Imran Khan Concert Tour 2026
Is Imran Khan Coming to Your City?
0 / 12 citiesLive tour status for Imran Khan across 12 of the biggest North American markets — refreshed daily from Ticketmaster. Tap any "not yet" city to see the closest confirmed date.
Imran Khan is currently between tours. No confirmed 2026 dates on Ticketmaster right now — this page auto-updates the moment new dates drop.
- How do I get Imran Khan tickets?
- Tap any date below to checkout on Ticketmaster — listings here are official primary tickets, refreshed daily.
- What time does the show start?
- Most Imran Khan 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.
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About Imran Khan
IImran Khan is the British Punjabi R&B artist bringing Punjabi music to global arenas in 2026. Expect a high-energy live band, signature bhangra-and-pop crossovers, and the singalong-heavy diaspora crowd that has made Punjabi concerts one of the fastest-growing live-music categories worldwide. Live dates auto-populate on this page the moment new 2026 shows are confirmed. 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 Imran Khan
Imran Khan is the Punjabi-Dutch pop singer-songwriter whose 2009 debut album 'Unforgettable' — and specifically the lead single 'Amplifier' — defined the international Punjabi-pop sound of the late 2000s and laid the production template that every subsequent Brampton-Surrey-Birmingham diaspora artist has either built on or had to define themselves against. Born November 28, 1984 in The Hague, Netherlands, to Punjabi-Indian parents whose family roots trace to the Doaba region of Punjab, Imran Khan came up entirely outside the traditional India-and-UK Punjabi-pop pipeline and instead built his early career through Dutch-Suriname Hindustani community radio, the Rotterdam-Den Haag South Asian club circuit, and the relatively small but tight-knit Continental European Punjabi-diaspora scene. 'Amplifier', released May 2009, became the first Punjabi-language single to cross 100 million YouTube views and remains one of the most-played Punjabi-pop tracks in history — a song that became the de-facto wedding-DJ closer at South Asian weddings across the UK, Canada, and US for the entire 2010s decade. The 'Unforgettable' album that followed in October 2009 produced 'Bewafa', 'Hey Girl', 'Pata Chalgea', 'Aaja We Mahiya', 'Pyar de Naa', 'Qott Ghusen Ge', and 'Ni Nachleh' — a run of seven singles all of which crossed 50 million YouTube views within a decade of release. After 'Unforgettable', Imran Khan released the long-anticipated single 'Satisfya' in 2013, which itself crossed 500 million YouTube views and became a defining Punjabi-pop track of the 2010s. The intervening years have been characterised by a notable touring quietness — Imran Khan toured selectively across the UK and Canada through the early 2010s but withdrew from the headline-festival circuit for most of the 2015-to-2020 window before returning with the 2022 'Khan-Vict' EP and a tour-comeback circuit that has accelerated through the mid-2020s. This page is the central hub for Imran Khan tour dates, ticket guidance, setlist context, and the cities where the comeback routing has landed.
About Imran Khan
Imran Khan was born November 28, 1984 in The Hague, Netherlands, to Punjabi-Indian parents who had migrated to the Netherlands as part of the broader Surinamese-Hindustani and direct-India-to-Continental-Europe Punjabi diaspora that built sizeable communities in the Hague, Rotterdam, Amsterdam, and the wider Randstad. His family roots trace to the Doaba region of Punjab — the same belt that has produced the bulk of overseas Punjabi-pop talent from Gurdas Maan through the modern Brampton-Surrey wave — though Imran Khan's career arc bypassed the traditional Jalandhar-Ludhiana-Birmingham-London pipeline entirely. He grew up bilingual in Dutch and Punjabi with significant Hindi exposure through Bollywood film and Sunday-morning Hindustani-language community radio, attended Dutch-language schools in The Hague, and started making music in his late teens through the small but creatively tight South Asian club and event scene that runs across the Rotterdam-Den Haag-Amsterdam corridor. His earliest recordings circulated on the Surinamese-Hindustani community-radio circuit and through Continental European Punjabi wedding and Diwali events before any formal label backing materialised. The pivotal career moment was his connection with Eren E and the Karma Productions team in the late 2000s — Eren E (a Turkish-Dutch hip-hop producer with cross-cultural