Introduction
Touring used to be the advertisement for an album. Now it’s the main event, and the numbers prove it. Every single tour in today’s top ten happened in the 2000s or later, and most of them landed in just the last decade.
We pulled verified gross revenue, official attendance figures, and real tour dates from Billboard, Pollstar, and direct company disclosures to rank the ten highest grossing concert tours of all time, exactly as they stand right now.
Table of Contents
- Key Highlights
- What Actually Drives a Tour to Record-Breaking Numbers
- The Top 10 Highest Grossing Concert Tours of All Time
- Important Statistics Table
- How Tour Grosses Are Actually Calculated (Step-by-Step)
- Pros and Cons Table (Scarcity vs. Volume Touring)
- Comparison Table: Top 10 Tours at a Glance
- Current Trends in Touring Revenue
- FAQs
- References
Key Highlights (Quick Facts)
- Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour is the first and only concert tour in history to cross $2 billion, grossing $2,077,618,725 from 149 shows.
- The Eras Tour sold 10,168,008 tickets at an average price of $204 per seat, according to figures Swift’s company gave The New York Times.
- Coldplay’s Music of the Spheres World Tour overtook the Eras Tour in total attendance, selling 13.1 million tickets across 223 shows, making it the most-attended tour in history.
- Every tour in the current top ten took place in the 2000s or later, reflecting how touring replaced album sales as the music industry’s primary revenue engine.
- The Rolling Stones have set the all-time touring revenue record three separate times, in 1990, 1995, and 2006, more than any other act in history.
- Elton John’s Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour ran the longest schedule in the current top ten, spanning 330 shows over five years, including a pandemic-related pause.
- Beyoncé’s Renaissance World Tour grossed $580 million from just 56 shows, an average above $10 million per night, second only to the Eras Tour’s per-show rate.
- Secondary market resale prices for the Eras Tour’s final North American leg averaged around $2,800 per ticket, far above the tour’s $204 official face-value average.
The truth is, there are two very different ways to top this list: a small number of enormous, premium-priced nights, or a long, sustained campaign across hundreds of shows. Both strategies show up clearly once you look past the headline gross numbers.
What Actually Drives a Tour to Record-Breaking Numbers
Before ranking the list, here’s what separates a merely successful tour from one that rewrites the record books.
Scarcity and Demand
Short, high-ticket stadium runs that treat every date as a singular event, like the Eras Tour or Beyoncé’s Renaissance tour, generate enormous per-show averages precisely because supply stays limited relative to demand.
Longevity and Volume
Other tours win through sheer endurance, playing hundreds of shows across years, like Elton John’s five-year farewell run, trading a lower per-night average for a much longer runway to accumulate total revenue.
Global Routing
The biggest tours now routinely cross five continents, tapping markets in Asia, Latin America, and Oceania that older mega-tours largely skipped, which meaningfully expands the total addressable audience.
Production Scale and Reinvention
Acts that keep reinventing their live shows, rather than repeating a fixed setlist and staging, tend to sustain demand across years or even decades, turning individual tours into ongoing cultural events.
The Top 10 Highest Grossing Concert Tours of All Time
Here is our researched, no-fluff ranking of the highest grossing concert tours in music history.
1. Taylor Swift — The Eras Tour
Dates: March 17, 2023 – December 8, 2024 Gross: $2,077,618,725 Shows: 149, across five continents Attendance: 10,168,008 tickets, at an average price of $204 per seat
The Eras Tour is the first concert tour in history to cross $2 billion, and the gap between it and second place is so large that industry analysts often treat it as its own category. Structured as a chronological journey through Swift’s entire discography, the show ran roughly 3.5 hours a night with around 44-46 songs across ten thematic “era” segments.
The tour set attendance records at stadiums worldwide, including eight sold-out nights at London’s Wembley Stadium that alone drew 753,112 fans. Swift’s team also confirmed the tour spawned the highest-grossing concert film of all time, while secondary market resale prices during the tour’s final North American leg soared to an average of roughly $2,800 per ticket, far above face value.
A packed stadium at night lit up for a major arena concert — the scale of modern stadium touring has transformed live music into the recording industry’s primary revenue source.
2. Coldplay — Music of the Spheres World Tour
Dates: March 18, 2022 – September 2025 Gross: $1.52 billion Shows: 223, across five continents Attendance: 13.1 million tickets, the most-attended tour in history
Coldplay’s Music of the Spheres tour became the first tour by a group to cross $1 billion and ultimately outsold the Eras Tour in total tickets, becoming the most-attended concert tour ever recorded. The tour was also notable for its sustainability push, cutting carbon emissions by 59% compared to the band’s previous tour and planting a tree for every ticket sold.
