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Concerts

The Biggest Concerts Coming To Canada in 2025

From Kendrick Lamar’s much-anticipated visit to Toronto to the combustible Oasis reunion at the new Rogers Stadium, these shows are bringing major artists – and some big storylines – to Canadian venues this year.

Oasis
Oasis
Simon Emmett

Taylor Swift's Eras Tour finished its run in 2024 in Toronto and Vancouver, fulfilling years of anticipation, but the appetite for mega-tours and stadium concerts hasn't abated.

Huge tours are thriving, and the concert calendar is already filling up throughout Canada with some major ones. From K-Pop to hip-hop, pop-punk to classic rock to country, there are some huge names coming to the country’s biggest venues.


Here are some of the biggest:

Sum 41 Play Their Final Concerts

This is it. Pop-punk/heavy rock stars Sum 41 are calling a career and wrapping up with a handful of Canadian dates, including their final show on January 30 in Toronto. They’re going out on a high note, with Heaven :x: Hell accounting for some of their biggest hits in decades. They’ll also be inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame soon after. Start practicing your sing-alongs: this is the last chance to belt along with favourites like “Fat Lip” and “In Too Deep.”

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January 10 – Victoria – Save-on-Foods Memorial Centre

January 11 – Vancouver – Rogers Arena

January 13 Kelowna Prospera Place

January 16 Calgary Scotiabank Saddledome

January 17 Edmonton Rogers Place

January 18 Saskatoon Sasktel Centre

January 20 Winnipeg Canada Life Centre

January 23 St. Catharines Meridian Centre

January 24 Ottawa Canadian Tire Centre

January 25 Laval Place Bell

January 27 London, ON Budweiser Gardens

January 28 – Toronto – Scotiabank Arena

January 30 – Toronto – Scotiabank Arena – FINAL SHOW

Four Tet and Skepta Bring the Heat to Montreal’s Igloofest

Some major international names will be donning their puffiest winter jackets for Igloofest 2025, the outdoor festival that runs every year during January and February in Montreal and brings music fans out of hibernation. The festival’s 17th edition promises to get fans dancing down by Montreal’s Old Port, with a flurry of strong headliners: electronic experimentalist and Skrillex collaborator Four Tet, U.K. grime MC Skepta performing his Más Tiempo house DJ set, and Swedish soundcloud rapper Bladee, to name a few, not to mention a deep roster of local talent.

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January 16 through February 8 Montreal Old Port

Yseult Brings Soulful Power to Montreal

Yseult had a big year, featured on one of 2024's most unlikely chart hits, "Alibi" with Sevdaliza and Pabllo Vittar. Known for her deeply personal lyrics and breathtaking vocals, the French singer-songwriter has also captivated fans around the world with hits like "Corps" and "Indélébile." Yseult is coming back to Montreal for her first performance in years, a place where her signature blend of pop and soul seems to resonate in a big way.

January 27 – Montréal – MTELUS

Katy Perry, Nelly Furtado, Jelly Roll and More at the Invictus Games

Prince Harry's Invictus Games has some big headliners coming to Vancouver and Whistler this winter. Pop star Katy Perry, anthemic folk singer Noah Kahan, Canadian pop icon Nelly Furtado and Quebec alt-pop singer Roxane Bruneau all play the opening ceremony on February 8, while Jelly Roll closes it down on February 16 with Barenaked Ladies and The War and Treaty. Other artists playing throughout the festivities include Jim Cuddy, Skratch Bastid and more. More info here.

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February 8-16 – Vancouver & Whistler, B.C.

Mustafa’s First World Tour Comes to Montreal

Mustafa's Dunya has been celebrated as one of the most acclaimed albums of 2024, and he's using that momentum to launch his first world tour. His star has risen over the past year for both his music and activism. The Toronto-born singer-songwriter’s tour will take him across the U.S. and Europe, plus Ethiopia and Sudan. The lone Canadian date is in Montreal, and it’s sure to be a good one.

February 27 Montreal Le National

Jelly Roll Blasts Through a Dozen Canadian Dates

Tennessee singer Jelly Roll picked Canada for a major milestone in 2024, performing his first international dates in Ottawa and Toronto last summer. This year, he’s ramping up the Canadian connection with a 12-city run, the Beautifully Broken Great Northern Tour. Named for his No. 1 record, Beautifully Broken, the headlining tour will take him from Victoria to Quebec City in March, with rising Canadian country singer Josh Ross along for the ride. A month later, he’ll hit the road again, playing stadiums with Post Malone.

