The United Kingdom has gone further in organizing the Eurovision Song Contest 2023 announcing all the details concerning the presence of the public at the event. From March 7, tickets will be available to attend both the semi-finals and the final of liverpool.

In order to buy these tickets, Eurovision 2023 has already advised the public to create a British Ticketmaster account and thus have access to the ticket sales channel, the prices of which will vary depending on the event.

As reported EBU (the organization that brings together the radios and televisions attached to the festival) there will be nine shows around the festival and tickets for each of them will be available on sale March 7 at 1:00 p.m. CET.

The three most important events will be the two semi-finals (the prices of which vary between 35 and 300 euros) and the final (the prices of which vary between 95 and 440 euros). The organization has already warned that tickets can only be purchased for one event per user.

The 67th edition of Eurovision will be held for the ninth time in the United Kingdom due to the impossibility of doing so in Ukraine (the country that won the last competition). This unusual event had not occurred for 43 years. The last time Eurovision was held in a country other than the previous year’s winner was in 1980. Israel had won two years in a row, in 1978 and 1979, with Abanibi and Hallelujah, when he decided not to participate in 1980. Eventually it was held in The Hague, Netherlands.

The final of the competition will take place on Saturday May 13, while the two semi-finals will take place respectively on the 9th and 11th of the same month. The setting chosen to host this major European song festival will be the M and S Bank Arena, also known as Liverpool Arena, which has a maximum capacity of 12,000 people, being the largest venue in the city.

Liverpool will host Eurovision for the first time, but the ninth in UK history: London did so in 1960, 1963 and 1977; Edinburgh, in 1972; Brighton, in 1974; Harrogata, in 1982; and Birmingham, in 1998.

The stage at Liverpool Arena is over 450 square meters, plus a further 220 square meters of video screens, which move and rotate independently. Likewise, there will be 700 video tiles embedded in the ground and over 1,500 meters of LED lights.

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