production credits) produced the entire 'Unforgettable' album using a sonic palette that fused Punjabi-pop melodic phrasing with heavy R&B and hip-hop low-end, autotuned vocal effects (then still relatively novel in Punjabi pop), and Western-pop song structure. The result was a sound that didn't exist anywhere else in the Punjabi-music industry in 2009 and that arrived just as YouTube was becoming the dominant distribution channel for South Asian music — 'Amplifier' uploaded to YouTube in May 2009 was the first Punjabi-language single to demonstrate the platform's scaling potential for non-Bollywood non-Indian-domestic-market South Asian music. The song crossed 10 million YouTube views inside three months, 50 million inside two years, and 100 million by 2014 — and seeded the entire model of independent Punjabi-pop artists releasing to YouTube without major-label distribution that AP Dhillon, Shubh, Karan Aujla, and the broader Brampton wave would later inherit. The 'Unforgettable' album released October 2009 produced 'Bewafa' (the second single, a slower R&B-influenced track that became the de-facto Punjabi heartbreak song of the early 2010s), 'Hey Girl' (the third single, pushing further into Western R&B territory), 'Pata Chalgea', 'Aaja We Mahiya', 'Pyar de Naa', 'Qott Ghusen Ge', and 'Ni Nachleh'. Every single from the album crossed 50 million YouTube views by 2020. After 'Unforgettable', Imran Khan released the standalone single 'Satisfya' in 2013 — a return to the harder uptempo Punjabi-pop sound of 'Amplifier' that itself crossed 500 million YouTube views and remains one of his most-streamed catalogue tracks. The 2014-to-2021 window was characterised by a notable career quietness — sporadic singles ('Lahore' in 2014, 'Mera Wada' in 2018, 'Trapline' in 2020), selective touring, and a deliberate withdrawal from the festival-circuit grind that artists like Hardy Sandhu and Diljit Dosanjh were running in the same era. Industry rumour and a series of Imran Khan interviews attribute the gap to a combination of personal life events, label disputes around the 'Unforgettable' catalogue, and a stated preference for studio over stage. The 'Khan-Vict' EP arrived 2022 with seven tracks including 'Dunya', 'Khaab', and 'Yaar Mod Do', and the tour-comeback circuit accelerated through 2023, 2024, and into the current touring window. He continues to be based primarily in the Netherlands and records at studios in The Hague, Rotterdam, and increasingly London and Birmingham.
Imran Khan tour comeback and live show
Imran Khan's tour comeback circuit, which accelerated through 2023 and 2024, is built around mid-tier theatre and small-arena dates in the UK, Canadian, US, and Continental European Punjabi-diaspora markets — a deliberately scaled-down configuration compared with the stadium-tier productions of Diljit Dosanjh or the larger-arena tours of AP Dhillon and Karan Aujla. The UK leg has anchored at OVO Arena Wembley (12,500 capacity at the lower seated-tier configuration), Resorts World Arena in Birmingham (also called the Utilita Arena Birmingham at the Brindleyplace ICC), the AO Arena Manchester, and the Indigo at the O2 in London for smaller-configuration dates. The Canadian leg has anchored at Coca-Cola Coliseum and the Sony Centre for the Performing Arts (now Meridian Hall) in Toronto, the Orpheum and Queen Elizabeth Theatre in Vancouver, and the Bell Performing Arts Centre in Surrey for the West Coast Punjabi-diaspora pocket. US dates have run through the Microsoft Theater in LA, the Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York, and the Rosemont Theatre outside Chicago. The show opens with a deliberate slow-build through deeper-cut tracks from 'Unforgettable' — 'Pata Chalgea', 'Aaja We Mahiya', 'Qott Ghusen Ge' — before pivoting into the recognisable singles 'Bewafa' and 'Hey Girl' for the mid-set, and closing on the harder-tempo trio of 'Satisfya', 'Ni Nachleh', and the obligatory two-pass 'Amplifier' encore. Total runtime is typically 75 to 95 minutes with a three-to-four-piece live band, no dancer corps, and a relatively restrained lighting and production package that leans more on vocal delivery and crowd nostalgia than on staging spectacle. North American promotion runs through Live Nation and regional Punjabi-promoter outfits (Bombay Tea Company, Brown Mantra in Canada; SD Promotions in the UK); the routing concentrates on the UK, Canada, US, and Continental European markets where the 2009-to-2013 catalogue still drives ticket demand from the original 'Unforgettable'-era audience now in their 30s and 40s.
