Poison Scraps 40th Anniversary Tour After Singer Bret Michaels’ Outrageous Money Demands
If you were dusting off your laced-up leather pants and teasing your hair to the heavens in anticipation of a Poison 40th anniversary tour this summer, you might want to sit down. Actually, put the Aqua Net hairspray away entirely. The glam metal legends have officially shelved plans for their 2026 reunion, and the reason is as old as the music industry itself: a massive, ego-bruising fight over money. Specifically, Bret Michaels allegedly demanding a payday that would make even the greediest corporate tycoon blush a bright shade of candy apple red.
Bret Michaels is the Reason Why We Can’t Celebrate Nice Things
According to Poison drummer Rikki Rockett, who spilled the tea to Page Six, the band was all set to hit the road. Everyone was on board – Rockett, guitarist C.C. DeVille, and bassist Bobby Dall were ready to sign on the dotted line. The only holdout? The bleached-blonde bandana-wearing frontman himself.
Bret Michaels Allegedly Demanded 600% More Cash Than His Bandmates
Let’s talk numbers, because the math here is honestly staggering. Rockett claims that Michaels wasn’t just asking for a slightly bigger slice of the pie; he wanted the whole bakery. The singer reportedly demanded $6 for every single dollar his bandmates earned. What? Rockett explained to the outlet:
“He wanted the lion’s share of the money, to the point where it makes it not possible to even do it…It’s like $6 to every one of our dollars. You just can’t work that way.”
Look, nobody is denying that the lead singer usually carries a bit more weight in these negotiations. They’re the face of the brand, the voice on the radio, and usually the one dodging bras and panties thrown on stage. But a 600% pay disparity?
That’s not a negotiation tactic; that’s a brutal statement. It essentially says, “I am the band, and you three are just the guys standing behind me.” Rockett, for his part, wasn’t having it. He noted that while he loves playing, he isn’t going to break his back setting up his drums (or instructing a roadie to do it) on a massive tour just to make someone else rich. Really – can you blame him?
The “Cordial” Ghosting of Poison
What makes this whole situation even more frustrating for fans of Poison is that the vibe isn’t necessarily “hate,” but it definitely isn’t “love,” either. Rockett described the current relationship between the band members as “cordial,” which is polite-speak for “we aren’t screaming at each other, but we aren’t hanging out.”
Rockett admitted to sending out a group text to all four members – including singer Michaels – trying to rally the troops and figure it out. The result? “Tumbleweeds.” Absolute radio silence. When you’re trying to organize a tour that involves millions of dollars and moving parts across the country, being left on read is the ultimate dealbreaker. Rockett mentioned that by late 2025, it became clear the tour wasn’t happening because you can’t just “shoehorn” a production of that magnitude into the schedule at the last minute.
Is This The End for Poison or Just a Speed Bump?
So, where does this leave the 40th anniversary of Look What the Cat Dragged In? Probably in the kitty litter box. Rockett is pivoting to tour with his side project, Rockett Mafia, instead. However, he hasn’t completely closed the coffin on Poison ever touring again. He jokingly (or perhaps painfully) suggested that doing a “41st anniversary tour” next year would be a “perfect Poison folly.”
There was also a brief, terrifying mention of potentially replacing vocalist Bret Michaels, an idea Rockett compared to surgery: a last resort. “I don’t think there’s a better frontman for Poison,” Rockett admitted, crushing the dreams of any bleached-blonde bandana-wearing tribute band singers hoping for their “Rock Star” movie moment.
For now, the reality is stark. Michaels is busy with his solo dates, the rest of the band is left holding the bag, and the fans are the ones missing out. It seems that while every rose has its thorn, this particular thorn comes with a ridiculous price tag that the rest of the band just couldn’t afford.
