
Bryan Adams Tour 2026
Next Bryan Adams Shows
The 8 closest dates from the live Ticketmaster feed.


Bryan Adams

Bryan Adams

Bryan Adams

Bryan Adams

Bryan Adams

Bryan Adams

Bryan Adams
Bryan Adams Tickets Near You — Shows by City
27 citiesBryan Adams is playing 27 cities this tour. Tap any city for exact dates, venue info, seat prices, and parking.
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1 showFrom $121Is Bryan Adams Coming to Your City?
1 / 12 citiesLive tour status for Bryan Adams across 12 of the biggest North American markets — refreshed daily from Ticketmaster. Tap any "not yet" city to see the closest confirmed date.
28 upcoming Bryan Adams concerts across 27 cities in North America, with tickets from $20 USD. Live Ticketmaster availability refreshed daily.
- When is Bryan Adams's next show?
- Sat, July 25, 2026 at Enterprise Center.
- How much are Bryan Adams tickets?
- $20–$308 USD, varies by city and seat section.
- Is Bryan Adams touring near me?
- Playing 27 cities in 2026. See the "Tickets Near You" section below for your city.
- How do I get Bryan Adams tickets?
- Tap any date below to checkout on Ticketmaster — listings here are official primary tickets, refreshed daily.
- What time does the show start?
- Most Bryan Adams shows start between 7 and 9 PM local, with doors 60–90 minutes earlier. Exact time is on each ticket.
- How long is the concert?
- Roughly 90–150 minutes including the opener and a short encore.
Bryan Adams Ticket Prices 2026— Cheapest Seats & Average Cost
Bryan Adams ticket prices vary by city, venue size, day of week, and seat section. Live price breakdown across all 2026 tour stops:
Bryan Adams Concert FAQ
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About Bryan Adams
BBryan Adams is on the 2026 tour with the full live rig — guitars front and center, full production, and the deep-catalog setlist long-time fans buy tickets to hear played end-to-end. 28 confirmed dates across 27 cities this run. Tickets currently start at $20. Tour routing typically spans major North American cities, with Canadian stops usually including arena-sized venues in Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, and Montreal, and US stops covering New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Miami, Seattle, and other top metros.
Inside Bryan Adams
Bryan Adams is a Canadian rock institution four decades into an arena-touring career that doesn't show any signs of slowing down. Born Bryan Guy Adams in Kingston, Ontario on November 5, 1959 and raised in North Vancouver, British Columbia after a childhood that moved with his father's diplomatic postings, he started his first band as a teenager, sold his college savings to buy a grand piano at fifteen, and was writing songs for other artists by the time he signed his own deal with A&M Records in 1979. The breakthrough came with Reckless in 1984 — six top-fifteen singles in the United States, five-times-diamond certification in Canada, and the kind of rock-radio dominance that turned Summer of '69, Run to You, Heaven, and Somebody into permanent fixtures of the format. The early 1990s reshaped his career a second time when (Everything I Do) I Do It for You, written for Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, sat at number one on the UK singles chart for sixteen consecutive weeks — a record that still stands — and Waking Up the Neighbours sold sixteen million copies worldwide. He's done the theme-song thing three different ways since (Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman from Don Juan DeMarco, I Finally Found Someone with Barbra Streisand, the Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron soundtrack in full), released studio albums on a roughly three-year cycle through the 2000s and 2010s, built a parallel career as a fine-art and editorial photographer with two coffee-table books and a London gallery show, and stayed publicly committed to vegan and animal-welfare activism through The Bryan Adams Foundation. The current touring era — So Happy It Hurts Tour into Roll With the Punches Tour — pulls from the entire catalogue across roughly two hours of arena rock and stripped-back acoustic interludes. This page is the landing spot for tour dates, ticket links, setlists, and city-specific show info, kept current year-round whatever leg of the calendar he's on.
About Bryan Adams
Bryan Guy Adams CC OBC was born in Kingston, Ontario in November 1959, the son of a Canadian Army officer who later joined the Canadian foreign service, and grew up across postings in Portugal, Austria, Israel, and the United Kingdom before the family settled in North Vancouver, British Columbia in the early 1970s. He dropped out of high school at fifteen, cashed in the college savings his parents had put aside, bought a grand piano, and started gigging Vancouver clubs almost immediately. His first real band was Sweeney Todd — he replaced original singer Nick Gilder in 1976 and recorded the album If Wishes Were Horses with them at sixteen — before pivoting back to songwriting with future collaborator Jim Vallance, the partnership that would write almost every Bryan Adams hit of the 1980s. A&M Records Canada signed him in 1979 and released his self-titled debut in 1980; You Want It You Got It followed in 1981, Cuts Like a Knife in 1983 (his first international breakthrough on the back of the title track and Straight from the Heart), and then Reckless in November 1984 — the record that ended any argument about whether he was a real rock star. Reckless sold five-times diamond in Canada, twelve million worldwide, generated six US top-fifteen singles, and put him on the global arena circuit. Into the Fire arrived in 1987, Waking Up the Neighbours in 1991, and the run of early-1990s theme-song singles — (Everything I Do) I Do It for You for Robin Hood, All for Love with Sting and Rod Stewart for The Three Musketeers, Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman for Don Juan DeMarco, and Please Forgive Me as a stand-alone single — made him one of the most ubiquitous voices on adult-contemporary radio in the world. 