Imran Khan tickets
Imran Khan tickets on the comeback tour circuit price at a deliberately accessible mid-tier band — typically GBP 45-75 for upper-tier seats at UK dates, GBP 95-160 for mid-tier reserved, and GBP 180-300 for floor or lower-bowl seats at on-sale; Canadian dates run CAD 65-110 for upper, CAD 130-220 for mid-tier reserved, and CAD 200-350 for floor before dynamic pricing engages. US dates through the Theater at Madison Square Garden, Microsoft Theater, and Rosemont Theatre tier sit at USD 70-130 upper, USD 140-240 mid-tier, and USD 220-380 floor. The Imran Khan ticket profile differs materially from the Diljit Dosanjh and Karan Aujla tiers in two ways: the secondary market on Imran Khan dates clears at closer-to-face multiples (typically 1.2-to-1.8x face rather than the 2-to-3x range seen on younger Punjabi-pop touring acts), and the demographic skew of the audience (older, predominantly 30-to-45-year-old original-'Unforgettable'-era fans who tend to book primary inventory rather than chasing resale) keeps inventory available for longer in the launch window. Official primary on-sales run through Ticketmaster in North America, AXS or Ticketmaster UK in the United Kingdom depending on the venue (OVO Arena Wembley sits on AXS; Birmingham and Manchester arenas run through Ticketmaster UK; Indigo at the O2 runs through AXS), and AlbumDirect and selectively Stager.nl for any Continental European dates that materialise. Live Nation pre-sales open 24-48 hours ahead of the public on-sale; the OVO Arena Wembley mailing list, AO Arena Buyer Club, and Utilita Birmingham pre-sale each offer a 24-hour pre-sale window worth registering for. The secondary market through StubHub, SeatGeek, and Vivid Seats carries buyer-guarantee protection for non-delivery; avoid Facebook Marketplace and WhatsApp DM sellers, which remain an unusually active fraud vector for Punjabi-diaspora touring inventory across all artist tiers.
Imran Khan setlist
An Imran Khan setlist on the comeback tour runs roughly 15 to 18 songs across 75 to 95 minutes, with a structure that explicitly leans on nostalgia for the 'Unforgettable' (2009) album and the 'Satisfya' (2013) era. The fixed core typically includes the entire singles run from 'Unforgettable' — 'Amplifier' as the encore closer, 'Bewafa' positioned mid-set as the emotional R&B pivot, 'Hey Girl', 'Pata Chalgea', 'Aaja We Mahiya', 'Pyar de Naa', 'Qott Ghusen Ge', and 'Ni Nachleh' — alongside 'Satisfya' as the high-tempo penultimate moment before the 'Amplifier' encore. Post-'Unforgettable' singles ('Lahore', 'Mera Wada', 'Trapline') and the 'Khan-Vict' EP material ('Dunya', 'Khaab', 'Yaar Mod Do') fill the remaining slots, with the more recent material typically clustered in the middle third of the set. The two-pass 'Amplifier' encore is the defining structural choice — the song is played once near the end of the main set, then a second time as the encore closer with extended live-band rearrangement, both performances triggering near-universal crowd singalong that drowns out the front-of-house mix. Night-to-night variation is modest; Imran Khan's catalogue is concentrated enough that the same 15-18 tracks cover essentially the full singles discography, and the band has built tight arrangements rather than reaching for deeper-cut album tracks. UK dates have occasionally included acoustic-stripped intermission moments where Imran Khan moves to the front of the stage and works through a slower catalogue track without the full band — a deliberate counter-programming choice against the higher-energy Punjabi-pop touring norm. For exact night-by-night setlists, setlist.fm carries crowd-submitted lists usually within hours of the encore.
