
From the moment the stage lights dim and the first chord rings out, there’s a thrill in the air that only a giant stadium tour can produce—and as 2025 marches on, Imagine Dragons are poised to take that energy across South America in their final stretch of international dates. The “LOOM World Tour” is wrapping up with several massive shows in Lima, Santiago, Belo Horizonte, Brasília, São Paulo—and each city feels like it’s bracing for something unforgettable.
On October 17, the band will set the tone in Bogotá, Colombia at Distrito Verde—expecting roaring crowds, bold visuals, and the raw emotion the band is known for. Just two days later, on October 19, they land in Lima, Peru at Estadio Universidad San Marcos. It’s the kind of place where the nights stretch long, and fans cling to every lyric.
By October 21, Santiago, Chile gets its turn—Estadio Monumental David Arellano is ready to host a tidal wave of sound. The mix of sangalong choruses and shimmering lights will wash over the fans there.
The tour moves into Brazil soon after. On October 26, Belo Horizonte at Estádio Mineirão will be roaring; then October 29 in Brasília at Arena BRB Mané Garrincha promises a grand spectacle. The energy is building up for what looks like two climactic nights in São Paulo—October 31 and November 1—both at Estádio MorumBis. These final shows feel like a crescendo: all that’s been built, all that’s been poured into LOOM, coming home for one last anthem.
Every stop is more than a concert—it’s a gathering. The way the setlist swells with hits like “Believer,” “Demons,” and “Radioactive,” alongside newer tracks from LOOM, shows the band’s journey: honoring their roots while pushing forward. The backdrops, visuals, stage design—each city gets a carefully crafted moment.
Fans in these cities are getting something special—not just shows, but experiences. In São Paulo, two back-to-back nights give extra breathing room for the band to stretch out, improvise, maybe even surprise with an unexpected song or two. These are moments that linger.
It’s worth thinking about what LOOM has represented so far: a leap in sound, a boldness of ambition. By the time this world tour closes out in early November, the band will have traversed continents, connected with millions, and hopefully left fans changed—if only a bit—by what they saw, heard, felt.
If you’re going to be at any of these final shows, there are a few tips: arrive early, soak up the opening acts, get lost in the crowd, and be ready for both spectacle and intimacy. These aren’t just gigs—they’re rituals. Moments when thousands of strangers sing as one.
When November 1 finally comes in São Paulo, and the stage empties, what will remain are older fans with memories, newer fans inspired, and a band that’s reminded everyone why they still headline stadiums. This is more than a tour—it’s a celebration of momentum, music, and connection.