
KATSEYE Canada Tour 2026 — Canadian Dates, Cities & Tickets
KATSEYE Canada Tour 2026 — All Dates
1 confirmed Canada date.

Canada Cities on the Tour
KATSEYE Canada Tour — FAQ
How many KATSEYE Canadian tour dates are confirmed in 2026?▼
What Canadian cities will KATSEYE play on the 2026 tour?▼
Are KATSEYE Canadian dates cheaper or more expensive than US?▼
How much are KATSEYE tickets in 2026?▼
When is KATSEYE's next concert?▼
Where is KATSEYE touring in 2026?▼
How do I get KATSEYE presale tickets?▼
Does KATSEYE do meet and greets or VIP packages?▼
How long is a KATSEYE concert?▼
Can I buy KATSEYE tickets on the day of the show?▼
Is KATSEYE coming to Canada in 2026?▼
Is KATSEYE performing near me?▼
About KATSEYE
KATSEYE were built deliberately, in public, over the course of the Dream Academy reality series that Hybe and Geffen ran across 2023 and 2024. The premise was simple and ambitious: take the rigorous Korean idol training system Hybe had honed with BTS, Tomorrow X Together, and LE SSERAFIM and apply it to a cast of trainees pulled from auditions held in Los Angeles, Seoul, Bangkok, Sydney, Mexico City, and online, with the explicit goal of debuting a group that didn't sit inside K-pop's national identity but could plug into any market. Twenty trainees were narrowed to six through a televised competition that judged vocals, choreography, on-camera presence, and the harder-to-name quality of pop-star magnetism. The final lineup paired Sophia, a Filipino-American singer who'd built a following on YouTube before auditioning, with Lara, of Indian and Swiss heritage; Manon, Swiss and a former dancer in the European competition circuit; Daniela, Venezuelan-American with a theatre background; Yoonchae, Korean and the youngest member of the group; and Megan, a US-born vocalist who came up through the LA musical-theatre and pop pipeline. Their sound sits inside the post-K-pop global pop lane — dance-pop production with bright top-lines and stacked harmonies, drawing on Y2K teen-pop, contemporary R&B, and the same Scandinavian songwriting bench that's powered the last decade of mainstream pop. The debut EP SIS (Soft Is Strong) shipped in 2024 with singles 'Debut' and 'Touch', and the group followed up with 'Tonight I Might' and a string of choreography-led short-form video moments that did the heavy lifting on TikTok and Instagram Reels. Live, they lean on six-part choreography, polished vocal arrangements, and the kind of in-ear-driven production that has become the global pop standard. The group's positioning matters as much as the songs: where K-pop's biggest girl groups have always carried the soft-power weight of Korea's entertainment industry on their backs, KATSEYE were engineered from the start to belong to no single market, and the fanbase that has cohered around them in the first two years of the project reads like a snapshot of how pop discovery actually works in the streaming era — multilingual, internet-native, choreography-fluent, and largely indifferent to the genre borders the industry still tries to police.
