The Weeknd has added three extra dates at London’s Wembley Stadium to his 2026 ‘After Hours Til Dawn’ tour – see all the details below.
- READ MORE: The Weeknd – ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ review: stadium-filling superstar prepares to move on
Last week, the Canadian pop and R&B star announced the extension of his record-breaking stadium tour, which will now see him play new shows in North America, South America, Europe and the UK between April and August 2026.
These include shows in London, Mexico City, Dublin, Paris, Amsterdam, São Paulo, Milan and many more, with Playboi Carti set to join all his UK and European dates, and Anitta for his North and South American shows.
Initially, The Weeknd announced two shows in London at Wembley Stadium, set to take place on August 14 and 15. But, today, (September 11), he’s added an additional three dates on August 16, 18 and 19.
General tickets will go on sale tomorrow (September 12) at 12pm BST – you will be able to get your tickets here. See a full list of tour dates below.

The Weeknd’s ‘After Hours Til Dawn’ 2026 stadium tour dates are:
APRIL
20 – Mexico City, MX – Estadio GNP Seguros
21 – Mexico City, MX – Estadio GNP Seguros
26 – Rio de Janeiro, Brazil – Estádio Nilton Santos
30 – São Paulo, Brazil – Estádio MorumBIS
Recommended
MAY
01 – São Paulo, Brazil – Estádio MorumBIS
JULY
10 – Paris, France – Stade de France
17 – Amsterdam, Netherlands – Johan Cruijff ArenA
21 – Nice, France – Allianz Riviera
24 – Milan, Italy – San Siro Stadium
30 – Frankfurt, Germany – Deutsche Bank Park
AUGUST
04 – Warsaw, Poland – PGE Narodowy
08 – Stockholm, Sweden – Strawberry Arena
14 – London, UK – Wembley Stadium
15 – London, UK – Wembley Stadium
16 – London, UK – Wembley Stadium (NEW DATE)
18 – London, UK – Wembley Stadium (NEW DATE)
19 – London, UK – Wembley Stadium (NEW DATE)
22 – Dublin, Ireland – Croke Park
28 – Madrid, Spain – Riyadh Air Metropolitano
29 – Madrid, Spain – Riyadh Air Metropolitano
Additionally, a portion of every ticket sold for the 2026 tour will go towards providing underprivileged children with funds for education, as well as food for the global hunger crisis via his partnership with Global Citizen.
€1 from each ticket sold across Europe, £1 in the UK and the $1 equivalent in Mexico and Brazil will be donated to the FIFA Global Citizen Education Fund and the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) to provide funds to the XO Humanitarian Fund.

Earlier this year, Tesfaye said he wanted to retire his Weeknd moniker after overcoming “every challenge as this persona, it’s a headspace I’ve gotta get into that I just don’t have any more desire for,” he told Variety. “I feel like it comes with so much. You have a persona, but then you have the competition of it all. It becomes this rat race: more accolades, more success, more shows, more albums, more awards and more Number Ones. It never ends until you end it.”
While the singer hasn’t yet put an end to the ‘Weeknd’ moniker, he’s long been vocal about wanting to “kill” the Weeknd moniker for several years. He’s even gone so far as to say that his latest album ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ and its accompanying film of the same name will be his last as The Weeknd.
‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ was given a four-star review from NME and described as “a fitting – and intriguing – swansong”.
“Though ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ has plenty of his usual moody synth-pop, it’s also speckled with experimentation: he pulls off throbbing Brazilian funk on ‘São Paulo’ and flirts with Kanye-style chipmunk soul on ‘Niagara Falls’,” it read. “If this is a swansong for The Weeknd, it’s a fitting one. Tesfaye is pushing forward before he exhausts the collective fascination with his alter ego, and that’s no small achievement.”
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