18 til I Die followed in 1996, On a Day Like Today in 1998, the Anthology hits collection in 2005, 11 in 2008, Tracks of My Years in 2014, Get Up in 2015 (produced by Jeff Lynne of ELO), Shine a Light in 2019, So Happy It Hurts in 2022, and Roll With the Punches in 2024. Alongside the music he built a second career as a professional photographer — portrait work for Vanity Fair, Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, and the Pirelli Calendar, plus published collections Exposed and Wounded — and has been a vocal vegan and animal-rights advocate through his foundation for decades. He holds the Order of Canada (Companion), the Order of British Columbia, multiple honorary doctorates, an Officer of the Order of Canada upgrade, and induction into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame, the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame, and Canada's Walk of Fame.
Bryan Adams tour dates
Bryan Adams tours in long global cycles. The current Roll With the Punches Tour — and the So Happy It Hurts Tour run that preceded it — typically routes Europe and the United Kingdom across spring and summer in arena-and-amphitheatre venues, picks up festival headline slots through the warm months on the continent, and then comes back to North America for an autumn arena leg with selected dates in Latin America, Australia, and Asia attached to the calendar where the routing allows. A typical night runs 110 to 130 minutes with no intermission. The opener is usually a hot-blooded rocker — Kick Ass, So Happy It Hurts, or Roll With the Punches itself — followed by an early run through Can't Stop This Thing We Started, Run to You, and Heaven on Earth. Mid-show he pulls the full band off and runs a stripped-back acoustic segment from the front of the stage, just guitar and harmonica and the closer-than-arena sightlines that the format allows, before bringing the electric band back for the singalong final third. The full electric touring band — Mickey Curry on drums for years, Keith Scott on lead guitar since the early 1980s, Gary Breit on keys, and Solomon Walker on bass — is among the tightest in the format, and the show pace never sags through the back half of the set. Use the live schedule above to filter the current tour leg by city and date; each event card links straight through to the venue listing with broadcast and start-time details. If a leg has just wrapped, check back soon — Bryan Adams books another routing roughly every twelve to eighteen months and rarely skips a major market across consecutive cycles.
Bryan Adams tickets
Bryan Adams tickets on tour are sold through Ticketmaster as the primary outlet, with secondary inventory on StubHub, SeatGeek, Vivid Seats, and Ticketmaster's own verified resale platform linked from each event card on this page. Arena pricing sits in a wide range: upper-bowl seats for a midweek non-major-market date can start around $45 USD, lower-bowl and floor seats typically run $110 to $260, and premium packages that bundle floor seating with exclusive merch, an early-entry photo opportunity, and a soundcheck access pass climb past $700 on the marquee markets. Fan club presales through the official Bryan Adams site go up roughly a week before the public on-sale and are the strongest path to good floor seats on the major markets — London, Toronto, Vancouver, Berlin, Sydney, New York. Citi, American Express, and venue-specific presales fill the rest of the early-access window before the general on-sale opens to the wider public. UK and European arena pricing skews lower than North American equivalents on the same tour; festival headline slots in Germany, the Netherlands, and the UK sometimes offer the cheapest single-night entry of the entire cycle if you're willing to do general admission on a field. Dynamic pricing is now standard on Bryan Adams on-sales, so face value can swing significantly between the moment the queue opens and the moment you check out — the secondary market often drops 15 to 25 percent in the final ten days before non-major dates.
Bryan Adams setlist
