Zach Bryan - With Heaven On Tour (2026)
Here's something you don't see every day: the man who just set the record for the largest ticketed concert in U.S. history just stealth-dropped two stadium dates in Toronto. No announcement, no presales, and less than 24 hours of lead-up before on-sale begins. Call it a soft launch of what will almost certainly be next year's biggest country show.
Toronto has already proven it'll show up for him. Now he's seeing how far that loyalty stretches with four times the capacity to sell compared to last year's Scotiabank Arena run.
Let's break down the hype and see exactly what's pushing this sale up or down the FaceValue scale.
The facts
- Who: Zach Bryan | Support: Trampled By Turtles, Gabriella Rose
- When: September 21st + 22nd, 2026 | 7PM
- Where: Rogers Centre | Capacity: 43,000
- Why: Touring behind his upcoming album, With Heaven On Top
- Last Toronto show: Scotiabank Arena (03/17+18/24)
- Nearest stop: Foxborough, MA (10/02)
Presale Dates
- General Public: Dec 5 @ 10AM
Ticket Links
Monday, September 21: Ticketmaster | Stubhub | TickPick TBD
Tuesday, September 22: Ticketmaster | Stubhub | TickPick TBD
Note: Tickets found on 3rd party sites (i.e Stubhub, TickPick) before presale are all speculative tickets. It's strongly discouraged to buy these tickets. Here is a fun read for more information about the topic.
Community Chatter
Curious how fans are feeling about the tour? Here are the best places to gauge sentiment:
Seating Map

💡How I rate shows
- Various factors are considered, including community sentiment, time since last show, pricing, proximity to nearby dates, and more
- Each factor is given a positive or negative score. Positive scores swing in the direction of Buy, and negative scores swing towards Wait
- Factors sum up to one score, which becomes the FaceValue Verdict: Buy or Wait
The factors
Here's everything pushing this presale up or down the FaceValue scale.
A silent announcement -
Fans were surprised to see Toronto's dates quietly appear on Ticketmaster with zero announcement from Zach or his promoters. With no presales and less than 24 hours of lead-up time before the public on-sale, it's a baffling approach for a stadium-scale artist. This suddenness could soften early demand simply because many fans don't even know the shows exist yet.
The Great American Stadium Standard ++
Zach is one of few modern artists with the pull to comfortably sell out stadiums off fan loyalty alone. He recently set the record for the largest ticketed concert in the U.S. with an eye-watering crowd of 112,408 fans at Michigan Stadium. His recent tours have been massive success stories with sellouts across the board and resales comfortably in the hundreds.

Proven Track Record in Toronto ++
Zach's last rodeo in Toronto was a pair of Scotiabank Arena shows in March 2024. Both cleanly sold out. Cheap seats were extremely hard, if not impossible, to come by. The demand is clearly proven, and Zach's popularity has only grown since then.

Pricing: the biggest wildcard -
Zach has a... hate-accept relationship with dynamic pricing. In 2022, he dropped a live album titled All My Homies Hate Ticketmaster. The very next year, he capitulated:
He's one of few major artists to force a spotlight on his ticket prices. His fans pay attention. They love him for speaking openly about pricing and judge him hard when the numbers don't match his ideals. Here's the problem for Toronto: we have little clues what tickets will cost. No verified fan vetting, no tiered releases, nothing.
I can see tomorrow's on-sale going one of two ways:
1) A feel-good "Zach keeps tickets fair" moment, or
2) The Blue Jays were just in the World Series? Welcome to the Premium market, Toronto!
My recommendation is Buy. Zach Bryan is one of the safest bets in live music, but do keep your guard up on prices. If they land fair, tickets will evaporate. If they're steep, demand could cool and force a late-game price cut.
