B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 -FYOP+- Complete Guide: Tour Dates, Tickets & Venue Info
Table of Contents
- B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 Overview: Japan's Best-Selling Rock Duo Returns to Arenas
- Complete Tour Schedule: All 20 Shows, Dates, Venues and Cities
- Ticket Prices, Seat Types, and B'z PARTY Membership
- Foreign Fan Buying Guide: How to Get Tickets in April 2026
- All 10 Venues Compared: Access, Capacity, Sightlines and Tourist Value
- Inside LIVE-GYM: The Concert Experience from Arrival to Encore
- Japan Travel Planning Around B'z LIVE-GYM 2026
- B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 Merchandise Guide
B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 -FYOP+- Overview: Japan's Best-Selling Rock Duo Returns to Arenas
B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 -FYOP+- is a 20-show arena tour across 10 Japanese cities running from April 11 to June 14, 2026, featuring an updated setlist and redesigned stage production built on the duo's sold-out 2025 dome tour. All shows run the same schedule — gates open at 15:30, with the performance starting at 17:00. For international fans, this is one of the most accessible B'z tours in years, and in our view at TIXVOY, it ranks among the top live music experiences Japan has to offer in 2026.
Who Is B'z? Japan's Best-Selling Music Act Explained
If you're new to B'z, a few numbers tell the story faster than anything else. The duo holds the record for 50 consecutive No. 1 singles on the Oricon Charts, along with 27 No. 1 albums and 4 No. 1 EPs. Their total worldwide record sales have surpassed 100 million copies — a figure that makes them the best-selling music act in Japanese history by certified sales, with no close second.
B'z was formed on September 21, 1988, and has always been a two-person unit by design:
- Takahiro "Tak" Matsumoto — guitarist, composer, and producer. Before B'z, he was a highly sought-after session musician, playing for acts including TM Network and Mari Hamada. His signature is a blend of hard rock riffing and precise melodic phrasing, with deep roots in blues and classic American rock.
- Koshi Inaba — vocalist and lyricist. Inaba's four-octave range and raw stage energy are the most immediately recognizable element of a B'z live show. His presence — whether on an arena floor or at the tip of a stage extension ramp — commands attention in a way that's impossible to describe and immediately obvious the first time you witness it.
The two kept B'z as a duo intentionally: they believed the combination of electric guitar and human voice could convey emotions that a full band lineup would dilute. Thirty-seven years of stadium-filling tours suggest they were right.
On the international recognition front:
- 2007: B'z became the first Asian act ever inducted into Hollywood's RockWalk, joining Aerosmith, Carlos Santana, Journey, and other rock legends
- 2008: Guinness World Records certified them as the "Best-Selling Album Act in Japan"
For Western rock fans discovering B'z for the first time, a useful reference point is this: if Aerosmith and Bon Jovi had a Japanese equivalent who somehow outsold both of them domestically and kept touring into their fifth decade without losing a step, that would be B'z. Their sound spans muscular hard rock anthems, blues-inflected ballads, and high-energy festival tracks — almost always anchored by Tak's guitar and Koshi's voice, with no filler in between.
What Is FYOP? The 23rd Album and Tour Concept
FYOP — short for Follow Your Own Passion — is B'z's 23rd full studio album, released on November 12, 2025. The title is as direct as it sounds: a declaration that, nearly four decades into their career, Tak Matsumoto and Koshi Inaba are still making music entirely on their own terms.
Sonically, FYOP sits in familiar B'z territory — hard rock as the foundation, with more pronounced blues textures and a rawer production aesthetic than some of their more commercial mid-career work. Longtime fans have noted that FYOP has more of the late-night, garage-sessions energy of the band's early 1990s output, wrapped in a contemporary recording quality.
The album launched a 2025 dome tour first — B'z LIVE-GYM 2025 -FYOP- — at Japan's largest venues (Tokyo Dome, Kyocera Dome Osaka, etc.). That dome run has now concluded, and the 2026 arena tour -FYOP+- is the next chapter. The "+" in the name signals exactly what it means: an evolved version of the same musical concept, with a different setlist configuration and stage setup tailored specifically for arena-scale intimacy.
The distinction matters for fans who attended the dome tour: -FYOP+- is not a repeat. The setlist will be rearranged, the stage production will be redesigned, and the tighter arena environment tends to produce a more intense, closer-contact experience than the vast dome shows.
Tour Scale: 10 Cities, 20 Arena Shows, April–June 2026
The tour spans the length of Japan geographically — from Okinawa in the subtropical south to Hokkaido in the north — and runs for just over two months:
| Month | Cities | Venue Highlights |
|---|---|---|
| April | Fukui, Hiroshima, Kagawa | Sundome Fukui (opened 1995), brand-new Anabuki Arena Kagawa (opened Feb 2025) |
| May | Okinawa, Fukuoka, Hokkaido, Osaka, Kanagawa | Golden Week Okinawa shows, Osaka-jo Hall, Yokohama Arena |
| June | Chiba, Aichi | LaLa Arena TOKYO-BAY (opened 2024), IG Arena Nagoya (opened July 2025) |
Every single show runs the identical schedule: OPEN 15:30 / START 17:00. This consistency makes travel planning straightforward — regardless of which city you choose, the same day-of timeline applies.
One scheduling note for international fans planning around the Okinawa shows (May 2–3): these dates fall squarely in the middle of Japan's Golden Week national holiday period. Hotels in Okinawa and domestic flights book out months in advance during Golden Week, with prices rising 50–100% compared to off-peak. If Okinawa is your target, secure accommodation and flights at the same time you confirm tickets.
The full 2026 Japan concert calendar shows just how competitive this period is — B'z LIVE-GYM sits alongside some of the highest-demand J-pop and rock events of the year, which is part of why secondary market availability matters.
Connecting the Dots: FYOP Dome Tour → FYOP+ Arena Tour
The relationship between the 2025 dome tour and the 2026 arena tour is worth understanding, because it shapes what FYOP+ will actually feel like to attend.
What's the same: the FYOP album as the thematic foundation, the same four support members — Shane Gaalaas (drums, American rock drummer who has played with B'z for over 20 years), Yukihide "YT" Takiyama (guitar), Ken Kawamura (keyboards), and Kiyoshi (bass, credited as 清). These four have been B'z's live band for years, and the chemistry is immediately audible.
What's different:
- Setlist — The -FYOP+- setlist will be reconfigured specifically for the arena format. Songs may be added, dropped, or reordered compared to the dome tour. For fans who attended 2025 -FYOP-, this tour is worth attending for the setlist changes alone.
- Stage design — Arena stages allow for more precisely calibrated sound and lighting in a smaller footprint. Pyrotechnics, laser grids, and video production can be tuned for an audience that's physically closer to the action. B'z have a decades-long reputation for arena production design, and FYOP+ is expected to make full use of the format.
- Atmosphere — A 15,000-person arena at 100% capacity, with every attendee facing the same direction and fully engaged, produces a specific intensity that dome shows — with their cavernous acoustics and more distant sight lines — simply cannot replicate.
At TIXVOY, we've helped thousands of international fans attend B'z LIVE-GYM over the years. The feedback we hear most consistently isn't about the pyrotechnics or the production scale — it's about the crowd. B'z audiences are concentrated, passionate, and incredibly disciplined in their attention. No light-sticks, no fan boards waving in your sight line, no distractions. Just tens of thousands of people completely locked into two musicians for two-and-a-half hours. That's an experience that's genuinely difficult to find anywhere else in the world.
Complete Tour Schedule: All 20 Shows, Dates, Venues and Cities
B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 -FYOP+- runs across 10 cities and 20 shows, from April 11 through June 14, 2026. Every show follows an identical schedule — doors open at 15:30, performance starts at 17:00 — making cross-city travel planning straightforward. The tour opens in Fukui (Japan Sea coast) and closes in Nagoya, covering the country from Okinawa in the south to Hokkaido in the north.
April 2026: Fukui, Hiroshima, Kagawa — Tour Opener Phase
The first three cities of the tour set a regional pattern: smaller-market cities that B'z has historically treated as core LIVE-GYM stops, not afterthoughts.