A current Bryan Adams setlist is built around the hits and stays remarkably consistent night to night across a tour leg. Expect the opener to land on Kick Ass — a recent staple — followed by an early electric run through Can't Stop This Thing We Started, Somebody, and Run to You with the full band locked in tight from the first downbeat. The middle of the show pulls in Cuts Like a Knife, Heaven, and Please Forgive Me before the acoustic segment thins the band out for It's Only Love, Straight from the Heart, and the harmonica-led acoustic reprise that he sometimes runs as a solo piece down at the front of the stage with the houselights up. The back half drops the full band back in for So Happy It Hurts, Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman, the title-track Roll With the Punches off the most recent record, and the inevitable Summer of '69 singalong that the room has been waiting for since doors opened. The closer is almost always (Everything I Do) I Do It for You — the sixteen-week-UK-number-one ballad that he plays as a stadium-arms-up megaclose, complete with the spotlight piano intro and the full final chorus carried by the crowd. For night-by-night accuracy check setlist.fm after the first show of any new leg; fan submissions usually go up within a couple of hours of the lights coming up.
Tour cities
Vancouver
Vancouver is the hometown market. Bryan Adams grew up in North Vancouver and almost every North American leg of a tour anchors here at Rogers Arena downtown — formerly GM Place and Canucks Place — for what's usually the loudest, longest, most singalong-heavy night of the cycle. The room seats roughly 19,000 for an end-stage concert with the floor opened up; the SkyTrain's Stadium-Chinatown station drops fans a two-minute walk from the gates. He frequently calls out North Van from the stage, brings out former bandmates and Vancouver-scene friends for the encore, and on multi-night stands sometimes plays a stripped-back acoustic gig at a smaller club in the city the night before. Lower-bowl tickets sell first on the on-sale; the 300-level upper rings are the value buy.
Toronto
Toronto is the eastern-Canada anchor of every Bryan Adams North American leg. The arena date plays Scotiabank Arena downtown — formerly Air Canada Centre — and a Toronto stop usually opens or closes the Canadian run. The room seats 19,800 for a concert end-stage, and the Canadian crowd skews older and louder than the US equivalent; Summer of '69 in Toronto is several decibels above the same song in Cleveland or Detroit. Scotiabank Arena is attached to Union Station via the SkyWalk, which means GO Transit, the UP Express from Pearson, and the TTC subway all drop within a five-minute walk of the gates without anyone needing to drive. Lower-bowl seats sell first; the 300-level uppers are the value play, and the corner sections on the upper ring have the best price-to-view ratio in the building.
London
London is the marquee European date on every Bryan Adams tour and one of the most important markets in his career — (Everything I Do) I Do It for You sat at number one on the UK singles chart for sixteen weeks here in 1991, a record that still stands. The arena date almost always plays The O2 Arena on the Greenwich Peninsula, the 20,000-seat former Millennium Dome reconfigured as a concert venue, with North Greenwich tube station a covered three-minute walk from the doors. Royal Albert Hall has hosted multi-night stripped-back Bryan Adams stands on acoustic-only tours and is the other London room to watch on the schedule. The London crowd is older, mixed UK-and-international, and turns the Robin Hood ballad into a singalong that runs the full final two minutes of the song.
Manchester
Manchester is the northern-England anchor of every Bryan Adams UK leg. The show typically plays Co-op Live or AO Arena in the city centre, both 21,000-capacity arenas a short walk from Manchester Piccadilly station and the Metrolink tram network. Manchester crowds run loud and stay loud — this is one of the strongest singalong markets in Europe on Run to You and Summer of '69 — and the city has a long history of Bryan Adams sellouts going back to the Reckless and Waking Up the Neighbours tours. Pre-show drinks in the Northern Quarter or around Deansgate; post-show trams run until late. Lower-tier seats sell first; the upper tiers offer the strongest value across the run.
Berlin
Berlin is one of the most important German markets on every Bryan Adams European leg — Germany has been a consistent top-three album market for him for thirty-five years. The show typically plays Mercedes-Benz Arena (formerly O2 World) at the Ostbahnhof, a 17,000-capacity room with steep tiers and clean sightlines, walking distance from Ostbahnhof S-Bahn station and a short U-Bahn ride from Alexanderplatz. The Berlin crowd skews multilingual — German, English, and a scattering of Eastern European fans who travel in for the show — and the singalong on (Everything I Do) I Do It for You is one of the longest in Europe. Mid-week tickets in the upper tiers are the cheapest way into a Bryan Adams Berlin show; Friday and Saturday nights sell out the lower bowl first.
Sydney
Sydney is the anchor of the Australian leg on the routings where it appears. The arena date typically plays Qudos Bank Arena at Sydney Olympic Park — a 21,000-capacity room about thirty minutes by train from Central station on the T7 line — or, on stripped-back acoustic legs, the smaller Aware Super Theatre at ICC Sydney in Darling Harbour. Australian crowds skew classic-rock and turn out for the Reckless-era hits in particular; Summer of '69 in Sydney is one of the strongest singalongs anywhere on the global circuit. Bryan Adams has a long Australian touring history going back to the 1980s and almost always adds Melbourne, Brisbane, and Perth dates around the Sydney anchor. Olympic Park station drops fans direct at Qudos; the line runs late after every concert.
