Global pop phenomenon The Weeknd will stage his monumental After Hours Til Dawn Tour at Singapore National Stadium on October 2 and 3, 2026, marking the final Asian performances of a trek that has already made music history. The concerts cap a three-date Southeast Asian run that begins in Jakarta before landing in Singapore, part of a wider eight-city Asian tour launching September 20 in Tokyo. For fans, these shows represent the last chance to experience a live production that has sold over 7.5 million tickets across 153 shows since 2022—officially the highest-grossing tour ever by a male solo artist.
The Closing Chapter of a Trilogy
The Singapore shows double as a live celebration of The Weeknd’s acclaimed cinematic album trilogy: After Hours (2020), Dawn FM (2022), and this year’s Hurry Up Tomorrow. The Canadian singer-songwriter, born Abel Tesfaye, has spent more than a decade reshaping the boundaries of R&B and pop, amassing over 115 million monthly listeners on Spotify. His 2019 megahit “Blinding Lights” remains the longest-charting song in Billboard Hot 100 history, joining a catalog that includes “Starboy,” “Can’t Feel My Face,” and “Save Your Tears.”
Supporting Acts Add Star Power
Japanese hip-hop duo Creepy Nuts—creators of the viral sensation “Bling-Bang-Bang-Born”—will support most Asian dates, including Singapore. Select stops will also feature local DJ ¥ØU$UK€ ¥UK1MAT$U. The Asia itinerary snakes through Tokyo, Jakarta, Singapore, Seoul, Bangkok, Hong Kong, and Kuala Lumpur before wrapping November 4 in an undisclosed location.
Ticketing Timeline
Ticket prices have not yet been announced, but Singapore fans can register now for artist presale access via The Weeknd’s official tour page. Presales begin May 18, followed by a Visa cardholder presale on May 19. General public sales open May 21 at noon through Ticketmaster Singapore.
Broader Context
The After Hours Til Dawn Tour has quietly bulldozed its way into the record books since launching in 2022, crossing North America, Europe, Latin America, and Australia. Its final Asian leg offers a rare, finite window to witness a production that has defined a generation of live music—before the curtain falls for good. For fans who missed earlier legs or want one last encore, October in Singapore may be the final destination.