Standout dates included a two-night stand in Ahmedabad, India that drew more than 223,000 fans, described as the largest stadium show of the 21st century, alongside a 10-show Buenos Aires engagement that set South American attendance and gross records.
3. Elton John — Farewell Yellow Brick Road
Dates: September 2018 – July 2023 Gross: $939.1 million Shows: 330, the longest schedule in the current top ten
Elton John’s farewell tour spanned five years, including a pandemic-related pause, making it by far the most drawn-out campaign among today’s top-grossing tours. Averaging roughly $2.8 million per night, the tour proved that sustained, long-running volume touring could rival the revenue of shorter, higher-priced stadium spectacles.
Framed explicitly as a retirement tour from full-scale touring, the show combined career-spanning hits with elaborate staging, closing out one of the most decorated live careers in music history.
4. Ed Sheeran — +–=÷× (Mathematics) Tour
Dates: April 2022 – September 2025 Gross: $875.7 million Shows: 169
Sheeran’s follow-up to his record-setting ÷ Tour became his biggest tour yet, continuing his approach of performing largely as a one-man show built around a loop pedal rather than a full band and elaborate staging. That stripped-down production model keeps costs dramatically lower than most stadium tours of comparable size.
The tour set a single-night attendance record during a 2023 stadium show, later referenced as a benchmark that was surpassed within the same touring cycle by other major acts.
A solo performer on a large stage with dramatic lighting — some of the highest-grossing tours in history rely on minimal production rather than massive stage spectacles.
5. Ed Sheeran — ÷ (Divide) Tour
Dates: March 2017 – August 2019 Gross: $776.2 million Shows: 255
Before Coldplay overtook it, the ÷ Tour held the all-time attendance record with 8.9 million tickets sold, a mark that stood for years. The tour’s massive show count, 255 dates over more than two years, made it one of the most extensive touring campaigns of the streaming era.
Its success helped cement Sheeran’s reputation as one of the most reliable and consistent live draws in music, translating streaming-era popularity into some of the largest sustained ticket sales in touring history.
6. U2 — 360° Tour
Dates: June 2009 – July 2011 Gross: $736,421,586 Shows: 110
U2’s 360° Tour became famous for its massive four-legged stage structure, nicknamed “The Claw,” which required its own dedicated structural engineering team and redefined what a stadium concert’s physical production could look like. At the time, it set the all-time touring gross record.
The tour averaged 66,090 attendees per show, a mark that stood as the highest average of the Pollstar reporting era until Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour eventually surpassed it more than a decade later.
7. Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band — 2023–2025 Tour
Dates: February 2023 – 2025 Gross: $729.7 million Shows: 129
Springsteen’s tour stands as one of the most remarkable late-career commercial achievements in rock history, driven by a fan base that has followed the E Street Band for five decades. The tour’s 2024 European leg alone brought in $158.5 million and sold more than 1.2 million tickets across 22 shows.
The tour reinforced Springsteen’s status as one of the last classic-rock-era stadium draws still capable of headlining at a scale comparable to acts a fraction of his age.
8. The Weeknd — After Hours til Dawn Tour
Dates: July 2022 – August 2026 Gross: $693.2 million reported to Pollstar Boxscore; Live Nation separately reported over $1 billion when including all dates through the tour’s full run Shows: Approximately 110-153, depending on which dates are included in the count
The After Hours til Dawn Tour is the only tour in this top ten still technically active at the time of writing, which explains the gap between the Pollstar Boxscore figure and Live Nation’s higher, more inclusive total. The tour has spanned Australia, Europe, North America, and South America.
The show drew on The Weeknd’s After Hours and Dawn FM album eras, combining elaborate visual production with a setlist built around his run of chart-topping singles from the preceding several years.
A concert crowd holding up phone lights during a ballad — audience participation moments like this have become a signature feature of major stadium tours in the streaming era.
9. Harry Styles — Love On Tour
Dates: September 2021 – July 2023 Gross: $617,325,000 Shows: 169
Love On Tour became one of the most commercially successful tours ever mounted by an artist still relatively early in a solo career, following Styles’s departure from One Direction. The tour’s numbers reflected how thoroughly Styles converted a pre-existing global fan base into sustained, multi-year ticket demand.
The show became known for its vibrant, fashion-forward visual identity and a famously interactive atmosphere, including Styles’s tradition of reading signs from the crowd and helping fans reveal pregnancy announcements or personal milestones on stage.
