Liam and Noel Gallagher will reportedly take up to 50 per cent of the food and drink sales during their run of Oasis reunion gigs.
The duo were already predicted to make £50 million from the tour through ticket sales and merchandise.
However their earnings won't stop there as The Sun has revealed they will also benefit from the selling of pints and snacks.
Across the 19 dates across the UK and Ireland a pint of beer will likely cost around £8, especially at large venues including Wembley Stadium and Manchester's Heaton Park.
This means the brother's will pocket £4 from every drink as they rake in the profits.
An insider told the publication: 'It is not uncommon for top acts to get half of the bar and food take.
'After all they are the ones who got the punters into the venues in the first place. And Oasis will bring along some very thirsty fans.'.
MailOnline have contacted Oasis' representatives for comment.
It comes after fans of the band have been left 'devastated' after missing out on a private ballot for extra Wembley dates.
Oasis announced this afternoon that all emails had been sent out with details and codes to be used in securing the final tickets.
The extra dates were added amid 'unprecedented' demand for tickets and comes after record amounts of people applied for gig tickets last month - crashing Ticketmaster.
In a statement, Oasis said: 'Fans selected in the private ballot have now been contacted with on-sale information and their code for the ticket sale.
'Codes were sent via the email address associated with their Ticketmaster account and ballot registration.
'Demand for these shows is unprecedented. A code does not guarantee tickets. Tickets will be sold on a first come first served basis.'
But many people took to social media to announce their dismay at missing out on the draw.
Some people posted Simpsons memes such as Moe the bartender with his head in the oven while others posted gifs of distraught football fans after their team loses.
Fans slammed Oasis last week as they complained about the high cost of tickets for his upcoming shows.
Hoards of fans lost out with sites booting them to the back of the queue after being mistaken for bots, people nabbing up tickets to resell them for thousands, as well as some sites doubling ticket prices form around £148 to £355
And Liam, who has never been one to shy away from controversy, broke his social media silence amid the row, but faced further flak for his outbursts, with some accusing him of 'scream[ing] from his ivory tower at the paupers.'
He posted on X, formerly Twitter, this morning: 'OASIS are back your welcome and I hear there ATTITUDE STINKS good to know something’s never change.'
When fans responded by criticising the ticketing approach, he replied: 'SHUTUP [sic]'
And when asked how he was feeling, the 51-year-old responded: 'SMUG only kidding SMUG AS F*** I told you all we were gonna get back together 1 fine day [sic]'