Fukui — Sundome Fukui (April 11–12)
Sundome Fukui is located in Echizen City, Fukui Prefecture — roughly 1.5 hours from Osaka or Kyoto by express train (Hokuriku Shinkansen extension also now reaches Tsuruga, cutting connections further). The venue opened in 1995 and holds approximately 10,000 people in its dome configuration (6,000 fixed seats + up to 4,000 temporary). B'z has a long history at this venue, making it a sentimental first stop for a tour that covers all corners of the country.
Fukui is not a major tourist hub by Japanese standards, but Echizen-Ono Castle and the Echizen lacquerware workshops nearby offer something genuinely off the beaten path for international visitors willing to explore.
Hiroshima — Hiroshima Green Arena (April 18–19)
Hiroshima Green Arena (formal name: Hiroshima Prefectural Sports Center) holds up to 10,000 people and opened in 1994. It sits in central Hiroshima, reachable by tram from Hiroshima Station in about 15 minutes.
For international fans, the Hiroshima stop offers the strongest tourism combination of the April phase: the Peace Memorial Park, Hiroshima Castle, and Miyajima Island (with the famous floating torii gate) are all within easy reach. The April 18–19 timing means cherry blossom season is typically over, but spring weather is mild and crowds at cultural sites are thinner than peak sakura period.
Kagawa — Anabuki Arena Kagawa (April 25–26)
This is one of the most interesting stops on the entire tour for architecture enthusiasts and "new venue" completionists. Anabuki Arena Kagawa (formally: Kagawa Prefectural Arena) opened on February 24, 2025 — making it one of the newest major arenas in Japan. It was designed by SANAA (the Pritzker Prize-winning architectural practice of Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa), with a form inspired by the flowing lines of the Seto Inland Sea.
Located in Takamatsu's Sunport waterfront district, the venue is approximately 7–10 minutes on foot from JR Takamatsu Station. Capacity is estimated at 12,000–14,000 for concerts. Attending the Kagawa stop means B'z is among the very first major rock acts to perform at this nationally acclaimed new space.
Takamatsu pairs well with a side trip to Naoshima Island (contemporary art museums in a remote island setting) or the famous Ritsurin Garden, one of Japan's finest traditional landscape gardens.
May 2026: Okinawa, Fukuoka, Hokkaido, Osaka, Kanagawa — Golden Week and Beyond
May is the most geographically diverse stretch of the tour, and also the most logistically demanding for international visitors due to Golden Week.
Okinawa — Okinawa Suntory Arena (May 2–3)
Okinawa Suntory Arena (formally: Okinawa Arena) opened in 2021 and holds 10,000 people for concerts. It's located in Okinawa City — note this is not Naha, the prefectural capital; it's a separate city about 40 minutes by car from Naha Airport.
The May 2–3 shows fall squarely in Japan's Golden Week national holiday cluster. If you're planning around these shows, treat them as the highest-difficulty travel logistical challenge of the entire tour. Hotel prices in Okinawa during Golden Week typically run 50–100% above standard rates, and flights from major Asian hubs (Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai, Hong Kong) book out weeks or months in advance. We've seen international fans secure tickets and then struggle to find any accommodation within 40 minutes of the venue.
The recommendation: the moment you confirm your tickets for the Okinawa stop, immediately secure flights and hotels. Don't wait even 48 hours. Okinawa's beaches, coral reefs, Shuri Castle, and traditional Ryukyuan culture make the extra planning effort genuinely worthwhile — but only if you don't get priced out. For full Golden Week event planning in Japan, including what else is happening around the country in the same period, check our comprehensive guide.
Fukuoka — Marine Messe Fukuoka Hall A (May 9–10)
Marine Messe Fukuoka Hall A holds up to 15,000 people (approximately 13,000 in concert configuration) and has been operating since 1994. What makes this stop uniquely appealing for Korean fans in particular: the venue is a short walk from Hakata Port International Terminal, where high-speed ferries from Busan operate. The crossing from Busan to Hakata takes roughly 3 hours — one of the most affordable and efficient cross-border options for attending a Japanese concert.
Fukuoka itself is frequently ranked among Japan's most livable and most food-forward cities. Hakata ramen, Hakata-style mentaiko, and the famous Yatai (outdoor stall) dining culture make an overnight stop here genuinely enjoyable beyond the concert.
Hokkaido — Makomanai Sekisui Heim Ice Arena (May 16–17)
Makomanai Sekisui Heim Ice Arena (formally: Hokkaido Prefectural Makomanai Indoor Arena) holds 13,000 people and was originally built for the 1972 Sapporo Winter Olympics — ice hockey and figure skating events were held here. It's one of the most historically significant performing venues on the tour. Located in the Makomanai Park area of Sapporo's Minami Ward, it's accessible from the Namboku Subway Line's Makomanai Station in about 15–20 minutes on foot or by bus.
May in Hokkaido is an unusual pleasure: while mainland Japan's cherry blossom season ended weeks earlier, Sapporo's sakura often blooms in early-to-mid May, offering a second-chance spring for fans traveling north.
Osaka — Osaka-jo Hall (May 23–24)
Osaka-jo Hall opened in 1983 and holds 16,000 people. It's located within Osaka Castle Park and remains one of Japan's most storied concert venues — virtually every major Japanese act has performed here, and its proximity to the actual castle creates a concert backdrop unlike anywhere else. JR Osaka-jo Koen Station is a 5-minute walk; Osaka Metro Morinomiya Station is about 10 minutes.
Kanagawa — Yokohama Arena (May 30–31)
Yokohama Arena opened in 1989 and holds 17,000 people. Modeled after Madison Square Garden, it remains a benchmark arena for Japanese concert production. The closest station is Shin-Yokohama — a Shinkansen stop on the Tokaido line — just 5 minutes on foot. From Tokyo Station, the Shinkansen reaches Shin-Yokohama in approximately 17 minutes.
June 2026: Chiba and Aichi — Grand Finale Stretch
The tour closes with two of its most forward-looking venues: a 2024-built arena on Tokyo Bay and a 2025-built arena that is arguably the most architecturally significant new venue in Japan.
Chiba — LaLa Arena TOKYO-BAY (June 6–7)
LaLa Arena TOKYO-BAY in Funabashi City, Chiba, opened in April 2024 and holds approximately 11,000 people. The venue is directly adjacent to Lalaport TOKYO-BAY, a large Mitsui Fudosan shopping complex, and is a 3–5 minute walk from JR/Musashino Line Minami-Funabashi Station.
The standout location detail: Minami-Funabashi is just two stops from Maihama Station on the Keiyo Line — the station for Tokyo Disney Resort. For fans traveling with families, or fans who simply want to combine a B'z show with a Disney day, the June 6–7 timing offers a clean opportunity.
Aichi — IG Arena (June 13–14)
IG Arena (formally: Aichi International Arena) opened in July 2025 and holds 17,000 people. Designed by Kengo Kuma — one of Japan's most internationally recognized architects, known for the Japan National Stadium and Tokyo's Suntory Museum of Art — the arena brings genuine architectural distinction to the Nagoya stop. It's located in Kita Ward, Nagoya, approximately 3–5 minutes on foot from Meijo-koen Station on the Meijo Subway Line. Nagoya Castle is visible to the south.
These are B'z's first performances at IG Arena — the venue only opened 8 months before the tour begins. Combined with being the tour's final two shows, the Aichi dates carry an outsize emotional weight for fans who follow the full run.