Los Angeles
Los Angeles plays one of two rooms on Bryan Adams tours — Crypto.com Arena downtown for full-band arena legs, or the Greek Theatre in Griffith Park for the outdoor-amphitheatre summer leg. Crypto.com seats roughly 19,000 with the floor opened up, sits on the LA Metro Expo and Blue lines at Pico station, and shares the LA Live entertainment complex with bars and restaurants for pre and post. The Greek is the more memorable show — 5,900 seats under the stars in the Griffith Park hills, with the canyon acoustics and the outdoor evening that the room is known for. LA crowds skew industry-and-radio in the lower bowl and travelling fans in the upper rings; the singalong on Summer of '69 lands strong. Lower-bowl Crypto seats sell first; Greek shows tend to sell out the night they go on sale.
New York
New York gets a Bryan Adams arena date at Madison Square Garden on most North American tour legs — the Garden is the marquee stop on the eastern swing and a sell-out for him across the lower bowl. The 7th Avenue building seats roughly 20,000 for an end-stage configuration and is directly above Penn Station, which makes it the easiest concert arrival in the country: any subway, NJ Transit, LIRR, or Amtrak line drops fans inside the arena in under five minutes. New York crowds skew classic rock with a strong contingent of British and European expat fans who came up on the Waking Up the Neighbours era. Lower-bowl pricing runs higher here than any other tour stop; the 200-level is the strongest value buy. He has played the Garden across every tour cycle since Reckless.
Chicago
Chicago is the Midwest anchor of every Bryan Adams North American leg. The show typically plays United Center on the West Side — the home of the Bulls and Blackhawks, 23,500 seats for an end-stage concert — or, on smaller stripped-back legs, the Chicago Theatre downtown on State Street. United Center is reachable on the CTA's Blue or Pink line with a short walk from Medical District or Illinois Medical District station; parking around the building opens about three hours before doors. Chicago crowds skew older classic-rock and the singalong on Summer of '69 is among the loudest in the Midwest. Lower-bowl tickets sell first; the 300-level rings offer the best value, and corner sections give clear sightlines on the runway extensions.
Tokyo
Tokyo is the Asian anchor on the routings where Japan appears. The show typically plays Nippon Budokan in Chiyoda — the 14,500-capacity martial-arts arena that's hosted every major rock act since The Beatles in 1966 — with smaller legs sometimes routing through Tokyo Garden Theatre or Tokyo International Forum. Budokan is on the Tokyo Metro Tozai and Hanzomon lines at Kudanshita station, a five-minute walk from the gates through the Imperial Palace gardens. Japanese crowds run quieter between songs than the European and North American equivalent and absolutely thunderous on the singalongs — Summer of '69 and the I Do It for You closer in particular get the full crowd response. Bryan Adams has a long Japanese touring history and the Tokyo dates almost always sell out within hours of the on-sale.
Cheapest Bryan Adams Tickets — 5 Ways to Save on the 2026 Tour
Bryan Adams tickets can move fast, especially for big-city dates, but there are a few reliable ways to land the best price.
- Buy during the official on-sale window. Face-value primary tickets on Ticketmaster are almost always cheaper than resale — the listings above show primary availability first.
- Consider mid-week shows. Tuesday and Wednesday Bryan Adams dates often list 15 to 30 percent lower than weekend stops in the same city.
- Go upper-level. Upper 300-level or balcony sections typically start near $20 and still offer a strong view of the stage.
- Watch last-minute drops.Resellers often slash prices 24 to 48 hours before doors open, especially for mid-week dates that haven't sold out.
- Compare nearby cities. It can be cheaper to drive 2 to 3 hours to a smaller market — check the full cheap Bryan Adams tickets guide for current low-priced dates.
Bryan AdamsVIP Packages & Meet & Greet Options
When available, Bryan Adams VIP packages are offered directly on Ticketmaster alongside the standard tickets for each tour date. VIP experiences for Bryan Adamsconcerts often include early venue entry, a premium seat or pit access, an exclusive tour merchandise item, and occasionally a pre-show soundcheck or photo opportunity. Meet and greet packages, when offered, sell out fastest — if you see one listed on the show page above, it's worth grabbing immediately. For the full breakdown of current VIP and meet and greet options on this tour, see the Bryan AdamsVIP & meet and greet guide.
Bryan AdamsPresale Tickets & Codes
Presale windows for the Bryan Adams 2026 tour typically open 1 to 3 days before the general on-sale and are the best way to lock in seats before inventory drops. The most common presales for Bryan Adamstour stops are Ticketmaster Verified Fan, Live Nation presale, the artist's official newsletter or fan club, and credit-card presales from Citi, American Express, or Capital One in North America. Sign-up links usually go live from the artist's official site 1 to 2 weeks before the on-sale. See the Bryan Adams presale guide for the current active codes and sign-up deadlines.
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