Concert season kicks into another gear this July as some of music’s biggest names hit the road. J. Cole begins what has been billed as his final major world tour, Benson Boone steps into his biggest arena run yet, Stray Kids launch another blockbuster global trek, and Young Miko celebrates a career milestone with her first headlining arena tour.
Add major outings from LE SSERAFIM, Melanie Martinez, Tame Impala, Beabadoobee, and Thomas Rhett, and July quickly becomes one of the most stacked months on the 2026 touring calendar. Here are the tours worth keeping on your radar.
The Late Checkout Tour — Young Miko
Young Miko reaches a major career milestone with The Late Checkout Tour, her first solo headlining arena trek. Supporting her sophomore album Do Not Disturb and its deluxe edition Late Checkout, the 31-date global outing spans 11 countries across Europe and North America.
The tour begins July 3 with its European run before visiting Cologne, Amsterdam, London, Paris, and Switzerland’s Gurtenfestival. After dates across Mexico, the U.S. arena leg opens October 13 at Seattle’s Climate Pledge Arena and concludes November 5 at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center.
Wanted Man Tour — Benson Boone
Fresh off the success of American Heart, Benson Boone returns to arenas with the Wanted Man Tour, beginning July 7 in Pittsburgh. The North American run includes two nights at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center, Boston’s TD Garden, Chicago’s Allstate Arena, Las Vegas’ T-Mobile Arena, and Dallas’ American Airlines Center before wrapping September 3 in Casper, Wyoming. Olivia O’Brien joins as the opening act.
Deadbeat Tour — Tame Impala
Kevin Parker’s Deadbeat Tour continues its global journey with a major North American summer leg starting July 7.
Supporting the critically acclaimed Deadbeat, the psychedelic project visits Miami, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Montreal, and several additional cities before concluding the regional run in September. Djo and Dominic Fike provide support throughout the North American dates.
The Soundtrack to Life Tour — Thomas Rhett
Thomas Rhett returns to headlining after three years away with The Soundtrack to Life Tour, launching July 9 in Nashville.
Built around the deluxe edition of About A Woman, the 24-date tour mixes arena performances with stadium events, including special shows alongside Niall Horan before continuing across North America through October.
The Fall-Off World Tour — J. Cole
One of the year’s biggest live events officially begins July 11 as J. Cole launches The Fall-Off World Tour, promoted as his final major global trek.
Supporting his seventh and reportedly final studio album The Fall-Off, the massive 73-date itinerary stretches across North America, Europe, Oceania, and South Africa. The tour opens with two hometown-region performances in Charlotte before eventually concluding at Johannesburg’s FNB Stadium in December.
Pureflow Tour — LE SSERAFIM
LE SSERAFIM start their second world tour with two nights at Seoul’s INSPIRE Arena on July 11.
Supporting Pureflow Pt. 1, the 32-show schedule covers South Korea, Japan, North America, Europe, and the Philippines. The European dates are particularly significant, marking the group’s first standalone headline tour across the continent.
Hades: The Sacrifice Tour — Melanie Martinez
Melanie Martinez returns with her biggest production yet on Hades: The Sacrifice Tour.
Originally scheduled to begin July 15, production delays pushed opening night back to July 17 in Rosemont, Illinois. Supporting HADES, the tour visits major North American arenas before crossing into the UK and Europe during September.
Put Your Phone Down Tour — CORTIS
Less than one year after debuting, CORTIS embark on their first headline world tour.
The Put Your Phone Down Tour opens July 18 with two concerts in Incheon before expanding into intimate theater venues throughout North America. The group also celebrates its first anniversary with special Seoul performances before concluding in Japan during early September.
The Loveland Tour — Suki Waterhouse
Suki Waterhouse continues her artistic growth with The Loveland Tour, her largest headline run to date.
Launching July 22 in Phoenix, the tour supports her third album Loveland and combines headline concerts with major festival appearances, including Lollapalooza, Hinterland, All Things Go, and Austin City Limits before ending in Chicago during October.
Run It World Tour — Stray Kids
Stray Kids open another blockbuster touring chapter on July 25 with Run It World Tour.
The first leg focuses on Asia, highlighted by a five-night residency in Seoul and an unprecedented stadium run in Japan, where the group becomes the first overseas male act to headline Tokyo’s national stadium. Additional dates continue through Hong Kong, Taipei, Bangkok, and Singapore into early 2027.
Powerlines Tour — Beabadoobee
Beabadoobee closes the month with Powerlines Tour, her first headline arena outing.
Beginning July 30 with festival performances before transitioning into full arena dates this autumn, the tour supports her upcoming album Pylon. Stops include Madison Square Garden, the Kia Forum, and major European venues, with Wisp and Violet Grohl joining selected dates.






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