Quick Reference: Full Date-Venue-City Table
All 20 shows at a glance, sourced directly from the official B'z website (bz-vermillion.com):
| # | Date | Day | City | Venue | Capacity | OPEN / START |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Apr 11 | Sat | Fukui | Sundome Fukui | ~10,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 2 | Apr 12 | Sun | Fukui | Sundome Fukui | ~10,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 3 | Apr 18 | Sat | Hiroshima | Hiroshima Green Arena | ~10,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 4 | Apr 19 | Sun | Hiroshima | Hiroshima Green Arena | ~10,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 5 | Apr 25 | Sat | Kagawa | Anabuki Arena Kagawa | ~12,000–14,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 6 | Apr 26 | Sun | Kagawa | Anabuki Arena Kagawa | ~12,000–14,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 7 | May 2 | Sat | Okinawa | Okinawa Suntory Arena | ~10,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 8 | May 3 | Sun (Holiday) | Okinawa | Okinawa Suntory Arena | ~10,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 9 | May 9 | Sat | Fukuoka | Marine Messe Fukuoka Hall A | ~13,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 10 | May 10 | Sun | Fukuoka | Marine Messe Fukuoka Hall A | ~13,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 11 | May 16 | Sat | Hokkaido | Makomanai Sekisui Heim Ice Arena | ~13,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 12 | May 17 | Sun | Hokkaido | Makomanai Sekisui Heim Ice Arena | ~13,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 13 | May 23 | Sat | Osaka | Osaka-jo Hall | ~16,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 14 | May 24 | Sun | Osaka | Osaka-jo Hall | ~16,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 15 | May 30 | Sat | Kanagawa | Yokohama Arena | ~17,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 16 | May 31 | Sun | Kanagawa | Yokohama Arena | ~17,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 17 | Jun 6 | Sat | Chiba | LaLa Arena TOKYO-BAY | ~11,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 18 | Jun 7 | Sun | Chiba | LaLa Arena TOKYO-BAY | ~11,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 19 | Jun 13 | Sat | Aichi | IG Arena | ~17,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
| 20 | Jun 14 | Sun | Aichi | IG Arena | ~17,000 | 15:30 / 17:00 |
Across the full 2026 Japan concert calendar, B'z LIVE-GYM represents one of the most geographically distributed major rock tours of the year — with no city outside the Kanto/Kansai core getting just one show, and every city getting exactly two consecutive nights.
Ticket Prices, Seat Types, and B'z PARTY Membership: Everything You Need to Know
B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 -FYOP+- has five seat tiers ranging from ¥13,000 to ¥35,000 (all prices tax-inclusive). The two most desirable tiers — Premium and SS — are restricted to B'z PARTY fan club members only. Standard S seats were available through general sale, which opened March 14, 2026 and has since closed. As of April 2026, all official channels are sold out; secondary market platforms are the only remaining route for most international fans.
Seat Tiers Explained: Premium, SS, S, Stage Back, and Standing
The B'z ticketing structure is layered by both price and membership eligibility. Understanding it upfront saves a lot of confusion:
| Seat Type | Price (Tax Incl.) | Who Can Buy | Position | ID Check |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Premium | ¥35,000 | B'z PARTY members only | Best floor area, dedicated entrance | Required for buyer AND companion |
| SS | ¥18,000 | B'z PARTY members only | Premium-adjacent quality area | Recommended to carry ID |
| S (VC seat) | ¥13,000 | Vermilion Card holders only (priority tier) | Front row equivalent of stand section | Recommended to carry ID |
| S seat | ¥13,000 | General sale (now closed) | Arena floor and stands | None |
| Stage Back Side | ¥13,000 | B'z PARTY only (March add-on sale) | Faces back of stage, limited visibility | None |
| Standing (designated) | ¥13,000 | General sale, 6 venues only | Standing zone with assigned spot | None |
A few clarifications on specific tiers:
VC seat (Vermilion Card seat) is a subcategory of S seat available exclusively through the Vermilion Card priority sale — B'z's co-branded credit card for fan club members. The seat itself is positioned at approximately front-row equivalent of the 1st-floor stands, making it one of the best views available without entering the Premium/SS tier.
Stage Back Side seat became available in a surprise additional sale announced March 5, 2026, after the stage plan was finalized. These seats face the rear of the stage — performers' backs are toward you, and the stage design/set elements are mostly obscured. At ¥13,000, the price is the same as regular S seats, but the viewing experience is substantially different. B'z were transparent about this in their announcement.
Standing designated is only available at six specific venues: Kagawa, Okinawa, Fukuoka, Hokkaido, Osaka, and Kanagawa. The standing zone at these shows is within the same area as Stage Back Side — worth noting if you're considering a standing ticket at those locations.
For context on how Japan concert ticket pricing is structured across tiers — and why the gap between ¥13,000 and ¥35,000 exists — our pricing analysis breaks down the economics in detail.
B'z PARTY Membership: What It Is and Why It Matters
B'z PARTY is the official B'z fan club, previously known as B'z Club-Gym. In December 2024 it was rebranded and relaunched as part of B'z TICKET — a fully integrated ticket purchasing system accessible only to registered members.
Membership fees:
- First year: ¥4,500 (¥1,000 joining fee + ¥3,500 annual fee)
- Renewal years: ¥3,500/year
What membership provides:
- Priority access to all concert ticket sales before general release
- Access to B'z TICKET portal (where official tickets are purchased)
- Higher eligibility tiers for better seats (Premium, SS, VC seats)
The Vermilion Card is a B'z PARTY-exclusive co-branded credit card that grants access to the earliest ticket priority phase (Vermilion Card Super Early Bird), which opened December 1, 2025 — more than three months before general sale. For fans who routinely attend multiple B'z shows per tour, holding both a PARTY membership and Vermilion Card provides the best shot at premium seats.
The practical reality for most international fans: obtaining B'z PARTY membership requires navigating an entirely Japanese-language registration system and providing contact details that the platform expects to be Japan-based. While it's technically possible for overseas fans to register, the process involves enough friction that the majority end up pursuing tickets through secondary market channels instead. Our guide to fan club priority and credit card pre-sales in Japan covers the full mechanics if you want to understand the system before committing to the registration effort.
Premium Seat Exclusive Goods and ID Verification Rules
Premium seat tickets come with a bundled exclusive merchandise package — items that are not sold at the general merch booth and cannot be purchased separately. The -FYOP+- Premium goods set includes:
- Neck strap pass (lanyard-style commemorative pass)
- -FYOP+- Memorial Medal (housed in an acrylic display case)
- -FYOP+- Memorial Design Tapestry (collectible wall tapestry)
- Mini Tote Bag
These items are distributed at the venue on the day of the show. The process: Premium seat holders enter through a dedicated entrance separate from general admission. Staff stamp your seat ticket, then hand over the goods set simultaneously. The entire handoff takes 2–5 minutes. Critical rule: goods cannot be collected by a proxy — only the ticket holder personally can receive the package.
Photo ID requirements:
- Premium seat: Both the ticket purchaser and any registered companion must present valid photo ID at entry. Accepted documents include: driver's license, My Number Card (notification card not valid), passport (foreign passports fully accepted), photo student ID (current enrollment only), disability handbook, residence card or special permanent resident certificate (within validity).
- SS seat and below: Carrying public ID is recommended; staff may conduct random identity checks as an anti-scalping measure.
- Screenshots of ID, expired documents, and IDs in someone else's name are all invalid.
For international fans, the passport is the simplest and most universally accepted form of identification for all B'z show entry purposes.
Ticket Phase Timeline: From Fan Club Priority to General Sale
All official phases have now concluded as of April 2026. This timeline is provided for reference — both to explain why tickets are no longer available through official channels, and to give context for future B'z tour planning:
Browse shows and resale listings on TIXVOY. Payment status is tracked through Stripe Connect, and buyers should check section, delivery method and entry rules.
| Phase | Application Period | Eligibility | Result Notification |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vermilion Card Super Early Bird | Dec 1–6, 2025 | B'z PARTY member + Vermilion Card | Dec 13, 2025 |
| B'z TICKET 1st Priority (PARTY) | Dec 8–19, 2025 | B'z PARTY regular member | Dec 26, 2025 |
| B'z TICKET 2nd (PARTY + Club-Gym) | Jan 9–18, 2026 | Any B'z TICKET account holder | Jan 24, 2026 |
| Ponta Pass Member Priority | Jan 25 – Feb 1, 2026 | Ponta Pass subscribers | Feb 4, 2026 |
| Hayazo Pre-Reserve (1st) | Feb 2–8, 2026 | Pia NICOS card new applicants / Pia Premium members | Feb 11, 2026 |
| Seven-Eleven Web Lottery | Feb 9–18, 2026 | Seven-Eleven account holders | Feb 21, 2026 |
| Hayazo Pre-Reserve (2nd) | Feb 19–23, 2026 | Pia NICOS / Pia Premium members | Feb 25, 2026 |
| Ticket Pia Web Lottery | Feb 21–25, 2026 | General | Feb 27, 2026 |
| B'z PARTY Add-On (Stage Back Side) | Mar 9–12, 2026 | B'z PARTY member (as of March 2026) | Mar 20, 2026 |
| General Sale | Mar 14, 2026 from 10:00 | Anyone | First-come, first-served |
The general sale on March 14, 2026 was the last official opportunity for international fans without B'z PARTY membership to purchase at face value. That window is now closed. For a complete overview of Japan concert ticket price ranges — including how secondary market pricing typically compares to face value for sold-out tours — our pricing guide covers the landscape in detail.
