AEW All In On Verge Of Becoming Biggest Wrestling Show Ever
AEW's Wembley card has been scrutinised, but the show is a huge business success.
AEW's upcoming All In pay-per-view is now less than 600 attendees away from becoming the biggest professional wrestling show of all time in terms of tickets distributed.
WrestleTix's latest update on the 27 August show's ticketing situation stated that 80,056 tickets have been distributed for the event so far. 84,048 seats have been made available for the Wembley Stadium, London supershow, meaning 3,992 remain.
Per WrestleTix:
AEW ALL INSun, 27 Aug 2023, 18:00Wembley Stadium, London
AdvertisementAvailable Tickets => 3,992Current Setup => 84,048Tickets Distributed => 80,056 (+710 since last update)Resale => 1,89380K crossed. The next record they are chasing is 80,709 set by WWE at WrestleMania 32 at AT&T… pic.twitter.com/up5NMTYsP2
— WrestleTix (@WrestleTix) August 14, 2023
WWE WrestleMania 32 currently stands as the show for All In to beat if it's to legitimately become the "biggest ever." Although WWE claims 101,783 were at AT&T Stadium on 3 April 2016, this is disputed, with the actual attendance reportedly 80,709. AEW has 11 days to hit that mark.
Typically excluded from these conversations are NJPW and WCW's two Collision in Korea shows in April 1995. Held in Pyongyang, North Korea, no tickets were sold for these shows, with the 355,000 attendees reportedly forced to attend by the country's regime.
The top five looked like this at the time of writing:
1. WWE WrestleMania 32 (3 April 2016) - 80,709
2. AEW All In: London (27 August 2023) - 80,056
3. WWE SummerSlam 1992 (29 August 1992) - 78,927
4. WWE WrestleMania III (29 March 1987) - 78,000
5. WWE WrestleMania 29 (7 April 2013) - 68,900