Tour cities
Toronto
Toronto is the largest North American Imran Khan market, driven by the Greater Toronto Area Punjabi-Sikh community across Brampton, Mississauga, the Rexdale-Etobicoke corridor, Malton, and the broader Vaughan-Woodbridge South Asian pocket — a demographic that was directly in the demographic sweet spot for 'Unforgettable' on its 2009 release and that has carried the 'Amplifier' and 'Bewafa' singles through fifteen years of wedding-DJ rotation, Bollywood-night clubbing, and now nostalgia-driven concert demand. The Imran Khan comeback tour Toronto stop has anchored at Coca-Cola Coliseum at Exhibition Place (7,500-capacity reconfigured arena) and the Meridian Hall (formerly Sony Centre for the Performing Arts, 3,191 capacity at 1 Front Street East) — both deliberately mid-tier venue selections that match the show's restrained production scale. Coca-Cola Coliseum is accessible via Exhibition GO Station on the Lakeshore West line (a 12-minute ride from Union); Meridian Hall is a five-minute walk from Union Station via Front Street East or the indoor PATH network. The Toronto crowd skews older than the Shubh and AP Dhillon Toronto audience — expect heavy 30-to-45-year-old attendance, families with adult children, and a notable representation of original-2010-era Punjabi-Canadian university fans now in their mid-30s. Pre-sales open through Ticketmaster and Live Nation 24-48 hours before public on-sale, with MLSE venue pre-sales for any Scotiabank Arena-tier date and TO Live pre-sales for Meridian Hall adding a second access window. At on-sale, upper-tier seats price CAD 65-110, mid-tier reserved CAD 130-220, and floor or lower-bowl seats CAD 200-350 before dynamic pricing engages. The Toronto stop reliably delivers one of the louder 'Amplifier' encore singalongs of the entire tour — fifteen years of weddings, family parties, and Bollywood-night clubs in the GTA have made the song unavoidable and the crowd response near-universal.
Vancouver
Vancouver plays Imran Khan at the Orpheum (2,765 capacity at 601 Smithe Street, the heritage 1927 theatre managed by the City of Vancouver) and the Queen Elizabeth Theatre (2,765 capacity at 630 Hamilton Street) for the comeback tour West Coast anchor — both deliberately mid-tier theatre selections rather than the Rogers Arena tier where younger Punjabi-pop acts like Shubh and AP Dhillon route. The Surrey-Delta-Newton South Asian community drives the bulk of Vancouver-area demand, with the Burnaby and East Vancouver Punjabi pockets adding meaningful secondary feeder traffic; the West Coast Express service from Surrey, Coquitlam, and Mission runs into Waterfront with a short SkyTrain or walk to the downtown theatre district. Both the Orpheum and the Queen Elizabeth Theatre are accessible from Granville and Stadium-Chinatown SkyTrain stations via a five-to-ten-minute walk through the downtown core. Pre-sales open through Ticketmaster and Live Nation 24-48 hours before public on-sale, with the Civic Theatres Vancouver mailing list and the BC Punjabi-promoter circuit (Brown Mantra, Bombay Tea Company) adding pre-sale access through Instagram and WhatsApp channels. At on-sale, upper-tier seats price CAD 70-115, mid-tier reserved CAD 140-230, and floor or front-orchestra seats CAD 215-360 before dynamic pricing engages. The Vancouver crowd has historically been one of the more vocally engaged stops on the Canadian leg — the Punjabi-Surrey demographic concentration is the densest in North America and the 'Amplifier' / 'Satisfya' encore reliably draws extended standing-ovation responses. Downtown hotel rates spike fast for confirmed dates; book inside the on-sale window if you're flying in from outside the Lower Mainland.
Surrey
Surrey is, by per-capita metrics, one of the most important Punjabi-music markets in North America — over 30% of Surrey's population identifies as South Asian, and the 32 Avenue-Newton corridor concentrates the densest Punjabi-Sikh diaspora outside Punjab itself. The Imran Khan comeback tour Surrey stop has anchored at the Bell Performing Arts Centre (1,052 capacity at 6250 144 Street, the dedicated cultural-performance venue on the Sullivan campus of the Surrey School District) — a deliberately small-configuration venue that matches the show's intimate-mid-tier production scale and that consistently delivers one of the highest per-capita attendance rates on the entire tour. The Bell PAC is accessible from the King George SkyTrain station via Surrey Transit route 314 or rideshare; parking is available on-site and fills 45-60 minutes before doors. Demand on Surrey-specific Imran Khan dates typically clears inside the on-sale window with the secondary market running at 1.5-to-2x face for the limited inventory — the Bell PAC's small capacity makes Surrey routinely the fastest sellout on the Canadian leg. The Surrey-driven demand profile also feeds the Vancouver Orpheum and Queen Elizabeth Theatre dates directly; most of the downtown Vancouver floor on Imran Khan nights is the Surrey crowd who took SkyTrain or drove via Pattullo Bridge. Pre-sales for Surrey-specific dates run through Ticketmaster and the Bell PAC mailing list; the regional Punjabi-promoter outfits (Brown Mantra, Bombay Tea Company) frequently handle Surrey-Newton block booking and offer pre-sale access through their Instagram and WhatsApp channels. At on-sale, all seats at the Bell PAC price in a relatively flat band of CAD 95-180 due to the small theatre capacity and unified sightlines. Plan to be at the venue 30-45 minutes before doors — the Bell PAC line at the main 144 Street entrance backs up fast on confirmed Punjabi-tour nights.
