps to avoid getting burned when you buy
Buyers can reduce headaches by using a simple checklist grounded in what the listings disclose. Confirm the exact show date in September 2026 and the venue name, The Colosseum at Caesars Palace. Look for “rescheduled from” notes to ensure you are not mixing dates. On resale purchases, review whether the tickets are mobile transfer, instant download, or delayed delivery, and make sure the marketplace offers clear buyer protections for invalid tickets.
Finally, remember that high-profile residencies can create urgency—and urgency is when people overspend. If the goal is simply getting in the building, consider less in-demand weekdays or sections that appear repeatedly across resale sites, and compare across platforms before committing. If the goal is the most secure purchase path, start with the official Ticketmaster and Live Nation listings, then use resale only when you fully understand the delivery terms and the full price with fees.
Limited data in the provided sources prevents a precise breakdown of fee structures, refund rules, or the exact cause of the reschedule. The clearest, verifiable information across platforms is the updated September 2026 schedule, the venue, and the reality that resale prices can be significantly higher than many fans expect—so the best “deal” is often the one that avoids surprises at the door.
Sources:
https://seatgeek.com/dolly-parton-tickets/vegas
https://www.vividseats.com/dolly-parton-tickets/performer/2771
https://www.ticketmaster.com/dollyvegas
https://www.stubhub.com/dolly-parton-las-vegas-tickets-9-17-2026/event/158602947/
https://www.vegas.com/shows/concerts/dolly-parton-las-vegas/
https://www.livenation.com/event/17C8vxG6u2dY8XP/dolly-live-in-las-vegas