Summer 2026 Stadium Tours: Morgan Wallen, Bruno Mars & More
Summer 2026 Stadium Tours are here, and there’s never been a better time to get out and experience live music at its biggest and boldest. There’s something about a stadium show that hits differently—the roar of the crowd, the lights, the moment your favorite song kicks in, and 60,000 people sing every word alongside you. This summer, some of the biggest names in music are hitting the road across North America, and the lineup is one of the most stacked in years. Whether you’re a country die-hard, an R&B fan, a pop lover, or somewhere in between, there’s a show with your name on it—and tickets are available right now at boxofficeticketsales.com.
Whether you’re trying to plan your summer around live music or still searching for last-minute tickets, this guide covers every major tour, every key date, and exactly what to expect at each show.
Morgan Wallen — Still The Problem Tour
Morgan Wallen, one of country music’s biggest stars, is in the middle of his most ambitious stadium run yet, and there’s still plenty of summer left to catch him. The Still The Problem Tour runs through August with back-to-back nights in nearly every city—21 shows across 11 markets—and Wallen is set to become the first musical performer in history to play consecutive nights at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor, “The Big House,” where Zach Bryan set the all-time US concert attendance record in 2025.
Remaining dates take the tour through some of the country’s most iconic venues. From Denver’s Empower Field at Mile High (June 13–14) to Memorial Stadium in Clemson (June 26–27), M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore (July 17–18), the historic two-night stand at Michigan Stadium (July 24–25), and a finale run at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia (July 31–August 1), there are still plenty of opportunities to secure your spot.
The supporting lineup rotates by night and includes Thomas Rhett, HARDY, Ella Langley, and Brooks & Dunn as primary openers, with additional support from Gavin Adcock, Flatland Cavalry, Hudson Westbrook, and Jason Scott & the High Heat. That rotation is actually one of the tour’s most compelling selling points—back-to-back nights in the same city genuinely feel like two distinct events, which is a big reason hardcore fans are buying pairs.
On stage, Wallen draws heavily from his groundbreaking 2025 record I’m the Problem—the title track, “Love Somebody,” “20 Cigarettes,” and “Dark Til Daylight” all feature—while fan favorites like “Last Night,” “Wasted on You,” “Whiskey Glasses,” and “More Than My Hometown” keep the crowd singing every word. Past shows have clocked in at around 28 songs and well over two hours.
Usher & Chris Brown — The R&B Tour
The biggest R&B co-headlining event of 2026 is finally here. Usher arrives fresh off his iconic Super Bowl LVIII halftime performance, while Chris Brown comes in on the back of the highest-grossing solo tour ever by an R&B artist. Together, they’re sharing one stage for 40 dates across North America through December—opening June 26 at Empower Field at Mile High in Denver and wrapping December 11 at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa. Demand was so overwhelming in Los Angeles that a third night at SoFi Stadium was added, turning it into a three-night stand.
The summer leg also includes three nights at Northwest Stadium in Washington, D.C. (July 10–13), and back-to-back nights at Soldier Field in Chicago (July 28–29). The northeast stretch brings the tour to Fenway Park in Boston (August 1), MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford (August 4–5), Rogers Center in Toronto (August 8–9), and Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta (August 14–15).
When the lights go down, both catalogs hit hard. Usher moves through “Yeah!,” “Burn,” “U Got It Bad,” “OMG,” and material from Coming Home with the precision of a performer who’s spent two decades perfecting his craft. Chris Brown counters with “Run It!,” “Forever,” “With You,” “Loyal,” “No Guidance,” and cuts from 11:11—and the energy rarely dips between sets. The two have collaborated on “New Flame,” “Back To Sleep Remix,” and the 2025 track “It Depends (The Remix),” so the door is wide open for live moments that go beyond what either artist does solo, and that chemistry is what makes this more than two co-headliners sharing a stage.
