
Few bands in rock history can still fill a stadium on name recognition alone, and fewer still can back it up with a three-hour set that justifies every dollar on the ticket. Guns N’ Roses still can.
Axl Rose, Slash and Duff McKagan are bringing World Tour 2026 to North America after a spring and early summer run through South America and Europe, and the international shows have already given fans a pretty good warning: this is not a tidy greatest-hits sprint. It is a long, loud, gloriously overstuffed GN’R night built for guitar solos, deep cuts, covers, newer songs, “November Rain” drama and the kind of “Paradise City” finish that can make a stadium feel like it is trying to shake itself apart.
Recent international shows have offered a strong preview of the setlist, show length, stage timing and overall feel of the night before the U.S. and Canada run begins.
Here is what to know before heading to the show, from who is opening to what songs Guns N’ Roses may play, how long the concert runs, what to bring and how to get Guns N’ Roses tickets on SeatGeek.
Guns N’ Roses’ North American run begins July 23 in Raleigh and continues through September 19 in Atlanta. The schedule includes a mix of stadiums, ballparks and amphitheaters, with opener lineups changing by date.
Here are the North American dates currently listed for Guns N’ Roses:
Date | Venue | City |
Wednesday, July 23, 2026 | Carter-Finley Stadium | Raleigh, NC |
Saturday, July 26, 2026 | Albany Med Health System at SPAC | Saratoga Springs, NY |
Tuesday, July 29, 2026 | Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre | Tinley Park, IL |
Friday, August 1, 2026 | Hersheypark Stadium | Hershey, PA |
Tuesday, August 5, 2026 | Rogers Stadium | Toronto, ON |
Friday, August 8, 2026 | Mystic Lake Amphitheater | Shakopee, MN |
Tuesday, August 12, 2026 | MetLife Stadium | East Rutherford, NJ |
Saturday, August 16, 2026 | Busch Stadium | St. Louis, MO |
Tuesday, August 19, 2026 | Morton Amphitheater | Riverside, MO |
Friday, August 22, 2026 | Allegiant Stadium | Las Vegas, NV |
Tuesday, August 26, 2026 | Commonwealth Stadium | Edmonton, AB |
Friday, August 29, 2026 | BC Place Stadium | Vancouver, BC |
Tuesday, September 2, 2026 | Snapdragon Stadium | San Diego, CA |
Friday, September 5, 2026 | Rose Bowl Stadium | Pasadena, CA |
Tuesday, September 9, 2026 | Globe Life Field | Arlington, TX |
Friday, September 12, 2026 | Thunder Ridge Nature Arena | Ridgedale, MO |
Tuesday, September 16, 2026 | Alamodome | San Antonio, TX |
Saturday, September 19, 2026 | Truist Park | Atlanta, GA |
One of the standout features of this tour is the rotating opener lineup. Five different support acts are confirmed across the 18 dates:
Public Enemy: July 23 (Raleigh), July 26 (Saratoga Springs), July 29 (Tinley Park), August 1 (Hershey), August 5 (Toronto), August 8 (Shakopee), August 12 (East Rutherford) and August 16 (St. Louis)
The Barbarians of California: August 19 (Riverside, MO) and September 12 (Ridgedale, MO)
The Black Crowes: August 22 (Las Vegas), August 26 (Edmonton), August 29 (Vancouver) and September 2 (San Diego)
Ice Cube: September 5 (Pasadena/Rose Bowl)
Pierce the Veil: September 9 (Arlington) and September 16 (San Antonio)
All 18 dates list a 6:25 p.m. local time show start. But that's the listed event time, not necessarily when GN'R takes the stage.
Recent international dates are a useful guide. Guns N’ Roses started around 8:15 to 8:35 p.m. at several 2026 European shows, though exact timing has varied by venue, opener, curfew and production needs. With rotating support acts on the North American run, fans should treat 6:25 p.m. as the start of the full night and arrive early if they want to catch the opener, avoid the entry rush and settle in before the main event.
Guns N’ Roses are still built for marathon nights. Recent World Tour 2026 shows have generally run close to three hours, with long setlists, extended guitar moments, covers, deep cuts and an encore-style finish that usually saves some of the biggest fireworks for last.
For fans attending a North American date, the full night can easily stretch four to five hours once you include the opener, changeover, main set, exit crowds and parking or rideshare waits. If your show is outdoors, also plan for a night that may start in summer heat and end after dark.
Guns N’ Roses’ World Tour 2026 is already underway internationally, so North American fans have a useful preview of what the band may bring to the U.S. and Canada. Setlists can still change by city, especially with a band known for long shows and rotating deep cuts, but recent 2026 performances point to a nearly three-hour set built around classics, covers, newer songs and extended live moments.
