By Keith Idec

If you want to attend the Anthony Joshua-Wladimir Klitschko fight, it’ll cost you plenty to sit somewhere at least reasonably close to the ring.

Matchroom Boxing, the company that promotes Joshua, announced Monday via Twitter that tickets to their heavyweight title fight, scheduled for April 29 at London’s Wembley Stadium, have been priced from 40 British pounds ($49.57) for Level 5 seating to 2,000 pounds ($2,479) for the closest floor seats to the ring. Tickets for their scheduled 12-rounder for Joshua’s IBF heavyweight championship are set to go on sale Tuesday at noon GMT (7 a.m. ET/4 a.m. PT), and can be purchased at wembleystadium.com and stubhub.co.uk.

Additional price points for the card headlined by Joshua-Klitschko are 800 pounds ($991.34), 400 pounds ($495.67), 200 pounds ($247.83), 150 pounds ($185.87), 100 pounds ($123.91), 80 pounds ($99.13) and 60 pounds ($74.35).

Promoter Eddie Hearn, group managing director of Matchroom Sport, has said he expects a crowd approaching 90,000 to attend the Joshua-Klitschko clash.

Ukraine’s Klitschko (64-4, 53 KOs) will turn 41 before he fights Joshua (18-0, 18 KOs), who’ll be 27 when they meet, and won’t have fought in the 16 months since England’s Tyson Fury (25-0, 18 KOs) upset him by unanimous decision to win the IBF, WBA and WBO heavyweight titles in Dusseldorf, Germany. Klitschko still will represent the most difficult test of Joshua’s four-year pro career, which began amid a lot of fanfare following the emerging British star’s gold medal-winning performance at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London.

Before he lost to Fury, Klitschko had made 18 consecutive defenses of the IBF title he won from American Chris Byrd by stopping him in the seventh round of their April 2006 bout in Mannheim, Germany. Fury gave up his IBF title late last year, rather than make a mandatory defense, and vacated his WBA and WBO titles two months ago to focus on his recovery from alcohol and drug addiction and depression.

Joshua-Klitschko officially was announced in the ring after Joshua demolished American Eric Molina (25-4, 19 KOs) in the third round of their IBF title fight December 10 at Manchester, England.

Keith Idec is a senior writer/columnist for BoxingScene.com. He can be reached on Twitter @Idecboxing.