Cardi B is keeping the pressure on to maintain her sold-out streak — she’s framing this as a challenge to fans, not an admission of weak demand. The tour hype is real, and she’s using the drama to drive last-minute ticket sales.
Fans are pushing back hard — they’re citing sky-high ticket prices ($91 to $462 for Hamilton, $126 to $792 for Toronto) and the fact that Cardi B has a show in Toronto the night before Hamilton. Locals are questioning why they should shell out for two shows in one weekend, just an hour apart.
Cardi B posted on X that her March 31 Hamilton show was estimated around 80% sold out. Tickets range from $91.15 to $461.97 on Ticketmaster. Her Toronto show on March 30 is nearly sold out, with tickets from $126 to $792.
Cardi B’s blunt approach might work — or it might backfire hard with Canadian fans who are already annoyed about ticket prices and the tight concert schedule. Either way, she’s keeping her name in headlines.
Cardi B is not mincing words. The Grammy-winning rapper took to X this week to call out Canadian fans for dragging their feet on ticket sales — and she made it very clear she's not about to let anyone ruin her sold-out streak.
"And I'm letting you Canadians know, if you break my sold-out streak, I don't know what I'm going to do… But y'all better go buy them tickets," Cardi B wrote, estimating her March 31 show at the TD Coliseum in Hamilton, Ontario was around 80 percent sold out. She doubled down with another post: "I swear to God, if you break my streak — y'all better go buy tickets. Y'all not breaking my perfectly sold out streak." The trash-talk tactic, she explained, is something she's picked up from boxers looking to boost pay-per-view numbers.
But Canadian fans aren't exactly feeling the pressure — some are pushing back hard on social media. The complaints? Sky-high ticket prices, for one. Ticketmaster listings show Hamilton tickets ranging from $91.15 to $461.97, while her March 30 Toronto show — the night before Hamilton — has tickets from $126 to $792. That's a lot of cash for two shows in cities just an hour apart. Locals are questioning whether the rapper is really giving them a reason to show up when she's literally playing down the road the night before.
The Toronto date, for what it's worth, is nearly sold out. The Hamilton show? Still plenty of seats available, according to Ticketmaster's site. Cardi B recently sold out two consecutive nights at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles and she's clearly looking to keep that momentum going across her North American run. This isn't the first time she's sounded the alarm, either — back on Feb. 20, she posted to Vancouver fans warning them not to break her streak ahead of a Feb. 21 show at Rogers Arena.
The Little Miss Drama tour is supporting Cardi B's second studio album, *Am I the Drama?*, and kicked off in Palm Desert, California before heading across North America with an eventual wrap in Atlanta. For now, the drama is less about the album and more about filling seats — and whether Canada's going to come through for B when it counts.