Based on recent World Tour 2026 setlists, fans may hear songs such as:
“Welcome to the Jungle”
“Mr. Brownstone”
“Bad Obsession”
“It’s So Easy”
“Slither”
“Live and Let Die”
“Yesterdays”
“Hard Skool”
“Estranged”
“Think About You”
“Double Talkin’ Jive”
“Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door”
“Nothin’”
“You Could Be Mine”
“Dead Horse”
“Atlas”
“Rocket Queen”
“Shadow of Your Love”
“Perhaps”
“Attitude”
“Wichita Lineman”
“Civil War”
“Sweet Child o’ Mine”
“The General”
“November Rain”
“Nightrain”
“Paradise City”
The exact Guns N’ Roses setlist can change by date, and North American shows may shift slightly depending on opener length, venue curfew and production needs
Yes. Guns N’ Roses’ 2026 set still leans heavily on the classic era, especially “Appetite for Destruction” and the “Use Your Illusion” albums. That means fans should expect the songs that made the band stadium-sized in the first place, including “Welcome to the Jungle,” “Sweet Child o’ Mine,” “November Rain,” “Mr. Brownstone,” “It’s So Easy,” “Nightrain” and “Paradise City.”
With a catalog this deep, not every fan favorite makes every setlist. Some songs rotate in and out, so fans hoping for a specific deep cut should check early North American setlist reports once the run begins.
Yes. Guns N’ Roses usually builds toward an encore-style final stretch, and fans should not leave early. Based on recent 2026 setlists, “Nightrain” and “Paradise City” have appeared near the end of the night, with “Paradise City” serving as the most likely closer.
Guns N’ Roses do not need much help making a big venue feel dangerous in the best way. The production is built around scale, volume and attitude: massive screens, heavy lighting, pyrotechnic moments, extended guitar spotlights and enough stage presence from Axl Rose, Slash and Duff McKagan to make a stadium feel like a late-night rock club.
The show is built for long solos, big choruses and the kind of slow-burn moments that let “November Rain” or “Rocket Queen” stretch out. For fans choosing seats, that means both proximity and sightline matter. Floor seats can be electric, but lower-bowl sections with a clean view of the full stage may be the better choice if you want to take in the screens, lights and full-band production.
With a 6:25 p.m. listed start time and a rotating opener lineup, this is not the kind of show to casually wander into after dinner. Treat that time as the start of the full night, especially if you want to catch the support act, buy merch or get settled before the crowd thickens.
For most fans, getting there about 90 minutes before the listed start gives you breathing room for parking, security, food, drinks and the inevitable T-shirt line. If you know the venue well and are going straight to your seat, 60 minutes may be enough, but stadiums, amphitheaters and ballparks can all turn simple entry into a slow crawl once thousands of fans arrive at the same time.
If merch is part of your plan, build in even more time. Guns N’ Roses crowds do not exactly ignore the merch stand, and waiting until right before the main set can mean choosing between a shirt and your spot.
Start with your mobile ticket and a charged phone. Download your ticket or add it to your phone’s wallet before you leave, because cell service can get messy once the lots, gates and concourses fill up.
Bring the practical stuff for a long summer rock show: ID, a credit or debit card, broken-in shoes and a small venue-approved bag if you need one. A portable charger is useful if you plan on taking photos, coordinating a ride or filming the moment Slash steps into another solo. For outdoor dates, sunglasses, sunscreen and a light layer can help carry you from the hot early evening into the cooler final stretch.
Earplugs are also worth considering. Guns N’ Roses are not built for background volume, and a stadium shouting through “Sweet Child o’ Mine” and “Paradise City” can be its own wall of sound. Leave oversized bags, outside food or drinks, professional cameras with detachable lenses and signs that block views at home.
Guns N’ Roses style has never been about looking polished. Think band tees, ripped denim, leather, boots, flannels, black jeans, old tour shirts and anything that feels like it belongs somewhere between a parking-lot tailgate and a midnight encore.
The trick is dressing for the full night, not just the photo before you leave. You may be walking a long way from parking, standing in merch lines, climbing stadium ramps or waiting through a hot early-evening opener before the temperature drops. Boots fit the vibe, but only if they can survive several hours on concrete. Sneakers may not look as dangerous, but your feet will thank you by the time “Nightrain” or “Paradise City” rolls around.
For outdoor shows, check the forecast before committing to the full leather-jacket fantasy. Summer heat, sudden rain and post-sunset temperature drops can all change the plan.
With 18 North American dates spanning stadiums and amphitheaters from Raleigh to Atlanta, there are plenty of options to find the right Guns N' Roses show at the right price with SeatGeek.
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By the time “Paradise City” hits, the night should feel a little messy in the best possible way: voices shot, guitars still ringing and a stadium full of people hanging onto one last chorus. This is the kind of show where you leave tired but very aware that some bands still know how to make a massive venue feel alive.
📁 Categories: Concerts
🏷️ Tags: Guns N' Roses, Pierce the Veil, Ice Cube, The Black Crowes, The Barbarians of California, Public Enemy