BTS revealed venue and ticket details for the Asia and Australia legs of the BTS WORLD TOUR 'ARIRANG', with the Asia swing beginning Thursday, Nov. 19 at Kaohsiung National Stadium and the Australia dates opening Friday, Feb. 12, 2026 at Marvel Stadium in Melbourne.
The band’s Malaysia stop is set for Dec. 12 and Dec. 13 at TM National Stadium in Kuala Lumpur, where organisers say the Kuala Lumpur shows will feature an immersive 360-degree, in-the-round stage design that places fans at the centre of the experience. Concerts in Sydney are scheduled for Feb. 20 and Feb. 21 at Accor Stadium, and the tour will continue with shows in Hong Kong and Manila next March.
Those dates arrive after a string of sellouts: BTS sold out all 41 stadium dates across North America, Europe and the United Kingdom, moving nearly 2.4 million tickets as the tour got going in April in South Korea and then continued through the United States and Mexico. The group will next play Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Saturday, May 23.
Ticketing for Kuala Lumpur is being staggered across presales and a general sale. The Army Membership Presale begins on June 3 at 11am, followed by a Trip.com presale on June 4 at 9am and a Live Nation presale on June 4 at 11am. The general on-sale for the Kuala Lumpur shows begins on Friday, June 5 at 11am via golive-asia.com. Prices range from RM338 to RM1,288 and the concerts are scheduled to begin at 7.30pm.
BTS representatives said the company had seen "overwhelming fan demand during presales" and described the response as "unprecedented", reflecting the rush for tickets that followed earlier legs of the tour. The 360-degree stage, organisers say, is designed both to put more fans close to the action and to expand stadium capacity compared with a traditional end-stage layout.
Context matters: the tour is produced by Live Nation and supports BTS' fifth studio album ARIRANG. The design and routing follow the tour’s opening in April and a rapid succession of sold-out stadiums in North America and Europe — a run that, organisers point out, has reshaped how stadium shows on this scale are staged and sold.
The friction is practical as much as cultural. Massive presales and multiple ticketing platforms create a scramble that often leaves fans juggling membership presales, third-party presales and general sale windows to secure seats. Those who missed the North America and Europe stadium dates will be watching the Kuala Lumpur timeline closely; organisers have offered multiple presale options, but demand appears likely to outstrip supply again.
For fans wondering what this means for the bts setlist: the tour explicitly supports ARIRANG, so songs from that album are expected to be central to performances, even as the 360-degree staging may change how older hits are arranged and presented on stage. That combination — new album material anchored by an in-the-round staging concept and the memory of 41 sold-out stadium dates — is the clearest signal yet that the group intends to make the Asia and Australia legs both a sonic and spatial step up from past runs.
Put plainly: if you want to see BTS in Malaysia, mark the presale and general-sale windows; if you want to know what they will play, the safe bet is that ARIRANG songs will anchor a set built for a 360-degree, stadium-sized audience.






