Benson Boone Toronto Concert — Next Date & Ticket Alerts
Benson Boone hasn't announced a Toronto date yet
Tour routing can change late, and Torontodates are often added after the first on-sale. Here's how to be first in line — plus everything worth checking while you wait.
Benson Boone in Toronto — FAQ
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About Benson Boone
Benson James Boone was born June 25, 2002, in Monroe, Washington, the small Snohomish County town between Seattle and the Cascades. The career started, in the working sense, with American Idol — he auditioned in early 2021, made it through to the top 24, and then withdrew before the live shows, a decision he has talked about as wanting to write his own material rather than perform other people's. That instinct turned out to be the right one almost immediately: a self-released TikTok clip of an unreleased ballad called 'Ghost Town' caught the algorithm, racked tens of millions of views, and pulled in offers from the majors. He signed to Dan Reynolds's Night Street Records imprint through Warner Records — Reynolds, the Imagine Dragons frontman, has been a public mentor on the project ever since — and 'Ghost Town' released as the official debut single in late 2021, charting in multiple countries on the back of the TikTok groundswell. Two more singles followed in 2022 and 2023 ('In the Stars' and 'Sugar Sweet'), building a steady mid-tier streaming audience without crossing into the broader pop conversation. The break came with 'Beautiful Things' in early 2024 — a one-take-feeling piano ballad about gratitude and the fear of losing it — that hit number two on the Billboard Hot 100, topped the UK Singles Chart, and stayed in the top of the global streaming charts for the better part of a year. The debut full-length Fireworks & Rollerblades followed in April 2024, debuting in the top three of the Billboard 200 and across most major international charts. An expanded edition followed, and the album has remained on the streaming heat map well past the typical post-release cooling window. The live identity sharpened over the same stretch: a Saturday Night Live performance where he backflipped off a grand piano became a defining clip, and the backflip has since been the structural climax of nearly every headline show. He is signed to Night Street/Warner, writes most of his own material, and the project now sits firmly inside the working arena-pop tier alongside Teddy Swims, Stephen Sanchez, and the upper end of the post-Idol crossover wave.
