Tate McRae Setlist 2026 — Songs, Order & Running Time
Tate McRae 2026 Tour Setlist Structure
Tate McRae, the Canadian pop act, has no confirmed dates on sale right now, so the song order below reflects how pop headline sets of this size are typically paced.
Recent Tate McRae 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 Tate McRae Setlist Change Night to Night?
The core of the Tate McRae 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 Tate McRae show, check fan-submitted setlists on Setlist.fm after the concert.
Tate McRae Setlist — FAQ
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About Tate McRae
Tate Rosner McRae was born July 1, 2003, in Calgary, Alberta, to Norwegian-born mother Tatiana, a dance teacher, and Canadian father Bill McRae, a lawyer. The dance career started essentially as soon as she could walk — she enrolled at Calgary's YYC Dance Project at six, trained in ballet, jazz, contemporary, and hip-hop through her childhood, and by twelve was placing nationally at the major American competition circuits. The 2015 win at the Dance Awards in New York (Best Female Dancer, Mini division) put her on the radar of the Fox dance reality machine; she was cast on So You Think You Can Dance: The Next Generation in 2016 at age thirteen and became the youngest Canadian finalist in the franchise's history, placing third overall. The pivot from dance to music came almost immediately after — she launched a YouTube channel called Create with Tate in 2017 where she posted original songs written in her bedroom on a weekly cadence, attracted a million subscribers inside two years, and was signed to RCA Records under Sony in 2019 on the strength of those uploads. The breakthrough single — One Day, a piano-led ballad written when she was fourteen — primed the audience for You Broke Me First in April 2020, a TikTok-native breakup record that climbed across the Anglophone markets through that pandemic summer, peaked top-twenty in the US and the UK, and got her the first proper streaming-era hit profile. The 2022 debut album I Used to Think I Could Fly leaned introspective and bedroom-pop in the Eilish-adjacent register; She's All I Wanna Be from that cycle was the breakout single. The category-shifting moment came in summer 2023 with Greedy — a tight, percussive, dance-floor-ready single from Think Later that hit number one on the global Spotify chart, soundtracked the autumn TikTok cycle, and re-positioned her from singer-songwriter to full pop-star tier almost overnight. Think Later (December 2023) consolidated the run with Exes, 10:35 with Tiesto, and a Think Later World Tour 2024 that played arenas globally for the first time. So Close to What in February 2025 was the consolidation record — her first Billboard 200 number-one, fronted by It's Ok I'm Ok, Sports Car, 2 hands, and Just Keep Watching — and the Miss Possessive Tour announced alongside it became her first stadium-tier headline run. She remains signed to RCA, remains Calgary-rooted on her public profile, and remains the only working A-list pop star whose live show genuinely deploys the full trained-dancer choreographic vocabulary across the entire 100-plus-minute set.
