How to Get Hamilton Tickets
Without Paying Broker Prices
The $10 lottery. The cancellation line. Box office tips. Broadway Week 2-for-1 deals. And how to find the best resale prices if none of those work out. Every method, ranked by price.
Hamilton in 2026: The State of the Show
Hamilton continues to be the most consistently demanded Broadway show almost a decade after its debut. With capacity numbers running above 90% and average ticket prices above $200 per seat, it is genuinely hard to get without planning ahead. Lin-Manuel Miranda is no longer in the original cast, but the show sells on its own at this point - not on any individual performer's name.
What changed in 2025-2026: the filmed version of the original Broadway cast was re-released theatrically in September 2025 for the show's 10th anniversary, bringing a new wave of demand from people who want to see the live production after discovering the show through the recording. Demand has not declined.
Hamilton also has a North American touring production that runs through early 2027 in cities across the U.S. and Canada. If Broadway prices are out of reach, the touring production offers the same show at typically lower prices in cities far from New York. Dates are confirmed for a significant number of tour stops - check the official Hamilton website for your region.
Every Way to Get Hamilton Tickets, Ranked by Price
Method 1: The Ham4Ham Lottery - $10 Per Ticket
The Ham4Ham lottery is Hamilton's daily digital lottery for $10 front row and orchestra seats. Named for Alexander Hamilton's face on the $10 bill, the program gives away 46 tickets per performance - about 3.5% of the house. You enter through the Hamilton app or official website on the day of the show, requesting up to two tickets. Winners are notified and must pay within one hour.
The odds are genuinely low - especially for popular weekend performances. But the cost to enter is zero and the reward is $10 orchestra seats. Download the Hamilton app and enter every show day you are available in New York. Many serious fans enter every day during a trip and treat winning as a bonus.
When ticket-holders cannot attend, their seats are returned to the box office and sold to people waiting in the cancellation line. These are sold at face value with no service fee. House seats - which are typically excellent center orchestra seats - are also released here when not used by the production. This is a legitimate way to get premium seats at face value on the same day.
The box office at the Richard Rodgers Theatre is open Monday through Saturday from 10 AM to 8 PM and Sundays from 11 AM. Join the line as early as practical. This method requires you to be in New York with an open day, but for a visitor willing to commit to the gamble, it is the best shot at a great seat at a fair price.
Broadway Week is a bi-annual two-week promotional period in January and September when participating shows sell 2-for-1 tickets - buy one, bring a guest free. Hamilton has participated in both the January and September Broadway Week promotions in recent years, making this one of the rare opportunities to see the show at a genuine 50% discount.
Plan well in advance - Broadway Week tickets sell out quickly, especially for Hamilton. Set a reminder for early January and early September and act the moment the promotion goes live. Check Playbill.com's Broadway Week announcements page, which publishes participating shows as soon as they are confirmed.
The Richard Rodgers Theatre box office sells tickets at face value with no online service fee. At $300+ ticket prices, the $14-per-ticket online service fee that Ticketmaster charges adds real cost to a pair of tickets. Walk-up box office purchase at face value is the cleanest way to buy Hamilton without any secondary markup.
Book 4-8 weeks in advance for the best combination of seat availability and pricing. Seats do become available weekly on Ticketmaster as well, but box office purchase avoids the online service fee and can give you a first look at availability before it hits the website.
If the lottery, cancellation line, and advance box office purchases all fail, the resale market is your reliable fallback. Hamilton consistently has secondary market inventory available through major platforms. The price premium over face value is real but the supply is dependable.
The most important decision on the resale market is where you buy. At Hamilton resale prices - often $400-$800 per ticket - a 28% buyer fee adds $112-$224 per seat. Buying through the TicketFlipping marketplace powered by TickPick eliminates buyer fees entirely, making the final cost meaningfully lower than StubHub or Vivid Seats on the same seats.
Find Hamilton Tickets - No FeesThe Touring Production: Same Show, Lower Prices
Hamilton North American Tour 2026-2027
The touring production visits over a dozen cities across the U.S. and Canada through early 2027. Tour tickets are consistently less expensive than Broadway - both at face value and on the secondary market - because tour stops are in markets with less intense demand than New York City. The production is identical: the same show, the same score, the same quality. If you cannot or do not want to travel to New York, the tour is a genuinely excellent alternative. Check the official Hamilton website for confirmed 2026-2027 tour dates by city. The Ham4Ham lottery is available at most tour stops as well, though policies vary by venue.
Resale Platforms: Where to Buy If You Cannot Get Face Value
When buying Hamilton tickets on the secondary market, the fee structure matters more than most buyers realize at these price points. Here is where to look:
Special Discounts Worth Knowing
- Military discount. Active and retired military personnel can get $25 off Hamilton tickets via ID.ME verification. A rare and valuable discount for a show that rarely offers any.
- Groups of 10+. Special group rates are available through Broadway Plus for groups of 10 or more. If you are organizing a company outing or a large family visit, contact them directly before buying individual tickets.
- TDF (Theatre Development Fund). TDF occasionally offers Hamilton tickets through their membership program to arts industry professionals. If you qualify for TDF membership, it is worth checking their current inventory.
- Broadway Week (January and September). As covered above - 2-for-1 when Hamilton participates. The single most reliable discounted path to the show for someone with schedule flexibility.
Hamilton resale tickets with zero buyer fees
The TicketFlipping marketplace powered by TickPick carries Hamilton tickets for both the Broadway production and major touring engagements - with no buyer service fees added to your order. At $400-$800 per seat, the fee savings over StubHub or Vivid Seats are meaningful. Same verified inventory, same buyer guarantee, no extra cost.
Find Hamilton Tickets Browse TicketNetworkGet Into the Room Where It Happens
Find Hamilton tickets for Broadway and the North American tour through the TicketFlipping marketplace - verified seats with no buyer fees added.
Find Hamilton Tickets - Zero FeesVerified tickets - No hidden buyer fees - Buyer guarantee