Calgary
Calgary plays Imran Khan at the Grey Eagle Resort & Casino Event Centre (2,500 capacity on the Tsuut'ina Nation grounds at 3777 Grey Eagle Drive southwest of the city) and at the Jubilee Auditorium (2,538 capacity at 1415 14 Avenue NW, the heritage 1957 theatre on the SAIT campus) for comeback tour mid-tier dates — both venue selections that fit the show's restrained production tier and avoid the Saddledome-arena-scale configuration where Shubh, AP Dhillon, and Diljit Dosanjh route. The northeast Calgary Sikh community across Castleridge, Falconridge, Martindale, Saddleridge, and Taradale drives multi-night demand at a per-capita rate that exceeds Toronto and Vancouver on metro-population-adjusted metrics, and the Imran Khan Calgary stop reliably sells through inside the on-sale window despite the limited theatre-tier capacity. Grey Eagle is accessible via Highway 22X and Tsuut'ina Trail with on-site parking; the Jubilee Auditorium sits a 10-minute walk from the SAIT/ACAD/Jubilee LRT station on the Red Line. Pre-sales open through Ticketmaster and Live Nation 24-48 hours before public on-sale; the Grey Eagle Event Centre mailing list and the Jubilee Auditorium box office add second-window pre-sale access. At on-sale, seats price CAD 90-170 across the Jubilee's mid-tier band; Grey Eagle Event Centre runs CAD 105-200 across general-admission and reserved configurations. Calgary nights pair with Edmonton on the same prairie routing block (typically 2-3 days apart on the same week), and the Alberta diaspora crowd has historically been one of the louder reception arcs on the Canadian leg — the 'Bewafa' mid-set and 'Amplifier' encore reliably draw extended singalongs that match the response seen at the Toronto and Surrey flagship dates.
Edmonton
Edmonton plays Imran Khan at the Northern Alberta Jubilee Auditorium (2,538 capacity at 11455 87 Avenue NW, the heritage 1957 theatre on the University of Alberta campus and the sister-venue to the Calgary Jubilee) and occasionally at the Winspear Centre (1,706 capacity at 4 Sir Winston Churchill Square, the downtown concert hall managed by the Edmonton Symphony Society) for comeback tour mid-tier dates. The Mill Woods, Tamarack, and southeast Edmonton Punjabi-Sikh corridor — anchored around Mill Woods Town Centre, the Singh Sabha and Guru Nanak Sikh Centre gurdwaras, and the Beverly-area pockets in the northeast — is one of the most concentrated Sikh communities in Western Canada, and Edmonton dates on the Imran Khan comeback tour sell at a tempo comparable to Calgary despite the smaller metro population. The Jubilee Auditorium is accessible from the University LRT station on the Capital and Metro lines (a five-minute walk south); the Winspear Centre sits directly on Churchill LRT station. The Edmonton stop runs the full 75-to-95-minute comeback setlist with no production drop-down from the larger Toronto Coca-Cola Coliseum and Vancouver Orpheum dates, and the Alberta crowd has consistently delivered one of the warmer reception arcs on the tour — Edmonton's older Punjabi-Canadian demographic skews directly into the 'Unforgettable'-era nostalgia profile that the comeback routing targets. Pre-sales open through Ticketmaster and Live Nation 24-48 hours before public on-sale, with the Edmonton Symphony's Winspear pre-sale and the Jubilee Auditorium mailing list offering second-window access. At on-sale, Jubilee seats price CAD 90-170 across the mid-tier band; Winspear seats CAD 100-190 depending on configuration.
