Chappell Roan Los Angeles Concert — Next Date & Ticket Alerts
Chappell Roan hasn't announced a Los Angeles date yet
Tour routing can change late, and Los Angelesdates are often added after the first on-sale. Here's how to be first in line — plus everything worth checking while you wait.
Chappell Roan's next confirmed dates elsewhere
Chappell Roan in Los Angeles— Concert & City Guide
Los Angeles is the symbolic and literal home of the Chappell Roan project — Pink Pony Club, the song that pre-dated the breakthrough by four years and seeded the fan base, is a direct love letter to the West Hollywood gay bar of the same name on Santa Monica Boulevard, and the pilgrimage-to-the-Pink-Pony-Club pre-show ritual has become a load-bearing part of the LA fan culture. When the routing lands in LA, the working pattern is Kia Forum (17,500 cap, Inglewood) or Crypto.com Arena (20,000 cap, Downtown) for the arena anchor, the Hollywood Bowl (17,500 cap, Hollywood Hills) as the natural future album-cycle one-off, and the early-cycle returns to the Greek Theatre (5,900 cap, Griffith Park) or YouTube Theater (6,000 cap, Inglewood) if a smaller-scale routing returns. LA onsales move through Ticketmaster Verified Fan (the same lottery-then-code pattern as every other US date) with the artist-list presale a day or two ahead of the public Friday-10am-local window. Pre-show coordination through Instagram and TikTok pulls the matching drag-inspired outfit pattern into focus — group costume themes by night, the Pink Pony Club itself as the pre-show drink stop on Santa Monica Boulevard, and the post-show retreat to the same handful of West Hollywood and Silver Lake bars. The Kia Forum sits beside SoFi Stadium and the YouTube Theater in the Hollywood Park development; light rail (K Line) is the standard public-transit arrival. If you do not see a confirmed LA date on the live event strip above, bookmark this page and the route will auto-update the moment a new LA date is added to the Ticketmaster feed.
Chappell Roan in Los Angeles — FAQ
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About Chappell Roan
Kayleigh Rose Amstutz was born February 19, 1998, in Willard, Missouri — a small Springfield-area town in the southwest corner of the state, the daughter of a registered-nurse mother and a veterinarian father, the eldest of four siblings. She started writing songs in middle school, posted early covers to YouTube under her birth name, and at seventeen signed her first publishing-and-recording deal with Atlantic Records on the strength of a self-recorded demo of an early song called 'Die Young' — written in the months after her older cousin's death, which became the song that pulled her out of Willard and into the Los Angeles industry machine. The Atlantic chapter ran from 2015 to 2020 and is the part of the origin story she has been most public about in interviews: a teenage move to LA without the support network to navigate it, a series of singles that did not break through, a school of major-label A&R that pushed her toward a sound she did not feel was hers, the publishing-and-recording deal terminated in 2020 in the middle of the pandemic with the project effectively reset to zero. The pivot was Dan Nigro — the producer who would also produce Olivia Rodrigo's SOUR and GUTS — agreeing to work with her on a new project on his own terms after the Atlantic deal collapsed. The Chappell Roan persona (the name pulled from her late grandfather Dennis K. Chappell and from the Steve Earle song 'Pink Pony Club'-adjacent track 'The Pilgrim: Chapter 33', stage-cocktailed into the character that fronts the project) was built during the 2020 to 2023 working window — Pink Pony Club released as a standalone single in 2020, the EP School Nights re-issued through her own indie deal, and the Midwest Princess full-length quietly released in September 2023 to modest first-week numbers and a cult fan base that knew every word. The breakthrough was 2024 and it was not a single moment — it was a chain of them. The Olivia Rodrigo GUTS World Tour opening slot in early 2024 put her in front of arena audiences for the first time. The April 2024 single 'Good Luck, Babe!' became the first true crossover smash — a top-10 Billboard Hot 100 entry, eight months on the chart, the song that pulled the casual listener into the catalogue. The Coachella mainstage debut in April was, by the post-festival consensus, the largest Coachella daytime audience for an early-billed act in the festival's history — the crowd overflowed the field and the festival had to reroute foot traffic. Lollapalooza in August broke the festival's all-time single-set attendance record by a meaningful margin. By the end of the year the project had moved from the 500-to-1,500-cap club tier to sold-out arena multi-night runs and the festival headline tier. Midwest Princess streamed past two billion plays, Pink Pony Club went diamond, and the Grammy nomination slate covered Album of the Year, Record of the Year, and Best New Artist with the Best New Artist win as the formal coronation. She is currently signed independently to Amusement Records through a distribution deal with Island/Universal, manages through Nick Bobetsky's State Of The Art, and writes her material with Dan Nigro as the consistent co-writer and producer across the catalogue.