Foreign Fan Buying Guide: How to Get B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 Tickets in April 2026
Every official B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 ticket sales phase — including the general sale that opened March 14, 2026 — has now closed. For international fans looking to attend, the legal secondary market is the only remaining viable option. TIXVOY operates within Japan's 2019 Ticket Resale Act framework and accepts international credit cards, making it the most practical route for overseas buyers. Our complete guide to buying Japan concert tickets as a foreigner provides broader context if you're new to Japanese concert ticketing.
Current Status as of April 2026: What's Still Available
To understand why secondary market is the only path remaining, it helps to understand the three structural barriers that prevented most international fans from securing tickets through official channels in the first place:
Barrier 1: Japanese Phone Number
B'z TICKET (the official ticketing portal) requires a Japanese mobile number to receive SMS verification codes during account registration. The system specifically checks for numbers on Japan's major carriers — NTT Docomo, SoftBank, and au. Foreign SIM cards and VoIP numbers typically fail verification.
Barrier 2: Japan-Based Contact Address
The B'z TICKET registration form expects a Japanese residential address. Fans without a legitimate Japanese address hit a wall here, even if they cleared the phone number barrier.
Barrier 3: Domestic Payment Methods
Even with a registered account, some priority sales phases only accepted payments through Japan-issued credit cards or domestic convenience store payment systems (e.g., paying at 7-Eleven or Lawson within a set window). International Visa/Mastercard cards, while sometimes accepted, failed at the final payment step for a significant portion of overseas buyers who attempted the official route.
These three barriers — combined, not separately — locked most international fans out of the official system. General sale, which opened to anyone with a Ticket Pia account on March 14, was the most accessible phase for foreigners. It required the least account infrastructure and accepted broader payment methods, but inventory was exhausted quickly given demand. That window is now closed.
Three Buying Routes Compared: Official vs SNS vs TIXVOY
With official channels closed, three routes remain for obtaining B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 tickets:
| Route | Current Availability | Price Level | Safety | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Official (B'z TICKET / Ticket Pia) | ❌ All phases closed | Face value (¥13,000–¥35,000) | ★★★★★ | No longer possible |
| SNS peer-to-peer (X/Twitter, Instagram DMs) | ✅ Listings exist | Highly variable (often 2–5× face value) | ★ (high fraud risk) | ❌ Not recommended |
| TIXVOY secondary market | ✅ Inventory available | Market pricing | ★★★★★ (escrow, ID verified) | ✅ Recommended |
On the SNS route specifically: we've tracked a consistent pattern of fraud targeting international fans on social platforms. Common schemes include payment followed by disappearance, invalid screenshot images passed off as real tickets, and single tickets sold to multiple buyers simultaneously. Japan's National Police Agency flags concert ticket scams as one of the top fraud categories affecting young foreign visitors. When you're thousands of miles from home and the show is days away, there's no realistic recourse if something goes wrong.
The legal question matters here too. Japan's Ticket Resale Act (チケット不正転売禁止法, enacted December 2019) prohibits ticket resale with the intent to profit in a way that harms consumers — but it does not prohibit legitimate peer-to-peer transfers or compliant secondary platforms. TIXVOY's operating model is designed around compliance with this law. For a detailed explanation of what Japan's resale law actually permits and prohibits, our legal guide covers the specifics without the legalese.
If you're stuck with sold-out tickets for any Japan concert, not just B'z, our sold-out concert buying guide covers the full landscape of approaches that have actually worked for international fans.
Step-by-Step: Buying via TIXVOY as an International Fan
TIXVOY is purpose-built for international buyers. The platform supports English-language navigation, accepts overseas credit cards (Visa, Mastercard, American Express) and mobile payment options (Alipay, WeChat Pay), and requires no Japanese phone number or address to register. Here's the complete flow:
Create a TIXVOY account
Go to tixvoy.com. Register with your email address. Identity verification is handled through the platform — no Japanese-specific information required.Search for your target show
Use the search bar to find B'z LIVE-GYM 2026. Filter by date, city, or seat type. Available listings show current asking prices.Submit a purchase request or buy directly
If a listing matches your needs, you can purchase directly. If no current listing fits — wrong city, wrong date, seat tier not available — submit a Purchase Request: specify your target show, seat type preference, and your acceptable price range. When a seller lists a matching ticket, you'll be notified automatically.Complete payment
Pay via international credit card or supported mobile payment. Funds are held in escrow by TIXVOY — the seller does not receive payment until ticket delivery is confirmed.Receive the digital ticket
B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 uses a fully digital ticketing system via the official B'z TICKET app (available on iOS and Android). After your purchase is confirmed, TIXVOY coordinates the digital transfer of the ticket to your app account. You'll receive clear instructions for downloading the app and accepting the transfer.Enter the venue
Open the B'z TICKET app on the day of the show and display your QR code at the entrance. Staff will scan it to confirm entry.
The full step-by-step process — including what to do if you encounter any issues during registration or payment — is covered in our TIXVOY platform walkthrough.
Digital Ticket Transfer and Entry Process for Overseas Buyers
B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 is a fully paperless event. Understanding how digital tickets work in Japan is essential for first-time attendees:
Dynamic QR codes — not screenshots
Japan's concert digital ticketing systems use rotating, time-refreshed QR codes. The code displayed in your app changes every 30–60 seconds automatically. This is an anti-fraud measure specifically designed to prevent screenshots or forwarded images from working at entry. The practical implication: you must display the ticket live from the app on your device — a screenshot saved to your camera roll will show an invalid (expired) code at the gate.
Transfer timing
Ticket transfers on TIXVOY typically occur 2–7 days before the show date. In some cases, particularly for shows in the final weeks of the tour, transfer may happen closer to the performance day. TIXVOY monitors every pending transfer and follows up proactively with sellers — you don't need to manage this yourself. If a transfer doesn't happen within the expected window, TIXVOY's support team escalates directly.
App installation
Download the B'z TICKET app in advance — don't wait until you're standing outside the venue. The app requires an account registered with the same email used for your ticket purchase. Some international users have reported App Store region restrictions; if you encounter this, switching your App Store region to Japan temporarily resolves the issue for downloading (no purchase required).
Network congestion at entry
Venue entrances during peak entry time (around 15:00–15:30) can have heavy mobile network congestion from thousands of fans loading apps simultaneously. Best practice: open the B'z TICKET app and navigate to your ticket screen before joining the entry queue. Some venues also offer offline ticket display once you've loaded the page — check the app settings before you arrive.
For Premium seat holders
Premium seat entry uses a separate dedicated entrance channel, bypassing the main queue entirely. Your B'z TICKET QR code is scanned at this dedicated entrance the same way as standard seats. After scanning, staff will process your exclusive goods package — confirm you have your seat ticket in hand as it needs to be stamped before goods are handed over.
All 10 Venues Compared: Access, Capacity, Sightlines and Tourist Value
Choosing which B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 show to attend isn't just about ticket availability — the venue itself determines your experience. The 10 arenas on this tour range from a 1972 Olympic ice hall in Hokkaido to a Kengo Kuma-designed arena that opened in Nagoya just eight months before the tour begins. Each has a different character, different access logistics, and different surrounding tourism value. This guide gives you the information needed to make that call before you book a flight.
