Backstreet Boys at Sphere: Are Tickets Worth It?
Saturday, June 20, 2026·4 min read
The Into the Millennium residency keeps selling out, but a starting price in the low hundreds buys you the most jaw-dropping room in Vegas.
I have walked past Sphere a hundred times now, and I still slow down every single time. So when people started asking me whether the Backstreet Boys run inside that giant glowing orb is actually worth booking, I went and dug into the real details instead of repeating a press release.
Here is the honest version. The Into the Millennium residency is a real thing, it has been selling out, and the band keeps adding dates because demand will not quit. Below is what I confirmed, what it costs, and whether I would tell my own family to buy in.
What's actually happening
The Backstreet Boys are running a residency called Into the Millennium at Sphere at The Venetian Resort. This is not a one-night stop. It is a long, rolling run that has stretched from late 2025 into 2026, including a New Year's Eve show, with a final block of summer 2026 dates that the official Sphere page lists across July and August.
They have added dates more than once because the rooms keep filling. That tells you something on its own. A nostalgia act with a fanbase this loyal does not need a marketing push, and the band has reportedly been one of the highest earning residencies in town. People are showing up in full force, often in matching outfits, treating it like a reunion they waited twenty years for.
Why a pop group works inside Sphere
Here is the part I did not expect to care about. Sphere is built around a wraparound interior screen that swallows the whole room, so the visuals are not a backdrop, they are the entire experience. That setup is wasted on a lot of acts, but it is a perfect match for a group selling memory and emotion.
When the giant canvas fills with millennium-era imagery and the hits everyone already knows by heart, the room does the heavy lifting. You are not just watching five guys on a stage from far away. You are standing inside the song. For a nostalgia run, that immersion is the whole point, and Sphere delivers it better than any standard arena could.
The price and where to stay
On the cost, be realistic. Get-in prices on lower dates have shown up in the low hundreds, often in the three-hundred range, and they climb fast from there into the four figures for premium sections and resale. There are also bundled packages that fold in a hotel stay and start higher. So the cheapest seat is a fair Sphere deal in my book, because even a budget ticket still gets you the most impressive room in Vegas. The trap is paying resale prices that quietly double the cost.
On where to stay, this is the easy part. Sphere sits right behind the Venetian and the Palazzo on the east side of the Strip, so booking either one puts you a short, mostly indoor walk from the door. That matters in July and August heat. If those are full or pricey, anything on the east side near that corner keeps you close and lets you skip a cab on a packed show night.
My bottom line
If you love this band, book it, because Sphere turns nostalgia into something you stand inside of, and the entry-level price is fair for what the room delivers. Just buy early at face value and stay at the Venetian or Palazzo next door instead of overpaying on resale.
David X Las Vegas earns a commission on bookings made through this link, at no extra cost to you. It never changes my honest take.
The facts above were reported by these outlets. The take is mine.
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