Ready for round two? After a locals presale and initial ticket drop—during which more than four million tickets were sold for anywhere from $28 into the thousands—LA28 has announced the details for the next ticket drop for the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.

Registration is open now for Drop 2, which will give lottery-selected Olympic attendee hopefuls another shot in August at trying to land tickets. We’ll dive into all of the details below, but the short version: Drop 2 will include new ticket inventory for all sports at a mix of price points, and if you’ve already bought (or tried to buy) tickets during the first drop, you’re still eligible—and, in fact, already automatically registered—for this second one as long as you didn’t hit your 12-ticket maximum.

When can I register for Drop 2? And when can I actually buy tickets?

Registration is open now through July 22, and tickets will go on sale sometime in August. Registration essentially puts your name into the pool for a random selection process; if you’re chosen, you’ll receive an email in August with the date, time and duration of your assigned time slot.

Who’s eligible for Drop 2?

Basically anybody who didn’t max out their 12-ticket allotment in the first drop. There’s no sort of locals-only window this time around. If you haven’t registered before for tickets for the 2028 Olympics, you can do so on LA28’s site.

If you already registered for LA28 tickets during the locals presale and Drop 1 and either weren’t chosen at all or purchased fewer than 12 tickets, you’ll automatically be entered for this ticket draw, as well as all future ones. Of course, you’re still welcome to head to the ticketing page just to double-check that all of your details are correct.

As a refresher, each account is limited to 12 tickets (the Opening and Closing Ceremony specifically have a four-ticket-per-account limit). In addition, there’s a separate 12-ticket maximum for soccer matches that doesn’t count towards your main allotment.

Will there be any new ticket inventory available?

Yes, LA28 says that this second drop includes “refreshed inventory across all Olympic sports.” One of the most disappointing aspects of the locals presale and Drop 1 was that there seemed to be no new tickets added during the on-sale window; if you had an early day and time you could scramble for seats to some of the highest-demand events, but those were not restocked as folks with later slots throughout the two-and-a-half-week sale were left to vie for high-priced leftovers. (And to confirm your suspicions, LA28 shared that artistic gymnastics did indeed have the quickest sell through in Drop 1.)

But will there still be any cheap tickets left?

Most likely yes, but expect them to go very quickly. LA28 notes that the Drop 2 restock will include tickets at “a range of price points,” though it doesn’t detail how exactly that inventory will be distributed. The organization also shared that L.A. and Oklahoma City locals snagged almost all of the cheap seats: 95% of all of the sub-$100 tickets were sold during the locals presale, including half a million $28 tickets. (LA28 initially estimated that over a million $28 tickets would be available for the Olympics, so about half of those are still in play for future drops.)

What other tips do you have for buying tickets?

Based on our experiences during the locals presale, we put together an in-depth guide on how to navigate the LA28 ticketing process. In short, you’ll want to go into the sale with a wish list of events (and their corresponding session codes) and prepare yourself for high prices with an “add to cart first, ask questions later” approach (and hope for a little bit of luck as seats expire from other people’s carts).

We also now have a bit more data from Drop 1 that might better inform your Drop 2 game plan. Women’s sessions outsold men’s 93% to 88%. Nearly all available soccer inventory sold out, as did the Summer Games’ newest sports: flag football, lacrosse, softball and squash. And the Valley Zone (home of 3×3 basketball, BMX freestyle and racing, skateboarding and modern pentathlon) led sell through for its combined sports.