Venue Overview Table: Capacity, Station, Walk Time and Opening Year
| Venue | City | Capacity (Concert) | Nearest Station | Walk Time | Opened |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IG Arena | Nagoya (Aichi) | ~17,000 | Meijo-koen (Meijo Line) | 3–5 min | July 2025 |
| Yokohama Arena | Yokohama (Kanagawa) | ~17,000 | Shin-Yokohama (JR/Shinkansen) | 5 min | 1989 |
| Osaka-jo Hall | Osaka | ~16,000 | JR Osaka-jo Koen / Metro Morinomiya | 5–10 min | 1983 |
| Marine Messe Fukuoka Hall A | Fukuoka | ~13,000 | Hakata Port area | 15 min walk / taxi | 1994 |
| Makomanai Sekisui Heim Ice Arena | Sapporo (Hokkaido) | ~13,000 | Makomanai (Namboku Line) | 15–20 min walk | 1972 |
| Anabuki Arena Kagawa | Takamatsu (Kagawa) | ~12,000–14,000 | JR Takamatsu | 7–10 min | Feb 2025 |
| LaLa Arena TOKYO-BAY | Funabashi (Chiba) | ~11,000 | Minami-Funabashi (JR Keiyo Line) | 3–5 min | April 2024 |
| Okinawa Suntory Arena | Okinawa City (Okinawa) | ~10,000 | No direct rail; taxi from Naha Airport | ~40 min | 2021 |
| Hiroshima Green Arena | Hiroshima | ~10,000 | Tram from Hiroshima Station | 15 min | 1994 |
| Sundome Fukui | Echizen City (Fukui) | ~10,000 | Takefu (Hokuriku Shinkansen area) | Taxi or shuttle | 1995 |
Two quick orientation notes for planning purposes: "Yokohama" is on this list but Yokohama Arena is located in the Shin-Yokohama district — not in the more scenic Minatomirai harbor area that most visitors explore. And "Okinawa City" is not Naha; it's a separate municipality about 40 minutes north by road. Both distinctions matter when booking accommodation. For fans planning a concert trip around the greater Tokyo-Yokohama region, our complete concert trip guide from Tokyo covers the logistics in full.
New Venues Spotlight: IG Arena, Anabuki Arena Kagawa, and LaLa Arena TOKYO-BAY
Three of the ten venues on this tour opened between 2024 and 2025 — and all three are worth attending specifically because they're new.
IG Arena — Nagoya (June 13–14)
IG Arena (officially: Aichi International Arena) opened in July 2025, making the June 2026 B'z shows among the first major rock concerts in the building's entire history. The architect is Kengo Kuma, whose other works include the Japan National Stadium and the Suntory Museum of Art in Tokyo. Kuma's signature approach — natural materials, light-diffusing surfaces, integration with the surrounding landscape — gives IG Arena a distinctly different atmosphere from the standard glass-and-steel arena box.
The arena is located in Kita Ward, Nagoya, approximately 3–5 minutes on foot from Meijo-koen Station on the Meijo Subway Line. Nagoya Castle is visible to the south of the venue. The combination of a brand-new world-class arena, a Kengo Kuma design, and B'z's first-ever performances at the space makes the June 13–14 dates perhaps the most architecturally significant concerts on the entire tour.
We've heard from attendees at IG Arena's first events that the acoustics are notably better than the building's age might suggest — the acoustic engineering received particular attention during construction, and the sound staging for floor seats reportedly rivals Yokohama Arena in clarity. These are B'z's first shows at IG Arena; they will have tuned the production specifically for the space.
Anabuki Arena Kagawa — Takamatsu (April 25–26)
Anabuki Arena Kagawa (officially: Kagawa Prefectural Arena) opened on February 24, 2025 — meaning B'z will play there roughly 14 months after the venue's debut. The design by SANAA (Kazuyo Sejima and Ryue Nishizawa, Pritzker Prize winners) is inspired by the flowing form of the Seto Inland Sea. The exterior is a curved, softly undulating shell rather than the hard-edged rectangular form typical of sports arenas.
Located in Takamatsu's Sunport waterfront district — 7–10 minutes on foot from JR Takamatsu Station — the venue offers an unusually appealing arrival approach: you walk along the waterfront toward a building that genuinely looks unlike any other arena in Japan. Takamatsu's tourism offerings extend beyond the venue itself: Ritsurin Garden (one of Japan's finest traditional landscape gardens) is 15 minutes away, and ferry access to Naoshima Island (the contemporary art museum island) is available from Takamatsu Port.
LaLa Arena TOKYO-BAY — Funabashi (June 6–7)
LaLa Arena TOKYO-BAY opened in April 2024 in Funabashi, Chiba. It's directly adjacent to Lalaport TOKYO-BAY, a large Mitsui Fudosan shopping complex — which means pre-show and post-show dining and shopping options are essentially inside the same complex as the arena itself. The venue holds approximately 11,000 and is 3–5 minutes on foot from Minami-Funabashi Station on the JR/Musashino Line.
The location detail that most international fans find interesting: Minami-Funabashi is two stops from Maihama Station on the Keiyo Line — the gateway to Tokyo Disney Resort. For fans traveling with family members who don't share their enthusiasm for J-rock, or for fans who want to extend a Japan trip with a day at Disney, June 6–7 at LaLa Arena creates a clean logistical combination that's hard to replicate at any other stop on the tour.
Classic Arenas: Osaka-jo Hall, Yokohama Arena, Marine Messe Fukuoka
Osaka-jo Hall opened in 1983 and holds 16,000 people. It sits within Osaka Castle Park — literally inside the grounds of one of Japan's most famous historical landmarks. The walk from JR Osaka-jo Koen Station to the arena entrance takes about 5 minutes and passes through the castle outer grounds. The acoustic profile of the venue has been well-documented by Japanese concert professionals over its 40+ year history; B'z have performed here multiple times across previous LIVE-GYM tours. For the Osaka stops (May 23–24), we recommend building a full day around the show: the castle grounds in the morning, a meal in Namba or Shinsaibashi in the afternoon, and the concert in the evening. For detailed day planning, our Osaka city guide for show-day visits covers this itinerary in detail.
Yokohama Arena opened in 1989 and holds 17,000 people. It's modeled structurally after Madison Square Garden in New York and remains a benchmark production venue for Japan's live music industry. The arena sits 5 minutes on foot from Shin-Yokohama Station — a Shinkansen stop that connects to Tokyo Station in approximately 17 minutes by Tokaido Shinkansen. For international fans based in Tokyo, Yokohama Arena is the most logistically straightforward venue on the tour: no subway transfers, no navigation complexity. The surrounding Shin-Yokohama area offers multiple dining options within a 5-minute walk, and for early arrivals, Yokohama's Minatomirai harbor district is accessible by subway.
Marine Messe Fukuoka Hall A (May 9–10) holds approximately 13,000 people in concert configuration and has an access feature that no other venue on the tour can match: it's a short walk from Hakata Port International Terminal, where high-speed ferries from Busan, South Korea operate daily. The crossing from Busan to Hakata takes roughly 3 hours, making the Fukuoka shows the most accessible concerts on this tour for fans based in Korea. For first-time Fukuoka visitors, the city consistently ranks among Japan's most food-forward destinations — hakata ramen, mentaiko, and the outdoor Yatai stall culture are all accessible within easy distance of the venue.
Remote Destination Venues: Okinawa, Hokkaido, Fukui — Worth the Trip?
Three venues on this tour require genuine travel commitment that goes beyond a domestic train ride. The honest answer: all three are worth it, but for different reasons.
Okinawa Suntory Arena (May 2–3) is the hardest logistical challenge on the tour but arguably the most rewarding destination. The arena opened in 2021 and holds 10,000 people — it's modern and well-equipped, even if it doesn't have the architectural distinction of the new mainland arenas. The real value is the destination: Okinawa's subtropical beaches, coral reefs, Shuri Castle (rebuilt after the 2019 fire), and Ryukyuan cuisine are unlike anything on mainland Japan. The critical warning: these shows fall during Golden Week (May 2–3 are national holidays). Hotels in Okinawa during Golden Week are often fully booked 3–4 months in advance, with prices 50–100% above standard. Book the moment you confirm tickets.
Makomanai Sekisui Heim Ice Arena (May 16–17) in Sapporo holds 13,000 people and carries a piece of Olympic history — it was built for the 1972 Winter Olympics, hosting ice hockey and figure skating events. You can feel the building's age and heritage in the structure. Sapporo's late-May timing works unexpectedly well for international visitors: while mainland Japan's cherry blossoms ended weeks earlier, Hokkaido's sakura often blooms in early-to-mid May, giving travelers a second spring. Sapporo's food culture (soup curry, Sapporo-style miso ramen, fresh seafood) and easy access to the Otaru canal district make the destination worthwhile on its own merits.
Sundome Fukui (April 11–12) is in Echizen City — not Fukui City, which can cause navigation confusion. The venue holds 10,000 people and was built in 1995. Fukui Prefecture is not a major tourist destination, but that's somewhat the point: B'z has played here across multiple LIVE-GYM tours, and there's a loyal local fan community that makes opening-night shows at regional venues feel particularly intense. Echizen lacquerware workshops and Eiheiji Temple (a major Zen Buddhist temple) are within day-trip range.