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March 6 Victoria Memorial Centre

March 8 Vancouver Rogers Arena

March 11 Calgary Scotiabank Saddledome

March 13 Edmonton Rogers Place

March 15 Saskatoon SaskTel Centre

March 16 Regina The Brandt Centre

March 17 Winnipeg Canada Life Centre

March 21 Ottawa Canadian Tire Centre

March 22 Toronto Scotiabank Arena

March 23 London Canada Life Place

March 25 Laval Place Bell

March 26 Quebec City Videotron Centre

Billy Joel's First Toronto Show in More Than a Decade

Billy Joel is returning to active duty. Following "Turn the Lights Back On" heralding his first new music in more than a decade, the legendary piano man is now set to return to Toronto on March 15. The stadium show will be his first performance in the Canadian metropolis in 11 years and his only Canadian performance in 2025. It's also the first time he's played at the home of the Blue Jays in more than 30 years.

March 15 – Toronto – Rogers Centre

Post Malone Fills Toronto's Big Ass Stadium

As he's transitioned from hip-hop to country, Post Malone has become one of the most popular touring artists. We saw it last year in Quebec City when he played for more than 100,000 people at FEQ, and he has that same big-crowd ambition on his upcoming Big Ass Stadium Tour. That tour will come to Toronto's Rogers Centre in May. Jelly Roll won't be coming with him as he is for much of the rest of the tour (he has his own arena date in the city just a couple of months before), but it seems Posty can fill a stadium on his own.

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May 26 – Toronto Rogers Centre

NXNE Gears Up for a Big 30th Anniversary Edition

Billboard Canada's parent company Artshouse Media Group (AMG) has acquired a major stake in North By Northeast (NXNE). This is the 30th anniversary of the iconic Toronto music festival, and the new partnership will bring the festival to its full glory. Venues will be filled across Toronto with emerging artists ripe for discovering, while a new Billboard stage will bring some big names to the city for a big blowout performance. Artists from Lizzo to Daniel Caesar, Feist, Grimes, The Beaches, Mac DeMarco, Haviah Mighty, Sam Roberts and Billy Talent have played critical NXNE showcases at breaking points in their careers, and this year will honour that legacy.

June 11-15 – Toronto – various venues (more info here)


Kendrick Lamar Comes to Drake’s Home Turf

Kendrick Lamar & SZA’s Grand National Tour, which brings them to stadiums across North America is already set to be one of the hottest tours of the year – but the two Toronto dates will grab the most headlines. These will be Kendrick’s first Toronto shows since his high-profile feud with Drake, and it’s one that beef-lovers will be watching very carefully. Will he perform “Not Like Us” at one of the city’s biggest stages? And how will the hometown crowd react? Many will be watching.

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June 12 & 13 Toronto Rogers Centre

Avril Lavigne Headlines the Second-Ever All Your Friends Fest

After a successful first run in 2024, pop-punk palooza All Your Friends Fest is returning to Ontario’s Burl’s Creek this year and bringing some serious 2002 energy. Canadian icons Avril Lavigne and Simple Plan — both of whom released their debut records that year — lead the lineup so far for the second edition, programmed by promoter Republic Live. Get your ties and white tank tops ready now.

June 28 & 29 Oro-Medonte, Ontario Burl’s Creek

Stray Kids Find a Venue Big Enough to Hold Them

Stray Kids are one of the hottest acts in K-Pop, and they've been setting records on the Billboard charts. When Live Nation announced Rogers Stadium, a new stadium built just for music, some of the online chatter wondered how many touring acts can fill a venue that size, but the global rise of genres like K-Pop (along with Punjabi, Latin music and more) means there is a diverse range of acts who can headline. For their <dominATE> world tour, it already feels like there's no stage too big for Stray Kids.

June 29 – Toronto – Rogers Stadium

Shania Twain Headlines Calgary Stampede

Let’s go (cow)girls. Shania Twain is performing in Calgary for the first time in over a decade this year, headlining the rowdiest show in town, the Calgary Stampede. The Canadian country queen and five-time Grammy winner will head to Calgary this summer after she wraps up a Las Vegas residency this winter. (She also took a moment off from the residency to appear in Sabrina Carpenter’s Netflix Christmas special.) Her brash country pop is sure to get the crowd revved up for the annual rodeo, which draws over a million people to the event grounds.

July 5 Calgary Scotiabank Saddledome

Gracie Abrams Enters Her Headliner Era

As one era ends, another begins: Gracie Abrams capped off her stint opening for Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour in Toronto and Vancouver by announcing a 2025 return to the road. The Secret Life of Us Deluxe Tour — named for the album that hit No. 1 in Canada — heads to six cities next summer, including Toronto’s outdoor Budweiser Stage, where Abrams is sure to bring out her chart-topping and infinitely catchy single “That’s So True.”