10. Pink — Summer Carnival
Dates: June 2023 – November 2024 Gross: $584.7 million Shows: 97 Attendance: Approximately 4.8 million tickets sold
Pink’s eighth concert tour, Summer Carnival, became her highest-grossing outing to date, performed across three continents and including headline sets at major festivals like BST Hyde Park in London and the Netherlands’ Pinkpop Festival. The tour is known for Pink’s acrobatic, aerial-heavy live performances, a signature of her shows for well over a decade.
With 97 shows generating nearly $585 million, the tour’s per-night average ranks among the strongest in the current top ten, reflecting a stadium-scale show built around genuine physical spectacle rather than just staging and lights.
Important Statistics Table
| Tour | Artist | Gross | Shows | Years |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Eras Tour | Taylor Swift | $2,077,618,725 | 149 | 2023-2024 |
| Music of the Spheres World Tour | Coldplay | $1.52 billion | 223 | 2022-2025 |
| Farewell Yellow Brick Road | Elton John | $939.1 million | 330 | 2018-2023 |
| +–=÷× Tour | Ed Sheeran | $875.7 million | 169 | 2022-2025 |
| ÷ Tour | Ed Sheeran | $776.2 million | 255 | 2017-2019 |
| 360° Tour | U2 | $736.4 million | 110 | 2009-2011 |
| 2023-2025 Tour | Bruce Springsteen & E Street Band | $729.7 million | 129 | 2023-2025 |
| After Hours til Dawn Tour | The Weeknd | $693.2 million+ | ~110-153 | 2022-2026 |
| Love On Tour | Harry Styles | $617.3 million | 169 | 2021-2023 |
| Summer Carnival | Pink | $584.7 million | 97 | 2023-2024 |
How Tour Grosses Are Actually Calculated (Step-by-Step)
- Venues and promoters report box office data to trade publications like Billboard Boxscore and Pollstar, though reporting is voluntary and not every date gets submitted.
- Trade publications aggregate reported grosses across a tour’s full run, cross-referencing venue capacities and ticket pricing to estimate figures where direct reporting is incomplete.
- Artists’ own production companies sometimes release final totals separately, as Taylor Swift’s Taylor Swift Touring did with The New York Times, which can produce a more complete, though not chart-eligible, figure than Boxscore’s running tally.
- Secondary market resale is excluded from official gross figures, meaning tours with heavy scalping activity, like the Eras Tour, generated far more real-world spending than the official numbers reflect.
- Merchandise, sponsorships, and film or streaming deals are tracked separately, and are not included in the touring gross figures used to rank tours on this list.
- Ongoing tours are updated periodically, meaning a tour like The Weeknd’s can show different totals depending on whether the count includes only completed, reported shows or projected future dates.
Pros and Cons Table (Scarcity vs. Volume Touring)
| Approach | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Scarcity model (Eras Tour, Renaissance) | Extremely high per-show revenue, cultural event status | Limited total shows caps overall gross ceiling |
| Volume model (Farewell Yellow Brick Road, ÷ Tour) | More total revenue potential over time | Lower per-night average, higher physical and logistical demands |
| Minimal production (Sheeran’s loop-pedal shows) | Much lower overhead, likely higher profit margin | Less visual spectacle than major stadium productions |
| Maximal production (U2’s 360°, Coldplay) | Unmatched visual spectacle, strong media coverage | Extremely high production and touring costs |
| Ongoing/ multi-year tours (The Weeknd) | Revenue keeps compounding over a longer window | Total figures are harder to pin down precisely mid-tour |
Comparison Table: Top 10 Tours at a Glance
| Tour | Avg. Gross Per Show (approx.) | Continents Played | Notable Record |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Eras Tour | ~$13.9 million | 5 | First tour to cross $2 billion |
| Music of the Spheres | ~$6.8 million | 5 | Most-attended tour in history (13.1M tickets) |
| Farewell Yellow Brick Road | ~$2.8 million | Multiple | Longest schedule in the current top ten |
| +–=÷× Tour | ~$5.2 million | Multiple | Sheeran’s highest-grossing tour to date |
| ÷ Tour | ~$3.0 million | Multiple | Held all-time attendance record before Coldplay |
| 360° Tour | ~$6.7 million | Multiple | Highest per-show average of its era |
| 2023-2025 Tour | ~$5.7 million | Multiple | Major late-career commercial peak |
| After Hours til Dawn Tour | Varies (ongoing) | 4 | Still active; final totals not yet finalized |
| Love On Tour | ~$3.7 million | Multiple | Among biggest tours by a solo artist early in a career |
| Summer Carnival | ~$6.0 million | 3 | Pink’s highest-grossing tour to date |
A stage with elaborate lighting rigs and pyrotechnics mid-show — production scale has become one of the clearest differentiators among today’s top-grossing tours.