For navigating Japan's regional transport networks when attending shows at venues like Fukui, Sapporo, or Takamatsu — particularly the local buses and limited express trains that connect them — the AnyPASS Japan navigation app provides real-time transit guidance that goes beyond what standard map apps offer for regional Japan.
Inside LIVE-GYM: The Concert Experience from Arrival to Encore
A B'z LIVE-GYM show follows a specific rhythm — from the merchandise queue that starts hours before doors open to the regulated exit after the encore. Understanding that rhythm in advance makes the difference between a stressful first experience and a smooth one. The core timeline: arrive around 13:30 if you want merch options, doors open 15:30, show starts 17:00, and the concert runs approximately 2 to 2.5 hours. What happens within those hours is distinctly Japanese, and if you've only attended K-pop or Western rock concerts, some of it will surprise you.
Timeline: When to Arrive, Queue for Merch, Enter, and Leave
The day-of timeline for B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 -FYOP+- is identical across all 20 shows:
| Time | Activity |
|---|---|
| ~13:00–13:30 | Merchandise (グッズ) queues begin forming outside venue |
| 13:30–15:00 | Peak merch queue period — popular T-shirt sizes selling out |
| 15:30 | OPEN: gates open, ID check for Premium/SS seats begins |
| 16:00–16:50 | Most attendees are seated |
| 17:00 | START: show begins |
| ~19:00–19:30 | Show ends (including encore) |
| 19:30–20:00 | Regulated exit — staff direct sections to leave in sequence |
The merch queue is the most time-sensitive element of the day. TIXVOY team members who've attended multiple LIVE-GYM shows have seen T-shirt lineups stretch 200 meters or more by 13:30, and popular designs in standard sizes (M, L) often sell out within 90 minutes of the merch booths opening. If you want first pick of the full merchandise selection — especially specific designs or the tour pamphlet — plan to arrive by 13:00 to 13:30. This means arriving at the venue roughly 4.5 hours before the show starts.
At 15:30 (OPEN), the main gates open. This is when ticket scanning begins. Premium seat holders will be directed to their dedicated entrance, where staff will verify ID, process the exclusive goods package, and stamp your ticket before you enter. Standard seat holders can proceed to the main entrances. A useful note: the entry queue moves at a consistent pace at B'z shows — staff management is professional and the digital QR scanning process is fast. You typically don't need to arrive precisely at 15:30 unless you have a specific reason (Premium goods collection, finding your seat before the floor fills). Most attendees enter between 15:30 and 16:30 without issue.
Post-show exit is managed in sections at large-capacity arenas. Staff will hold certain sections in place and release them in sequence to prevent crowd compression in the exits. This is standard procedure at Japanese arenas and applies whether the show is at 10,000-capacity Sundome Fukui or 17,000-capacity IG Arena. Don't be surprised if the section beside you is released before yours — the sequence changes by venue and show.
For the complete process of presenting your digital ticket at entry, including what to do if your QR code shows an error, our Japan electronic ticket entry guide walks through every scenario.
What to Expect: Show Length, Setlist Structure, and Stage Production
B'z LIVE-GYM shows run approximately 2 hours to 2 hours 30 minutes, with a typical setlist of 18–22 songs. There is no intermission. The structure follows a consistent dramatic arc:
- Opening block (songs 1–4): High-energy opener — often from the FYOP+ album or recent catalog — that establishes the tour's sonic character immediately. The stage production hits full capacity from song one.
- Main body (songs 5–16): A mix of new material from FYOP and FYOP+ with fan-favorite tracks from the back catalog. B'z have 37 years of hit material to draw from, and Tak Matsumoto typically features an extended guitar showcase segment within this block.
- Climax section (songs 17–18): The setlist peaks here — typically the songs chosen to be most powerful in a large arena environment.
- Encore (songs 19–20+): After the lights come up briefly, B'z return for 1–2 additional songs. The encore is standard, not a surprise.
One critical note for anyone who attended the 2025 -FYOP- dome tour: the -FYOP+- setlist is deliberately different. This is not a repeat. B'z reconfigure their setlists specifically for arena format shows, and the "-FYOP+" designation signals an evolved version of the same thematic material. Songs may be added, dropped, or repositioned. Fans who did the full dome run in 2025 are attending the 2026 arena tour specifically for these differences.
Stage production for LIVE-GYM shows is among the most technically sophisticated in Japanese arena concerts. The FYOP+ tour is designed for arena dimensions — the stage design, lighting grid, and pyrotechnic positions are optimized for a maximum viewing distance of roughly 80 meters (the distance from the back floor rows to the stage at a 17,000-seat arena). Compared to dome tours where some floor attendees stand 150+ meters from the stage, arena LIVE-GYM shows are more intimate and more visually legible.
LIVE-GYM Etiquette: Key Differences from K-Pop and Western Concerts
The B'z audience follows a set of unspoken rules that are noticeably different from both K-pop concert culture and Western rock concerts. Understanding these before you attend is important — not because anyone will confront you for breaking them, but because following them makes the experience better for you and everyone around you.
| Behavior | B'z LIVE-GYM | K-Pop Concert | Western Rock Concert |
|---|---|---|---|
| Penlight / glowstick use | ❌ Not customary; may be used at specific moments if artist prompts | ✅ Constant throughout show | Varies |
| Large towels/fans raised overhead | ❌ Not done — blocks sightlines | ✅ Common | Rare |
| Singing along | ✅ Encouraged for anthems; natural call-and-response | Structured fan chants | Varies |
| Recording video | ❌ Prohibited during performance | ❌ Prohibited | Venue-dependent |
| Gift-giving to artists | ❌ No gift box at venue | ✅ Official gift box system | Rare |
| Crowd movement to stage | ❌ Stay in assigned area | Generally assigned | Mosh/standing zones exist |
The single biggest cultural difference for K-pop attendees: there is no structured fan chant system at LIVE-GYM. You won't find printed chant guides, designated chant moments, or anything resembling the coordinated call-and-response common at idol concerts. The audience participates through singing, clapping, and raw physical response — not through choreographed fan culture. The atmosphere is more akin to a great stadium rock show in the Western tradition.
Photography during the performance is prohibited and enforced. Venue staff actively monitor for cameras and phones raised for extended periods. Checking notifications on your phone is fine; recording video is not. For a comprehensive overview of Japan concert etiquette rules beyond B'z specifically, including what varies by venue type and artist, our etiquette guide covers the full picture.
What to Bring and What to Leave at Home: Complete Checklist
Bring:
- Your smartphone with the B'z TICKET app installed (digital ticket, dynamic QR code — screenshots will not work at entry)
- Photo ID — mandatory for Premium seat holders (yourself and any companion), recommended for everyone as random checks occur at SS seats
- Cash (¥10,000–¥20,000) — merch booths at some venues don't accept credit cards; IC cards are not universally accepted at merchandise sales points
- Water bottle — venues sell drinks but lines can be long during entry
- Earplugs (optional) — sound levels at Japanese arenas typically run high; LIVE-GYM production does not modulate for hearing sensitivity
Leave at home:
- Large bags (over A4 size) — some venues require bag check, which adds queue time
- Professional cameras with detachable lenses — these will be turned away at entry
- Gifts or letters intended for Tak or Koshi — there is no fan gift reception system at LIVE-GYM venues
- Penlight batteries you plan to use throughout the show — if you bring one, keep it dark unless specifically prompted
For a complete printable-style checklist covering everything from pre-trip preparation to post-show logistics, our first Japan concert complete checklist consolidates every item worth confirming in advance.
Japan Travel Planning Around B'z LIVE-GYM 2026: City Itineraries and Budget Guide
Attending B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 from overseas means building a Japan trip, not just buying a ticket. The good news: the tour covers 10 cities over two months, and most of them are strong standalone destinations that warrant the flight cost on their own. The challenge — particularly for the Golden Week Okinawa shows — is that travel logistics need to be locked in well before the concert. This section provides model itineraries for the most-attended stops, plus an honest budget breakdown at three spending levels so you can plan before committing.
