Phoebe Bridgers expands ‘The Lost Tour’ with nine new dates across North America, UK and Ireland as new album anticipation builds
Phoebe Bridgers has expanded her upcoming ‘The Lost Tour,’ adding nine new dates across North America, the UK, and Ireland just three days after the initial announcement on June 5, 2026. The additions include a second night at London’s O2 on December 2, a second date at Dublin’s 3Arena on November 24, and multiple extra nights in Chicago, Brooklyn, Toronto, Boston, and San Francisco. Tickets go on sale Friday, June 12, at 10am local time, with pre-sale options opening Wednesday, June 10.
The tour’s expansion comes with momentum that is hard to ignore. Bridgers has not released new solo material since 2020’s ‘Punisher,’ the record that earned four Grammy nominations and made her one of indie music’s defining voices of the decade. In the weeks leading up to the announcement, she played a series of quietly promoted pop-up shows across the country, including a stop in Roswell, New Mexico, where she debuted three new songs in an alien-themed setting that strongly suggested a new album is in progress.
The run culminated in a sold-out acoustic show at Madison Square Garden on June 4, where tickets were priced between one and twenty dollars, with all proceeds directed to the Community Justice Exchange’s Immigration Bond Freedom Fund to support those in ICE detention.
The Road Ahead and What It Might Mean
‘The Lost Tour’ is Bridgers’ first full-band solo outing since 2023, when she closed out the Boygenius touring cycle. The photography for the tour was created in collaboration with acclaimed fine art photographer Gregory Crewdson, establishing a visual language that feels deliberate and considered for a return of this scale.
Support comes from Alex G across all North American dates and from former Black Country, New Road frontman Isaac Wood, alongside Anaïs, for the UK and European leg. The scope of the routing says something about where Bridgers stands in 2026. She is booked into arenas: Barclays Center for three nights, the Intuit Dome for three nights, Chase Center for two nights, and London’s O2 for two nights, among others.
Her 2020 record ‘Punisher’ turned songs like “Kyoto,” “I Know the End,” and “Garden Song” into rallying cries for a whole generation of fans, and the years since have only built on that. The Boygenius debut album ‘The Record,’ released in 2023, was named NME’s album of that year and debuted in the top five.
Nothing has been officially confirmed about a new solo record at time of writing, but the evidence points in one direction. Pop-up shows in small venues, new songs being road-tested in front of live audiences, a sold-out MSG performance at barely any ticket cost, and now a full arena tour with the kind of venue capacity that only makes sense if there is a major release behind it.
Charity, No Phones, and a Political Statement
The practical details of the tour carry the same intentionality Bridgers has brought to her live shows throughout her career. Every ticket sold in the EU and UK will see one euro or one pound donated via PLUS1 to local organizations supporting survivors of sexual assault and violence. In the US, one dollar from every ticket goes to RAINN, the nation’s largest anti-sexual violence organization. A no-phones policy will be in effect at all dates, consistent with the approach she introduced at recent shows.
At her MSG performance, Bridgers used the moment to call out ICE and direct resources toward immigrants in detention. It was characteristic: the arena show as civic act, the comeback as something larger than a record cycle. ‘The Lost Tour’ is already the most anticipated indie outing of the year’s second half, and it has not even started.