Current Trends in Touring Revenue
Touring economics keep shifting, and a few clear patterns stand out in the current data.
Billion-Dollar Tours Are No Longer a Fluke
With both the Eras Tour and Music of the Spheres crossing the billion-dollar threshold within roughly a year of each other, what once seemed like an unrepeatable outlier is starting to look like an emerging tier of touring altogether.
Secondary Market Pricing Is Reshaping the Real Cost of Attendance
Official gross figures increasingly understate what fans actually spend, since resale platforms now regularly command multiples of face value for the biggest tours, a gap that has drawn regulatory and legislative attention in several markets.
Global Routing Is Now Standard for Mega-Tours
Nearly every tour in the current top ten routes through five continents rather than concentrating on North America and Europe, reflecting how much international markets, particularly in Asia and Latin America, now drive total touring revenue.
Sustainability Is Becoming a Genuine Production Consideration
Coldplay’s emissions-reduction push during Music of the Spheres, including a rechargeable mobile show battery and a tree planted per ticket sold, signals growing pressure on major tours to address their environmental footprint without scaling back production ambition.
Legacy Acts Continue Outperforming Expectations
Elton John’s five-year farewell run and Bruce Springsteen’s ongoing late-career tour both demonstrate that veteran acts can still generate top-ten-caliber revenue, proving audience demand for legacy artists remains as strong as ever.
FAQs About the Highest Grossing Concert Tours
What is the highest grossing concert tour of all time? Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour holds the record, grossing $2,077,618,725 from 149 shows between March 2023 and December 2024, making it the first tour in history to cross $2 billion.
Which tour has sold the most tickets? Coldplay’s Music of the Spheres World Tour holds the all-time attendance record, selling 13.1 million tickets across 223 shows, more than any tour in history including the Eras Tour.
What was the average ticket price for the Eras Tour? According to figures Taylor Swift’s production company gave The New York Times, the average price was about $204 per seat across all 10,168,008 tickets sold, though secondary market resale prices ran far higher.
Are secondary market resale prices included in these gross figures? No. Official touring gross figures reflect face-value ticket sales only. Resale platform prices, which for the Eras Tour’s final leg averaged around $2,800 per ticket, are tracked separately and are not part of the official rankings.
Why does The Weeknd’s tour show two different gross figures? The tour is still active. Pollstar Boxscore reports a lower figure based only on officially submitted, completed show data, while Live Nation has separately reported a higher total that includes additional dates.
How long did the longest tour on this list run? Elton John’s Farewell Yellow Brick Road tour ran the longest, spanning 330 shows across five years, including a pandemic-related pause, from September 2018 to July 2023.
Do these figures include merchandise, sponsorships, or film revenue? No. The rankings reflect ticket sale gross revenue only. Additional income streams, like Taylor Swift’s concert film or artist merchandise sales, are tracked and reported separately from touring gross totals.
Conclusion
The highest grossing concert tours of all time now overwhelmingly belong to the past few years, proof of just how dramatically touring has replaced record sales as music’s primary revenue engine. Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour and Coldplay’s Music of the Spheres both crossed a billion dollars within roughly a year of each other, a milestone that once seemed nearly impossible. Whether through scarcity-driven mega-events or years-long volume campaigns, these ten tours show there is more than one way to make touring history.
References
- Wikipedia — List of Highest-Grossing Concert Tours
- The New York Times — Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour Grand Total: A Record $2 Billion
- Pollstar — Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour Sets All-Time Touring Record, Breaking $2B
- Wikipedia — Music of the Spheres World Tour (Coldplay)
- Billboard — Coldplay’s Music of the Spheres World Tour Has Sold 10.3 Million Tickets — So Far
- Pollstar — Coldplay’s Music of the Spheres World Tour to Increase All-Time Attendance Record to Projected 13M Tickets
- Guinness World Records — Coldplay’s Music of the Spheres Tour Sets Record for Highest Attendance
- That Eric Alper — The 20 Highest-Grossing Concert Tours of All Time, Ranked
- NPR — The Eras Era Ends: A Look Back at Taylor Swift’s Record-Breaking, 21-Month Tour
- Forbes — Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour Grossed $2 Billion, Double Any Other Tour in History
- SeatData — How Much Are Taylor Swift Tickets in 2026?
- Billboard — Coldplay Tops July Boxscore Report as Tour Surpasses $1 Billion in Grosses



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