Ed Sheeran — LOOP Tour
One of the top-selling concert artists in the world is back in North America, and this time he’s bringing his eighth studio album, um, Play to 22 cities across 26 stadium dates. Ed Sheeran‘s LOOP Tour kicks off June 13 at State Farm Stadium in Glendale and runs through November 7 at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa—picking up right where the momentum of his record-smashing Mathematics Tour left off. The summer leg alone is packed with marquee stops: Soldier Field in Chicago on June 27, an Independence Day show at Empower Field in Denver on July 4, Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara on July 25, SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles on August 8, back-to-back nights at Rogers Centre in Toronto on August 21–22, and a summer finale at Ford Field in Detroit on August 29.
What makes a Sheeran stadium show so special is the setup itself—one man, a loop pedal, and a guitar filling 70,000 seats, building every vocal layer and instrument live in real time. It’s the kind of performance fans consistently describe as “impossible to believe” until they see it in person. Add a setlist stacked with global hits—”Shape of You,” “Thinking Out Loud,” “Bad Habits,” “Perfect,” “Shivers,” “Castle on the Hill,” and “Happier”—alongside fresh material from Play, and you’ve got one of the most crowd-pleasing, emotionally satisfying shows of the entire summer. For pop fans and casual concertgoers alike, this one’s hard to pass up.
Zach Bryan — With Heaven On Tour
Coming off his world-record-breaking concert at Michigan Stadium in 2025, Zach Bryan‘s With Heaven On Tour is his biggest international run yet—more than 40 dates across North America and Europe, wrapping October 10 at Jordan-Hare Stadium in Auburn, Alabama. And it’s not just the scale that sets this tour apart. The supporting lineup reads like a festival headliner bill in its own right: Kings of Leon, Alabama Shakes, Dijon, MJ Lenderman, Gregory Alan Isakov, Ben Howard, and Caamp. These aren’t typical openers—they’re arena headliners, and their presence here is a direct reflection of Bryan’s extraordinary drawing power.
Remaining North American dates include San Diego at Petco Park, Arlington at AT&T Stadium, Foxborough at Gillette Stadium, Eugene at Autzen Stadium, and the October 10 finale in Auburn, plus additional European dates running through July. If you’re on the fence, consider this: Bryan’s shows feel less like a concert and more like a massive communal singalong. Fans know every word of “Something in the Orange,” “I Remember Everything,” “Heading South,” “Open the Gate,” and “From Austin”—and Bryan rewards that devotion with more than two hours of emotionally resonant, barn-burning Americana that regularly moves crowds to tears. Catching Alabama Shakes or Gregory Alan Isakov before Bryan even takes the stage makes this one of the most well-rounded concert experiences of the entire summer.
Bruno Mars — The Romantic Tour
Bruno Mars hasn’t toured since the 24K Magic World Tour wrapped in 2017. That near-decade absence—broken only by his Las Vegas residency—has made The Romantic Tour one of the most anticipated live music comebacks in recent memory. When the tour debuted in Las Vegas and Phoenix earlier this year, critics were unanimous: a “funky retro lovefest” that reminded audiences exactly why Bruno Mars is considered one of the greatest live performers of his generation. The tour now spans nearly 70 shows across North America, Europe, and the UK, and the momentum hasn’t slowed down since.
On stage, expect wall-to-wall hits delivered in a full production spectacle—elaborate choreography, a tight live band, and showmanship at the highest level. “Uptown Funk,” “That’s What I Like,” “Grenade,” “Just the Way You Are,” “Locked Out of Heaven,” “Treasure,” “24K Magic,” and “Leave the Door Open” are all in the mix, alongside fresh material from The Romantic. For pop fans, this is the show of 2026. Simple as that.
My Chemical Romance — The Black Parade 2026
Twenty years ago, The Black Parade redefined what alternative rock could be—and My Chemical Romance is honoring that legacy with 17 additional stadium dates extending their anniversary celebration through fall 2026. The North American leg picks up August 9 at Citi Field in New York. It moves through Nashville, Washington D.C., Detroit, Minneapolis, Denver, San Diego, Phoenix, and San Antonio before closing out with three nights at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles in October. Supporting acts vary by date and include Franz Ferdinand, Pierce the Veil, Modest Mouse, Iggy Pop, Sleater-Kinney, the Breeders, Babymetal, Jimmy Eat World, and The Mars Volta—a supporting lineup that’s genuinely impressive in its own right.
