The announcement landed like a thunderclap across the music world: Liam Gallagher and Noel Gallagher are standing on the same stage again. After years of public feuds, solo careers, and countless “never happening” moments, the brothers have officially reunited for what’s being billed as their biggest-ever brotherly concert tour in 2026. For fans who grew up on the sound of Oasis blasting from car stereos and bedroom speakers, this feels less like a tour announcement and more like history finally correcting itself.
Sources close to the band say the reunion has been quietly in the works for months, sparked by long conversations, old demos resurfacing, and a shared realization that their legacy deserved one last, definitive chapter. This isn’t a casual run of shows or a one-off festival appearance. It’s a full-scale world tour, built around the idea of two brothers, two egos, and one stage, delivering the songs that defined a generation with the intensity they were always meant to have.
The setlist is expected to lean heavily on the classics that made Oasis untouchable in the ’90s. “Live Forever,” “Don’t Look Back in Anger,” “Champagne Supernova,” and “Wonderwall” are all said to be locked in, alongside deeper cuts that longtime fans have been begging to hear live again. Insiders hint that Liam’s raw, sneering vocals paired with Noel’s melodic precision have rediscovered a balance that feels both familiar and newly energized.
The tour is scheduled to kick off in the UK, a symbolic homecoming that sets the tone for everything that follows. Opening night is set for June 5, 2026, at Manchester’s Heaton Park, followed by June 7 in London at Wembley Stadium and June 10 in Dublin at Croke Park. From there, the brothers take the reunion across Europe with stops in Paris on June 14, Berlin on June 18, Amsterdam on June 21, and Madrid on June 25, each in massive stadiums chosen to match the scale of the moment.
North America follows in July, starting July 3 at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, then moving through Toronto on July 7, Chicago on July 11, Los Angeles on July 16, and closing the U.S. leg in San Francisco on July 20. The tour then heads south and east, with dates confirmed for August 2 in São Paulo, August 6 in Buenos Aires, August 12 in Sydney, August 16 in Melbourne, and August 20 in Tokyo, making this a truly global celebration of the Oasis catalog.
What makes this reunion feel different from past rumors is the tone coming from both camps. There’s less sarcasm, fewer insults, and more focus on the music and the fans. Those close to the tour say rehearsals have been intense but surprisingly focused, with both brothers fully committed to delivering performances that honor what Oasis meant and still means to millions around the world.
By the time the final show wraps up, this 2026 tour is expected to stand as one of the most significant reunions in modern rock history. It’s not just about nostalgia or settling old scores; it’s about two brothers acknowledging that together they created something bigger than either of them alone. For fans, it’s the chance to witness the Gallagher brothers side by side once more, singing the songs that shaped their lives, and proving that some stories really do deserve a proper ending.