After years of speculation, silence, and scattered hints, Oasis have officially confirmed what fans both feared and hoped for: a monumental 2027 Farewell Tour that will close the final chapter of one of the most defining bands in British music history. Titled as their last ride together, the announcement has sent waves across the global music scene. From Manchester to Tokyo, the message is clear — this is not just another reunion run. It’s the end of an era that shaped a generation with anthems that still echo through stadiums today.
The tour will kick off on June 12, 2027, at Etihad Stadium in Manchester, a symbolic homecoming that promises to be emotional and explosive. From there, the band will headline London’s Wembley Stadium on June 19 and June 20 before heading to Dublin’s Croke Park on June 26. European dates follow with Paris (July 3, Stade de France), Berlin (July 8, Olympiastadion), and Milan (July 12, San Siro). Each venue has been carefully selected to reflect the band’s long-standing connection with massive stadium crowds.
North America will witness the farewell beginning August 5 at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey, followed by Chicago’s Soldier Field on August 12, Toronto’s Rogers Centre on August 18, Los Angeles’ SoFi Stadium on August 25, and Mexico City’s Foro Sol on September 2. Industry insiders are already predicting record-breaking ticket demand, with pre-sale registrations surpassing expectations within hours of the announcement.
Asia and Australia will complete the global journey, with Tokyo Dome on September 18, Seoul Olympic Stadium on September 23, Sydney’s Accor Stadium on October 2, and Melbourne Cricket Ground on October 9. The final performance is scheduled for October 23, 2027, back in the UK at Glasgow’s Hampden Park — a closing night expected to be historic, emotional, and unforgettable.
Sources close to the band reveal that the production will be grand but nostalgic, blending raw 90s Britpop energy with modern stadium spectacle. Fans can expect career-spanning setlists featuring timeless classics alongside deeper cuts rarely performed live. The tour is described as a celebration rather than a goodbye soaked in bitterness — a statement that honors the music, the memories, and the millions who sang along for decades.
While the future beyond 2027 remains unwritten, one thing is certain: this farewell tour is designed to be definitive. No extensions, no surprise encores years later — just one final, global salute. For longtime supporters and new listeners alike, this is more than a concert series. It’s the closing page of a story that began in Manchester and changed rock history forever.