London
London is the European flagship for the Imran Khan comeback tour, anchored at OVO Arena Wembley (12,500 capacity, configured in the lower seated-only tier for most Punjabi-pop bookings) and at Indigo at the O2 (2,800 capacity in the smaller venue inside the larger O2 dome complex) for smaller-configuration dates. The British Punjabi-Sikh community across Southall, Hounslow, Hayes, Slough, and the broader West London corridor — alongside the East London Forest Gate and Ilford Sikh populations and the Birmingham-Wolverhampton Midlands feeder — drives the largest single concentration of original-'Unforgettable'-era Imran Khan fans in the world. The UK demographic skew toward older Punjabi-British fans now in their 30s and 40s makes the London date one of the warmer reception arcs on the entire global routing — 'Amplifier' was a defining Punjabi-British song of the 2009-to-2012 era and the encore reliably draws crowd-singalong responses that drown out the front-of-house mix. OVO Arena Wembley is accessible directly from Wembley Park station (Jubilee and Metropolitan lines, a four-minute walk via Olympic Way) and from Wembley Stadium station on the Chiltern Railway out of Marylebone; the Indigo at the O2 is accessible from North Greenwich station on the Jubilee Line via a five-minute walk through the O2 dome courtyard. Pre-sales open through AXS, Ticketmaster UK, and the OVO Arena Wembley mailing list 48 hours before public on-sale; Live Nation UK pre-sales add a second access window. At on-sale, OVO Arena Wembley upper-tier seats price GBP 45-75, mid-tier GBP 95-160, and floor or lower-bowl GBP 180-300 before dynamic pricing engages; Indigo at the O2 seats price in a flatter GBP 75-180 band due to the small capacity. UK secondary-market regulation (Live Music Act, viagogo restrictions, StubHub UK verified-resale program) caps resale closer to face than the multiples seen on StubHub North America. Plan transit early — Wembley Park gets crowded post-show.
Birmingham
Birmingham is the Midlands anchor for the Imran Khan UK leg and one of the most consistently sold-out dates on the entire comeback routing. The West Midlands Punjabi-Sikh community — concentrated across Smethwick, Handsworth, Wolverhampton, West Bromwich, and the broader Black Country corridor — is the second-densest Punjabi diaspora population in the UK after West London, and the demographic skew toward older Punjabi-British fans who came up with 'Unforgettable' in 2009 makes the Birmingham date one of the warmer reception arcs on the entire tour. The Birmingham comeback stop has anchored at the Utilita Arena Birmingham (15,800 capacity in the ICC Brindleyplace complex on Broad Street, the venue formerly known as the National Indoor Arena and the Barclaycard Arena) and at the Resorts World Arena on the NEC campus near Birmingham Airport. The Utilita Arena is a five-minute walk from Birmingham New Street station via Broad Street and the ICC pedestrian routes; Resorts World Arena is accessible from Birmingham International station via the NEC shuttle bus. Pre-sales open through Ticketmaster UK and the Utilita Birmingham pre-sale mailing list 48 hours before public on-sale; Live Nation UK pre-sales add a second access window. At on-sale, upper-tier seats price GBP 45-75, mid-tier GBP 95-160, and floor or lower-bowl GBP 180-300 before dynamic pricing engages. The Birmingham crowd has consistently delivered one of the loudest 'Amplifier' encore singalongs of the entire global comeback tour — fifteen years of West Midlands Punjabi wedding-DJ rotation has made the song unavoidable and the crowd response near-universal.
Amsterdam
Amsterdam holds a uniquely meaningful place on the Imran Khan touring routing — Imran Khan was born and raised in the Netherlands (specifically The Hague, a 50-minute train ride south of Amsterdam) and the Continental European Punjabi diaspora that supported his earliest pre-'Unforgettable' work is concentrated across the Randstad corridor that runs Amsterdam-The Hague-Rotterdam-Utrecht. The Amsterdam comeback tour stop has anchored at AFAS Live (5,500 capacity at ArenA Boulevard 590 in the Bijlmer ArenA complex, the venue formerly known as Heineken Music Hall) and at the Ziggo Dome (17,000 capacity on the same ArenA complex) when the production scales up. The Surinamese-Hindustani community in Amsterdam Zuidoost (Bijlmer) and across the broader Randstad provides the core demand profile, supplemented by direct-India-to-Netherlands Punjabi migration of the 2010s and the Continental European Punjabi tourism that brings UK and Belgian diaspora fans into Amsterdam for single-date routings. AFAS Live and the Ziggo Dome both sit on the Bijlmer ArenA complex, accessible directly from Bijlmer ArenA station on the Amsterdam Metro M50 and M54 lines and the Dutch InterCity rail network from Centraal Station. Pre-sales open through Ticketmaster Netherlands and Stager.nl 48 hours before public on-sale; the Mojo Concerts mailing list and the regional Punjabi-promoter circuit in the Netherlands (which is smaller and more tightly relationship-based than the UK or Canadian equivalents) offer pre-sale access via direct booking. At on-sale, AFAS Live seats price EUR 55-95, with the small standing-only floor configuration adding EUR 110-180 tickets. The Amsterdam date has historically delivered the most personal stage moments of the comeback tour — Imran Khan typically extends the between-song banter, switches between Dutch and Punjabi for the audience, and acknowledges family and longtime Hague-Rotterdam friends in the front rows in a way that doesn't happen on UK, Canadian, or US dates.