July 26 Toronto – Budweiser Stage

Tate McRae’s First Arena Tour in Canada

Canada’s newest global pop star is heading on her first arena run through her home country next year. She’ll bring her Miss Possessive tour, which also takes her through Europe and the Americas, to six Canadian cities in August: Vancouver, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal. The tour comes alongside the release of her third album, So Close To What on February 21, and gives Canadian fans who didn’t see her at the Calgary Stampede or Toronto’s Budweiser Stage in 2024 the chance to take in the “Greedy” singer and her acclaimed dance moves up close.

August 5 –Vancouver – Rogers Arena

August 7 – Edmonton – Rogers Place

August 9 – Winnipeg – Canada Life Centre

August 19 – Toronto – Scotiabank Arena

August 22 – Ottawa – Canadian Tire Centre

August 24 – Montreal – Bell Centre

Linkin Park 2.0 Comes to Canada

Linkin Park’s new version with Emily Armstrong stepping in for late vocalist Chester Bennington has already been a commercial success in Canada, with their 2024 album From Zero topping the Canadian Albums chart last year. There’s clearly still demand for the nu-metal hitmakers, and Canadian fans will get it this summer at a handful of arenas. Not just a nostalgia tour, these shows are sure to be packed with new material.

August 6 – Bell Centre – Montreal

August 8 – Scotiabank Arena – Toronto

September 21 – Rogers Arena – Vancouver

My Chemical Romance Celebrate The Black Parade in Toronto

Emo heroes My Chemical Romance are getting ready for a big anniversary: their bombastic third record, The Black Parade, turns thirty in 2026. They’re celebrating in style this year with a special stadium tour, “Long Live,” which heads to ten cities across the continent, including Toronto’s Rogers Centre. Legendary indie rockers Pixies will be opening for MCR, as thousands of fans fulfill a long-awaited dream: to see the black parade.

August 22 Toronto Rogers Centre

Oasis’s Reunion Tour Comes to Toronto’s Newest Stadium

Oasis’s reunion tour is so big, Live Nation may have built a stadium for it. The 50,000-capacity Rogers Stadium opens this coming summer, and in a Billboard Canada interview, Erik Hoffman said it was inspired by a band that otherwise would have skipped Toronto. It’s easy to guess he was likely talking about Oasis, whose North American tour was announced shortly after. Anticipation is high for the British rockers, and sportsbooks are already taking bets on if the Gallagher brother frontmen can put aside their combustible rivalry long enough to actually complete the tour. Time will tell.

August 24 & 25 Toronto Rogers Stadium

More Major Concerts in Canada in 2025

Jack White – February 6-8 – Toronto – History/Massey Hall & May 22-23 – Vancouver – Commodore Ballroom

Aespa – February 13 – Toronto – Scotiabank Arena

Kylie Minogue – March 29 – Toronto – Scotiabank Arena & March 30 – Montreal – Bell Centre

Bachman-Turner Overdrive – April 1-May 8 – 22 dates throughout Canada (itinerary here)

J Balvin – April 7 – Laval – Place Bell & April 8 – Toronto – Scotiabank Arena

Nelly with J Rule & Special Guests April 11-July 31 – 10 dates throughout Canada (itinerary here)

Metallica – April 24 – Toronto – Rogers Centre

Shakira – May 20 – Montreal – Bell Centre & May 26 – Toronto – Scotiabank Arena

Coldplay with Arya Starr and Elyanna – July 8 – Toronto – Rogers Stadium

Country Thunder Saskatchewan featuring Def Leppard, Bailey Zimmerman, Jason Aldean and more – July 10-13 (info here)

Dua Lipa – September 1-2 – Toronto – Scotiabank Arena

System of a Down & Deftones – September 3 & 5 – Toronto – Rogers Stadium

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Neil Young performs on stage in Hyde Park on July 12, 2019 in London.
Matthew Baker/GI

Neil Young performs on stage in Hyde Park on July 12, 2019 in London.

Music News

Neil Young Reverses Glastonbury Withdrawal, Cites ‘Error’ for Earlier Stance

The Canadian rocker had initially called the festival a "corporate turn-off" earlier this week, blaming the BBC's involvement at the event.

Neil Young has announced that he will be headlining Glastonbury Festival in June, just days after he said that he would withdraw from the festival and called it a “corporate turn-off.”

Earlier this week (Jan. 1), Young wrote on his website: “The Chrome Hearts and I were looking forward to playing Glastonbury, one of my all time favorite outdoor gigs,” Young wrote in the brief update. “We were told that BBC was now a partner in Glastonbury and wanted us to do a lot of things in a way we were not interested in. It seems Glastonbury is now under corporate control and is not the way I remember it being.”

This article first appeared on Billboard U.S.

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