Hearing “Welcome to the Black Parade,” “Famous Last Words,” “I’m Not Okay (I Promise),” “Helena,” and “Cancer” performed in a stadium setting is a viscerally different experience from any other show on this list. This album was a defining cultural artifact for an entire generation, and the Hollywood Bowl three-night finale is, for fans of the emo and alternative era, a genuine bucket-list moment. If you were there the first time around—or wish you had been—this is your chance.
Karol G — VIAJANDO POR EL MUNDO Tour
Hot off her Coachella 2026 headlining performance, Karol G is at the absolute peak of her career—and her VIAJANDO POR EL MUNDO Tour makes that impossible to ignore. Her last stadium run shattered Latin touring records, and this 2026 world tour keeps the momentum going strong, with North American stops at some of the country’s largest venues, including State Farm Stadium in Glendale in August and SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles.
If you haven’t seen Karol G live, here’s what to expect: full spectacle from start to finish. We’re talking elaborate production, dramatic costume changes, and a crowd connection that few artists at any level can match. She moves through “Bichota,” “Provenza,” “MAMIII,” “Cairo,” “TQG,” and her string of chart-topping collaborations with a relentless, high-energy momentum that barely lets up from the first note to the last. For fans of Latin music, this is the stadium show of 2026—and it’s not a close call.
Luke Bryan & Jason Aldean — Double Down Tour
Country music‘s two biggest legacy stadium acts are joining forces for the Double Down Tour 2026, kicking off in August at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas—and if you’re a fan of classic-era country, this one’s hard to overlook. Jason Aldean, the reigning ACM Artist of the Decade, and five-time Entertainer of the Year Luke Bryan bring two of the deepest hit catalogs in the genre to the same stage, making for a night that feels more like a greatest-hits celebration than a standard co-headlining show. Bryan delivers crowd favorites like “Country Girl (Shake It for Me),” “Drink a Beer,” “Play It Again,” and “One Margarita,” while Aldean counters with “Big Green Tractor,” “Dirt Road Anthem,” “She’s Country,” and “You Make It Easy.” For fans who find the newer wave of country skews a little too young, this is the summer’s ideal stadium alternative—two proven headliners, decades of hits, and a crowd that’ll know every word.
Stadium Concert Tips: What to Know Before You Go
First time at a stadium show — or want to make the night run smoother? Here’s what matters:
- Arrive early. Security lines can add 30–45 minutes to your entry time. Plan accordingly.
- Download your ticket before you leave home. Cell service near stadiums at capacity is notoriously unreliable.
- Know the bag policy. Most stadiums require clear bags (max 12″×6″×12″) — check your specific venue’s rules before you pack.
- Pre-book parking. Stadium lots fill up fast, and nearby garages charge more on game day. Rideshare drop-off zones are typically several blocks away — budget the walk time.
- Bring a light layer. Summer evenings cool off quickly in open-air stadiums once the sun goes down, regardless of the forecast.
- Time your merch run. Lines are shortest 30 minutes before doors and during the opening act. Avoid the intermission rush.
- Eat before you go. Most venues prohibit outside food and drink, so a pre-show meal saves you time and keeps you fueled for the night.
- Charge your phone. A portable charger is worth every dollar on a show night.
Don’t Miss Your Seat This Summer
Summer 2026 is one of the best years in recent memory for live music fans. Morgan Wallen is making history at Michigan Stadium. Usher and Chris Brown sharing a stage. Ed Sheeran is looping a 70,000-seat crowd into silence. Zach Bryan is turning a football stadium into a campfire sing-along. Bruno Mars is back where he belongs. MCR is closing out a 20-year legacy at the Hollywood Bowl. The shows are happening—and they’re not waiting.
And if stadium tours aren’t your thing, there’s plenty more to explore. From intimate club shows and theater nights to hip-hop, pop, country, Latin, and everything in between, you can find concert tickets across every genre and live event type—all in one place. Whatever your sound, your summer starts here.
Browse every summer 2026 stadium tour date and buy tickets today at boxofficeticketsales.com.