New York
New York sees Imran Khan at the Theater at Madison Square Garden (5,600 capacity inside the MSG complex at 4 Pennsylvania Plaza above Penn Station) and at the Beacon Theatre (2,894 capacity at 2124 Broadway on the Upper West Side) for the comeback tour East Coast anchor. The Queens, Long Island, and Edison-Iselin Punjabi communities drive the demand profile; Queens Borough Punjabi-Sikh density across Richmond Hill, South Ozone Park, and Jackson Heights is the largest concentrated Punjabi population on the US East Coast, supplemented by the New Jersey diaspora pockets in Iselin, Edison, and Jersey City. The Theater at Madison Square Garden is accessible directly from Penn Station via the LIRR, NJ Transit, NYC Subway A/C/E and 1/2/3 lines; the Beacon Theatre is reached from the 72nd Street station on the 1/2/3 lines, a one-block walk west to Broadway. Pre-sales open through Ticketmaster and Live Nation 24-48 hours before public on-sale, with MSG Premier and Knicks/Rangers MSG Insider pre-sales adding a second access window for the Theater date. At on-sale, upper-tier mezzanine seats price USD 70-130, mid-tier reserved USD 140-220, and floor or front-mezzanine seats USD 240-380 before dynamic pricing engages. The New York crowd skews older and more first-generation than the Toronto and Vancouver demographics — the Queens Punjabi-American audience came up directly with 'Amplifier' on 2009 release and the 'Bewafa' mid-set moment reliably draws the most emotionally engaged singalong response of the US leg. Plan transit early — the Penn Station post-show outflow backs up fast and the A/C/E platforms get crowded inside 30 minutes after the encore.
Sydney
Sydney plays Imran Khan at the Hordern Pavilion (5,500 capacity at 1 Driver Avenue in the Moore Park entertainment quarter adjacent to the Sydney Cricket Ground) and at the Enmore Theatre (2,000 capacity at 118 Enmore Road in Newtown) for the comeback tour Australian leg, with the Aware Super Theatre at ICC Sydney (8,000 capacity at Darling Harbour) reserved for larger configurations. The Australian Punjabi-Sikh community is concentrated across Blacktown, Parramatta, Liverpool, Casula, and the broader western Sydney corridor — alongside the Wollongong and Newcastle pockets to the north and south — and the demographic enthusiasm for the 'Unforgettable'-era catalogue tracks with the older Punjabi-Australian audience that established itself in the 2000s and 2010s through Western Sydney University and the Liverpool-Bankstown South Asian community circuit. The Hordern Pavilion is accessible from Central station via the 339 or 343 bus to Anzac Parade and a five-minute walk through Moore Park; the Enmore Theatre is a 10-minute walk from Newtown station on the T2 Inner West line. Pre-sales open through Ticketek and Frontier Touring Australia 48 hours before public on-sale; the Frontier Touring mailing list and Live Nation Australia pre-sale add a second access window. At on-sale, Hordern Pavilion floor GA prices AUD 145-220 and reserved seating AUD 95-180; Enmore Theatre seats run AUD 110-220 across the unified small-venue tier. The Australian Punjabi crowd reliably delivers one of the warmer reception arcs on the entire comeback tour — 'Amplifier' was unavoidable on Sydney South Asian community radio across the 2010s and the encore singalong rivals the Toronto and Birmingham flagship dates in volume.
Cheapest Imran Khan Tickets — 5 Ways to Save on the 2026 Tour
Imran Khan 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 Imran Khan 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 $45 to $75 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 Imran Khan tickets guide for current low-priced dates.
Imran KhanVIP Packages & Meet & Greet Options
When available, Imran Khan VIP packages are offered directly on Ticketmaster alongside the standard tickets for each tour date. VIP experiences for Imran Khanconcerts 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 Imran KhanVIP & meet and greet guide.
Imran KhanPresale Tickets & Codes
Presale windows for the Imran Khan 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 Imran Khantour 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 Imran Khan presale guide for the current active codes and sign-up deadlines.
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