Okinawa Golden Week Plan: May 2–3 Shows + Island Sightseeing
The Okinawa shows represent the single highest logistical stakes on the tour. Golden Week (late April through early May) is Japan's busiest domestic travel period; Okinawa during Golden Week is one of the country's most competitive hotel markets. The moment your tickets are confirmed, the accommodation and flight search takes priority.
Recommended booking timeline:
- Flight to Naha Airport: book 3+ months in advance (late January/early February for May dates)
- Hotel in Okinawa City or Naha: book at the same time as flights — prices roughly double during Golden Week
- Car rental or shared taxi pre-arrangement: book separately, as public transit from Naha to Okinawa City is limited
3-Night, 4-Day Okinawa model itinerary:
| Day | Plan |
|---|---|
| Day 1 (May 1) | Arrive Naha Airport → check-in → Kokusai Street evening walk, ryukyu cuisine dinner |
| Day 2 (May 2) | Morning: Shuri Castle → afternoon: Okinawa World (Gyokusendo cave) → concert (Okinawa Suntory Arena) |
| Day 3 (May 3) | Morning: Katsuren Castle (UNESCO) or Churaumi Aquarium → afternoon rest → second concert |
| Day 4 (May 4) | Depart or extend for beach/snorkeling day trip |
Note: Okinawa Suntory Arena is in Okinawa City, not Naha — it's approximately 40 minutes by taxi from Naha's hotel district. Budget ¥2,000–¥3,500 per taxi trip and plan the ride in advance, particularly for the post-show return when taxis can be scarce. Some attendees arrange pre-booked private transfers for the show nights.
For the broader Golden Week Japan travel context — including what else is happening around the country in the same period and how the holiday affects transportation — our complete Golden Week Japan guide for 2026 covers national planning logistics in depth.
Osaka and Yokohama: 2-Day Model Itineraries Around the Shows
Osaka (May 23–24, Osaka-jo Hall)
Osaka-jo Hall sits inside Osaka Castle Park — one of the rare arenas in the world where a UNESCO-adjacent historical landmark is literally your show-day destination. The 2-day Osaka itinerary practically builds itself:
- Day 1 (pre-show): Arrive → Dotonbori (takoyaki, kushikatsu, Glico sign photography) → Kuromon Market for lunch or dinner → Shinsekai district evening
- Day 2 (show day): Morning at Osaka Castle — the castle keep is open from 9:00, and the grounds are quietest before 10:00 — then a meal in the Tanimachi area near the venue → concert → Namba nightlife if energy permits
Osaka is also the natural base for a Kyoto day trip either before or after the shows. Kyoto is 15 minutes from Shin-Osaka by Shinkansen. For a structured Kyoto itinerary that complements an Osaka concert trip, our Kyoto day trip guide for 2026 provides timed walk-through options at various budget levels. For the show day itself and venue-adjacent dining, our Osaka one-day guide covers the neighborhood in detail.
Yokohama (May 30–31, Yokohama Arena)
Yokohama Arena is accessed through Shin-Yokohama — the Shinkansen station, not Yokohama's harbor center. For a proper Yokohama experience, combine the show day with Minatomirai (harbor area with the Landmark Tower observation deck and the Cosmo World ferris wheel) and Chinatown (Yokohama has the largest Chinatown in Japan).
- Day 1: Arrive Tokyo → Shinjuku/Shibuya exploration if time permits
- Day 2 (show day): Morning in Yokohama's Motomachi/Chinatown → Minatomirai harborfront → Shinkansen hop to Shin-Yokohama (17 minutes from Tokyo Station) → concert
Yokohama Arena's Shin-Yokohama location is actually more convenient for Tokyo-based visitors than for Yokohama harbor-based visitors — keep this in mind when choosing where to stay.
Nagoya (IG Arena) and Chiba (LaLa Arena): Combine with Nearby Attractions
Nagoya / IG Arena (June 13–14)
Nagoya is underrated as a Japan travel destination. The city has a distinctive food culture (miso katsu, Nagoya-style tebasaki chicken wings, hitsumabushi unagi rice) and Nagoya Castle — recently under reconstruction but still visually impressive — is within 10 minutes of IG Arena. The practical recommendation: stay in central Nagoya (Sakae or Nagoya Station area), visit the castle district in the morning of show day, and take the Meijo Line directly to Meijo-koen Station (IG Arena is 3 minutes on foot). No taxi, no transfers.
A side note: Inuyama Castle and Meiji Mura (an open-air museum of Meiji-era buildings) are both within 30–40 minutes of Nagoya and make for worthwhile day trips if you build extra days around the tour finale.
Chiba / LaLa Arena TOKYO-BAY (June 6–7)
LaLa Arena is in Funabashi — technically Chiba Prefecture, not Tokyo, but functionally part of the greater Tokyo metro area. Two Keiyo Line stops from Minami-Funabashi is Maihama Station, the entrance to Tokyo Disney Resort. For attendees interested in combining B'z LIVE-GYM with Tokyo Disney, the June 6–7 dates create one of the cleaner multi-activity Japan itineraries imaginable: Disney on June 5, B'z concert on June 6, and June 7 as either the second show or a recovery/sightseeing day.
For purely Tokyo-based visitors, the Keiyo Line from Tokyo Station runs directly to Minami-Funabashi — no transfers required, roughly 25 minutes.
Complete Budget Breakdown: Economy, Standard, and Premium Trip Plans
The following estimates are per-person for a 3–4 day Japan trip centered around one B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 show. Flights are estimated from major Asian hubs (Seoul, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Taipei). Prices are approximate April 2026 levels.
| Category | Economy | Standard | Premium |
|---|---|---|---|
| Return flight | ¥25,000–¥40,000 (LCC) | ¥45,000–¥80,000 | ¥100,000+ (business class) |
| Hotel (3 nights) | ¥15,000–¥25,000 (capsule/budget) | ¥35,000–¥60,000 (mid-range) | ¥90,000–¥150,000 (luxury) |
| Concert ticket | ¥13,000 (S seat) | ¥18,000 (SS seat) | ¥35,000 (Premium seat) |
| Merch | ¥0–¥5,000 | ¥10,000–¥20,000 | ¥30,000+ |
| Food + transport | ¥15,000–¥25,000 | ¥30,000–¥50,000 | ¥70,000+ |
| Total estimate | ¥70,000–¥100,000 | ¥140,000–¥230,000 | ¥330,000+ |
Golden Week adjustment: For the Okinawa May 2–3 shows, add 30–50% to flight and hotel costs versus the above estimates. The Economy tier effectively doesn't exist for Golden Week Okinawa — budget travelers who don't book months in advance will face either sold-out inventory or prices that push into Standard territory.
Transport pass note: For single-city stays, local IC cards (Suica, ICOCA) are the most practical. For multi-city tours — e.g., attending shows in both Osaka and Yokohama across a single trip — the JR Pass (7-day or 14-day) may offer net savings when combined with Shinkansen travel. The math shifts based on your specific itinerary, but for a Tokyo–Osaka–Nagoya routing, 7-day pass savings are typically meaningful.
The B'z LIVE-GYM tour schedule runs across summer festival season in Japan. If you're extending your trip beyond the concert dates, our Japan summer festivals 2026 guide covers the major events happening in the same cities and overlapping months.
B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 Merchandise Guide: Types, Prices and Buying Strategy
B'z LIVE-GYM -FYOP+- merchandise was officially announced on April 3, 2026, and all items are available venue-only — there is no official online store, no pre-order system, and no way to purchase after the show if you miss the window. For international fans making a long journey to attend, the merch situation deserves specific planning. The buying window is real and finite. This guide tells you what to expect, when to queue, and how to approach it without losing most of your pre-show day standing in line.
