Charli XCX Setlist 2026 — Songs, Order & Running Time
Charli XCX 2026 Tour Setlist Structure
Charli XCX, the British hyperpop act, has no confirmed dates on sale right now, so the song order below reflects how hyperpop headline sets of this size are typically paced.
Recent Charli XCX concerts have averaged between 18 and 24 songs spread across roughly 90 to 120 minutes of performance time (excluding opener). The shows typically follow this rough structure:
- Opener (song 1 to 2). A high-energy hit to set the tone.
- Hit block (song 3 to 7). A run of the most-streamed singles.
- Acoustic / storytelling moment (song 8 to 10). Stripped-back arrangements and banter.
- Deep-cut set (song 11 to 15). Fan favorites and newer album tracks.
- Peak run (song 16 to 20). The dancefloor anthems and biggest singalongs.
- Encore (song 21 to 24). A 2 to 3 song encore featuring the signature closer.
Does the Charli XCX Setlist Change Night to Night?
The core of the Charli XCX 2026 setlist — the singles and the staging — stays consistent across the tour so production cues work from night to night. Smaller changes (a deep cut swap, a city-specific cover, or an acoustic surprise) happen on some nights. For the exact setlist from a specific Charli XCX show, check fan-submitted setlists on Setlist.fm after the concert.
Charli XCX Setlist — FAQ
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About Charli XCX
Charlotte Emma Aitchison was born August 2, 1992 in Cambridge, England, the daughter of a Scottish father and an Indian-Ugandan mother. Suburban Essex, where she grew up, is not a place that historically produces pop visionaries, and the early Charli XCX origin story has the quality of self-invention: a teenager uploading demos to MySpace in 2008 under a nickname her father chose for her MSN screenname, getting booked on London's warehouse rave circuit while still in school, signing to Atlantic Records by 2010, and treating the major-label apparatus less as a destination than as a tool to be bent toward weirder ends. The debut album True Romance (2013) was a Gothic, glittering opening statement that earned critical respect but only middling sales; Sucker (2014) leaned harder into pop-punk and arena-ready hooks, generating Boom Clap (the Fault in Our Stars soundtrack hit), Break the Rules, and the radio omnipresence of features on Icona Pop's I Love It and Iggy Azalea's Fancy. By the mid-2010s she was, technically, a mainstream pop star — but the trajectory bored her. Then, around 2016, came the pivot that defined everything since: the alliance with the PC Music label and the late visionary producer SOPHIE, which produced the Vroom Vroom EP, the Number 1 Angel and Pop 2 mixtapes (the latter widely regarded as one of the most influential pop projects of the 2010s, and the document most responsible for the existence of hyperpop as a recognized genre), and a community of collaborators — A. G. Cook, Caroline Polachek, Kim Petras, Cupcakke, Tommy Cash, Christine and the Queens, Rina Sawayama — operating roughly five years ahead of the chart. Charli (2019) consolidated that vocabulary into a more cohesive album statement; how i'm feeling now (2020), assembled in six weeks of COVID lockdown via daily Zoom livestreams and direct fan input, became a critical landmark, a Mercury Prize-nominated document of the era, and a case study in how a pop release cycle could be reinvented under constraint. Crash (2022) pivoted toward maximalist 1980s-coded pop as a deliberate genre exercise — her first UK number-one album. Then Brat (2024) collapsed every binary at once. Recorded with A. G. Cook, EASYFUN, and Cirkut, mixing 1990s European club music with the hyperpop dialect Charli helped build, it produced 360, Von dutch, Apple, Guess (whose Billie Eilish remix dominated summer 2024), and Sympathy is a knife. The blank lime-green cover and lowercase Helvetica title became a meme template; "brat summer" entered political discourse when the Kamala Harris presidential campaign adopted the aesthetic; the album earned a 2025 Grammy nomination for Album of the Year and won three Grammys including Best Dance/Electronic Album. The Sweat Tour, co-headlined with longtime collaborator Troye Sivan, sold out arenas across North America, Europe, and Australia through fall 2024.
