
Fleetwood Mac fans, fasten your seatbelts: Stevie Nicks, Mick Fleetwood, and the band are coming back together for a 2026 global tour—rumored to be called Silver Storm or One Last Ride—and this feels like destiny revisited. Officially announced just this week, Mick, Stevie, Lindsey Buckingham, and John McVie will reunite on stage, with Christine McVie honored through archival vocals and visuals, and even a heartfelt homage to founding member Peter Green. It’s shaping up to be a transcendent mix of nostalgia, gratitude, and finality.
The emotional core of this tour seems to be healing old wounds. Stevie and Lindsey, whose personal history spans decades, have reportedly reconciled—prompted by a vivid vision Stevie shared during the Royal Albert Hall press event. She recounted that Lindsey called her after dreaming of Peter Green urging them to go back on the road. Their reunion marks a powerful symbol: overcoming long-standing conflict to honor their shared legacy.
Mick Fleetwood, the steadfast anchor of the group, summed it up best when he said the tour is “about honoring everyone who helped shape the magic.” From Christine, who passed in 2022, to Peter Green—whose spirit will be invoked nightly—this tour won’t just revisit hits; it will be a living tribute to the souls behind the songs.
Expect nothing less than an epic retrospective. The core lineup—Stevie, Lindsey, John, and Mick—will dive into their biggest classics: “Rhiannon,” “The Chain,” “Landslide,” “Go Your Own Way”, accompanied by rare pieces and deep cuts. Highlights will include a nightly tribute to Peter Green with haunting reimaginings of “Man of the World” and “Albatross.” Visually rich tributes will ensure Christine’s presence is deeply felt.
Rumor has it the tour will span 40 to 45 dates across North America and Europe, possibly extending into Asia, South America, and Australia. Opening shows may take place in Los Angeles or San Francisco in spring 2026, with a grand finale in London at Wembley or the O2 Arena in late summer. Global anticipation is already building, with early VIP packages, documentary tie-ins, and a celebration of the band’s five-decade legacy.
The title Silver Storm, with its ethereal, cosmic edge, captures the band’s mystical essence. Alternatives like One Last Ride or Moonlit Mirage have surfaced as contenders, each evoking a journey through memory, myth, and music. The goal is clear: to craft an experience that honors not just their catalog, but the emotional fabric behind it.
For longtime fans who grew up with Rumours, or newer ones who found “Dreams” through social media revivals, this tour is more than concerts—it’s an event. It’s a final opportunity to experience Fleetwood Mac as a living, breathing story. Expect emotion. Expect catharsis. Expect to be reminded of why this band became legend.
Behind the scenes, the band has been working quietly since late 2025. Studio collaborations between Mick and Lindsey sparked new material, and a new studio album—titled Moonlit Mirage—is scheduled for release in early 2026. This won’t just be a retrospective; there will be new songs, new sounds, and new stories to tell.
Solo obligations are being carefully woven in. Stevie continues her solo tour. Lindsey recently hinted that “everything depends on Stevie’s willingness,” and despite past statements from her suggesting a reunion “just couldn’t happen” without Christine, her renewed connection with Mick and Lindsey shows her heart may be fully open to this final ride.
This isn’t just a tour. It’s a farewell letter written in sound. Stevie, Mick, Lindsey, and John aren’t reuniting to relive the past—they’re coming together to make peace with it. In doing so, they’re offering the world one last chance to feel the thunder of The Chain, the ache of Landslide, and the unbreakable magic of Fleetwood Mac.