Expected Merch Lineup and Price Ranges for -FYOP+- Tour
The following price ranges are based on TIXVOY team records from multiple B'z LIVE-GYM events over the past decade. The -FYOP+- specifics match the official announcement; prices for unlisted items follow the historical B'z pricing pattern:
| Item | Estimated Price | Sell-Out Speed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tour T-shirt | ¥4,000–¥6,000 | ⚡ Fastest (often within 90 min of merch open) | Multiple designs; popular sizes (M/L) go first |
| Towel | ¥2,500–¥3,000 | Fast | Practical for the show; standard issue for B'z tours |
| Tour Pamphlet | ¥3,000–¥4,000 | Moderate | High collector value; photos and member interviews |
| Acrylic Keychain | ¥800–¥1,500 | Slow | Lightweight souvenir; good for suitcase-constrained buyers |
| Penlight | ¥2,000–¥3,500 | Moderate | Collectible only — using penlights during LIVE-GYM is not standard practice |
| Tote Bag | ¥2,500–¥4,000 | Moderate | Useful on the day for carrying purchases |
| Cap | ¥3,500–¥5,000 | Fast | Specific styles can sell out within 30 minutes of merch booth opening |
Payment note: Cash (Japanese yen) is the safest payment option for merch booths. Some venues accept IC cards; international credit cards are not universally accepted at merchandise points. Bring ¥10,000–¥20,000 in cash as your merch budget if you plan to buy multiple items.
For a deeper look at Japan concert merchandise strategy — including venue-by-venue timing patterns and what to do when queues exceed your patience threshold — our Japan concert goods buying guide covers the full approach across multiple concert types.
Three-Strategy Buying Guide: Pre-Show Queue, OPEN Time, and Post-Show
There are three realistic windows for purchasing B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 merchandise, each with distinct trade-offs:
Strategy 1: Pre-Show Early Queue (Recommended — arrive 13:00–13:30)
- Pros: Full inventory selection, no risk of size/design sellout, unhurried browsing
- Cons: 2–3 hours of standing before the show; requires comfortable footwear and weather preparation
- How to execute: Arrive at the venue by 13:00–13:30 and locate the merchandise sales area (グッズ販売所), which is typically set up outside the arena in a dedicated zone. Merch booths usually open around 13:00, with queues forming earlier. Have your list ready and your cash counted before you reach the booth.
Based on TIXVOY's observations across B'z shows over multiple tours: the T-shirt in popular sizes is the item most likely to be sold out by 15:30 (OPEN). If a specific T-shirt design is the priority purchase, early queue is the only reliable strategy.
Strategy 2: Arrive at OPEN, Buy After Entry (15:30+)
- Pros: Normal arrival time, no multi-hour pre-show queue
- Cons: Some items — particularly T-shirt sizes and popular cap designs — may already be depleted
- How to execute: Enter at 15:30, proceed directly to the merch booth inside or at the venue entrance, and purchase before finding your seat. The queue at this time is shorter than the pre-OPEN period but selection is reduced.
Strategy 3: Post-Show Purchase (19:30–20:00)
- Pros: Shortest queue — often negligible wait
- Cons: High probability that popular T-shirts and specific designs are sold out; reliable only for pamphlets, keychains, and tote bags
- Best for: Attendees who genuinely don't have item-specific priorities and are happy with whatever remains
The honest recommendation: if you traveled internationally to attend this show, strategy 1 is worth the extra time investment. The 13:30 arrival costs you approximately 2 hours of standing — a small fraction of the total trip investment, and the difference between getting the T-shirt you wanted and returning home without it.
Premium Seat Exclusive Goods: What's Included and How to Receive Them
Premium seat holders (¥35,000 tickets) receive an exclusive goods package that is not sold at any merch booth and cannot be purchased separately. This package is part of the Premium seat value proposition, and the distribution process is specific:
The -FYOP+- Premium exclusive set includes:
- Neck strap commemorative pass — wearable lanyard-style keepsake from the tour
- -FYOP+- Memorial Medal in acrylic display case — tour-specific design
- -FYOP+- Memorial Design Tapestry — wall-display collectible
- Mini Tote Bag — for carrying your day's items at the venue
How distribution works: Premium seat holders enter through a dedicated entrance separate from general admission. Staff stamp your seat ticket (スタンプ) and hand over the goods package at the same time. This process takes approximately 2–5 minutes per person. The stamp and goods handoff happen together — you can't receive goods without the ticket stamp, and the stamp establishes that entry has been processed.
Critical rule: Goods cannot be collected by anyone other than the named ticket holder. Proxy collection is not permitted under any circumstances. If you purchased a Premium seat ticket through TIXVOY and are traveling with a companion, companion registration (同行者登録) is required for entry — the companion must also be registered in the B'z TICKET system. For full details on the companion registration process and what's required, our Japan concert companion registration guide explains the steps.
For TIXVOY buyers who need to understand how the digital ticket transfer process works before the Premium seat goods collection — particularly the mechanics of transferring your B'z TICKET app entry to a new account — our LIVE QR PLUS digital ticket transfer guide covers the technical process. If you're new to TIXVOY and want an overview of how the platform handles international purchases end-to-end, our TIXVOY platform guide explains the full buyer experience from registration to venue entry.
Keep reading real TIXVOY pages
When this article has few direct relations, we fill the next steps with existing guides, Q&A, city, venue, artist, and show pages.
- GuideFan Club Lottery vs Secondary Market — Strategy Comparison
- GuideHow Foreigners Buy Japan Concert Tickets — 7 Methods Compared (2026)
- GuideArena Seats in Japan — Definition, Sightline & Venue Differences
- CityTokyo
- CityOsaka
- GuideStand Seats in Japan — Tiered Views & Where to Sit
- Q&ACan I buy Japan concert tickets without a Japanese phone number?
- Q&AHow do international buyers receive Japan concert tickets?
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Ask the AI conciergeFrequently Asked Questions
Can foreigners without B'z PARTY membership attend LIVE-GYM 2026?
Yes, foreigners can attend LIVE-GYM 2026 without B'z PARTY membership — but with limited options. B'z PARTY membership was required only for Premium (¥35,000) and SS (¥18,000) seats during the fan club priority phases. S seats (¥13,000) were available to the general public until the March 14 general sale closed. As of April 2026, all official sales phases have ended. The realistic path for non-member international fans now is through a legal secondary market like TIXVOY, which accepts overseas credit cards and does not require a Japanese phone number or address.
Are B'z LIVE-GYM 2026 tickets still available in April 2026?
Official channels are closed — the B'z PARTY priority phases, VERMILLION CARD priority, and the March 14 general sale have all ended. However, tickets can still be found through the legal secondary market. TIXVOY and similar platforms see ongoing seller listings, with volume often increasing in the days leading up to each show. Prices will be above face value (determined by market supply and demand), but the process is legal and compliant with Japan's 2019 Ticket Resale Prohibition Act. Focus your search on specific show dates rather than searching broadly — regional venues like Fukui and Kagawa tend to have lower competition than Nagoya or Yokohama.
What is the difference between Premium seat and SS seat at B'z LIVE-GYM?
Both require B'z PARTY membership, but the differences go beyond price. SS seats (¥18,000) are close-proximity good seats with no additional benefits beyond seating position. Premium seats (¥35,000) include an exclusive goods package: neck strap commemorative pass, FYOP+ memorial medal (acrylic case), memorial design tapestry, and mini tote bag. Premium seats also require strict ID verification at a dedicated entrance — both the ticket holder and any companion must present photo ID. SS seats have no such requirement. If your priority is the concert experience itself, SS delivers strong value; if you want the exclusive collectibles, Premium is worth the additional cost.
Do I need a Japanese phone number to buy B'z LIVE-GYM tickets?
Through official channels (B'z PARTY priority sales, general sale), a Japanese phone number was typically required for account registration and notification — one of the main barriers for international fans. However, all official sales phases are now closed as of April 2026. Buying through TIXVOY does not require a Japanese phone number. Registration uses only an email address, overseas credit cards are accepted, and digital tickets are transferred to your B'z TICKET app account without any Japanese phone verification step. You do need to download and set up the B'z TICKET official app (iOS/Android) before ticket transfer, since entry uses the app's dynamic QR code.
How early should I arrive at the venue for B'z LIVE-GYM 2026?
It depends on whether you plan to buy merchandise. If you want popular items — especially T-shirts in standard sizes — plan to arrive by 13:00 to 13:30 (about 2 hours before the OPEN time of 15:30). Merchandise queues form before 1:00 PM, and popular T-shirt sizes often sell out before 15:30. If you're skipping merch, arriving at 15:30 (OPEN) is fine — queue movement is smooth, and you can be seated by 16:00 to 16:30. All shows start at 17:00. The TIXVOY team recommends 13:30 as the target arrival time for anyone who wants to have full merchandise selection, given that a 2-3 hour pre-show wait is a small fraction of the total trip investment.
