
Niall Horan Parking 2026 — Venue Lots, Arrival Time & Transit
Niall Horan Shows to Plan Parking Around
Choose your date first, then check the venue's official parking and transit page before checkout.


Niall Horan

Niall Horan

Niall Horan

Niall Horan

Niall Horan

Niall Horan

Niall Horan

Niall Horan

Niall Horan

Niall Horan

Niall Horan
Niall Horan Concert Parking Plan
Niall Horan, the American pop rock act, currently has 50 confirmed live dates across 44 cities — the most recent routing points at Hersheypark Stadium in Derry Township, so the parking and arrival guidance below is calibrated to the venue type those pop rock shows usually book.
The next confirmed Niall Horan show is at Hersheypark Stadium in Derry Township. For arena and stadium dates, book official parking as soon as you buy tickets if the venue offers it. Lots closest to the building fill first, and event-night pricing can jump when another game, concert, or downtown festival is happening nearby.
When to Arrive for Niall Horan
- Stadium shows: arrive 90-120 minutes before showtime.
- Arena shows: arrive 60-90 minutes before showtime.
- Theatre shows: arrive 45-60 minutes before showtime.
- General admission floor: arrive earlier if you care about rail position.
Rideshare and Transit Tips
Rideshare is easiest before doors, but pickup zones surge after the encore. Walk a few blocks away from the venue before requesting a ride, or wait 20-30 minutes for prices to settle. If the venue is near rail or subway service, transit is often faster than driving after the show.
Niall Horan Parking — FAQ
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About Niall Horan
Niall James Horan was born on September 13, 1993 in Mullingar, the market town in County Westmeath an hour's drive west of Dublin, to Bobby Horan, a butcher at a local supermarket, and Maura Gallagher, with an older brother Greg. His parents separated when he was around five years old, and he was raised between the two households in the same town, attending Coláiste Mhuire Mullingar through his secondary school years. He taught himself guitar in his early teens, picking up the basics from YouTube tutorials and the cassette and CD recordings his older brother brought home, and spent his early adolescence absorbing the broader Irish singer-songwriter canon — The Frames, Damien Rice, Glen Hansard, The Script, and the broader Eagles and James Taylor American 1970s soft-rock lineage that his parents played around the house. He auditioned for The X Factor UK in 2010 at age sixteen with a stripped acoustic cover of Ne-Yo's So Sick, was put through to bootcamp where his solo audition did not progress beyond that stage, and was folded into the newly formed five-piece group at the suggestion of Nicole Scherzinger and the bootcamp panel alongside Harry Styles, Liam Payne, Louis Tomlinson, and Zayn Malik. The group, named One Direction, finished third in the ninth series of The X Factor UK in December 2010 and signed to Simon Cowell's Syco Records the following month. The five years that followed — Up All Night in November 2011, Take Me Home in November 2012, Midnight Memories in November 2013, Four in November 2014, and Made in the A.M. in November 2015 — produced the boy-band catalogue that defined the streaming era's first wave of pop-music fandom: What Makes You Beautiful, One Thing, Live While We're Young, Best Song Ever, Story of My Life, Drag Me Down, History, and the broader catalogue. The Up All Night, Take Me Home, Where We Are, On the Road Again, and On the Road Again world tours scaled from theaters through arenas to stadiums across every continent except Antarctica, with the Where We Are stadium tour through 2014 setting attendance records that few pop groups had touched in the preceding decade. Zayn Malik departed the group in March 2015, the remaining four completed the Made in the A.M. cycle through the end of 2015 and the On the Road Again touring extension, and the group entered an indefinite hiatus in January 2016 to allow each member to pursue solo work. Horan signed a solo deal with Capitol Records and released This Town in September 2016 as his first solo single — an acoustic ballad that announced an entirely different artist than the boy-band years suggested, pulling on the Irish singer-songwriter tradition and the American 1970s soft-rock canon that had been his private listening rather than the EDM-pop and arena-rock balance of the One Direction catalogue. Flicker, his debut solo studio album, arrived in October 2017 and produced Slow Hands as the breakout single — a Daryl Hall and John Oates-leaning groove that hit the top ten in the United States and went multi-platinum globally. The Flicker World Tour through 2018 carried the album cycle across arenas in North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia. Heartbreak Weather, his second studio album, was released on March 13, 2020 — two weeks before the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered live touring globally — and contained Nice to Meet Ya, No Judgement, and Black and White. The Nice to Meet Ya World Tour that was scheduled to support the album was postponed and ultimately cancelled. The Show, his third studio album, arrived on June 9, 2023 and produced Heaven and Meltdown as the lead singles, returning Horan to the arena touring tier with The Show Live On Tour through 2024 and into the cycle that followed. Horan joined The Voice US as a coach for Season 23 in spring 2023, won the season with his contestant Gina Miles, returned for Season 24 in fall 2023, and continued the role through Season 25 in 2024. His Voice US tenure has expanded his American television footprint significantly and remains one of the defining elements of his post-One Direction solo identity. The arc reads as one of the most coherent solo careers to emerge from the One Direction-era boy-band cohort: an acoustic-driven melodic pop voice with the songwriting room and the arena touring scale to sustain a long-term career.