Tame Impala is bringing the Deadbeat Tour back to North America this summer, rolling out a tightly paced arena run that starts in Miami on July 7 and finishes in Houston on September 19. The newly announced leg also comes with a clean split in opening support: Djo (James Keery) handles the early stretch, then Dominic Fike takes over starting August 25.
For fans who track the small details, this announcement has a few. One is the routing: the schedule leans into big-room markets across the U.S. and Canada but skips the New York City area on this particular leg, following last fall’s multi-night Barclays Center run. Another is timing: the ticket window is set with a standard presale-to-public pattern, with presales beginning Wednesday, February 18 at noon local time and the general on-sale Friday, February 20 at noon local time.
The broader moment is hard to miss, too. The tour announcement lands just after Tame Impala picked up the 2026 Grammy for Best Dance/Electronic Recording for “End of Summer,” a nod that tends to sharpen mainstream interest right as a ticket cycle begins. If you’ve been waiting for a clean, arena-scale route without festival variables, this is that kind of run.
If you’re planning to buy, it helps to know which opener is on your date. The first half of the summer run features Djo, whose sleek, synth-leaning pop has been translating into bigger rooms fast. Then the tour pivots to Dominic Fike, a versatile live presence who can swing from melodic hooks to guitar-driven energy without losing the thread. Both fits make sense for the Deadbeat Tour’s palette, but they’ll feel different in the building.
Ticket availability and the fastest updates typically live on the primary ticketing listing; you can check your city and on-sale countdown via Ticketmaster’s Tame Impala tour page.
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Tame Impala — Deadbeat Tour (North America) 2026 dates
- Jul 7 — Miami, FL — Kaseya Center (with Djo)
- Jul 9 — Tampa, FL — Benchmark International Arena (with Djo)
- Jul 12 — Atlanta, GA — State Farm Arena (with Djo)
- Jul 15 — Philadelphia, PA — Xfinity Mobile Arena (with Djo)
- Jul 18 — Baltimore, MD — CFG Bank Arena (with Djo)
- Jul 19 — Baltimore, MD — CFG Bank Arena (with Djo)
- Jul 22 — Montreal, QC — Bell Centre (with Djo)
- Jul 25 — Toronto, ON — Scotiabank Arena (with Djo)
- Jul 26 — Toronto, ON — Scotiabank Arena (with Djo)
- Jul 28 — Boston, MA — TD Garden (with Djo)
- Jul 29 — Boston, MA — TD Garden (with Djo)
- Aug 1 — Charlotte, NC — Spectrum Center (with Djo)
- Aug 4 — Nashville, TN — Bridgestone Arena (with Djo)
- Aug 25 — Columbus, OH — Nationwide Arena (with Dominic Fike)
- Aug 28 — Minneapolis, MN — Target Center (with Dominic Fike)
- Sep 1 — Seattle, WA — Climate Pledge Arena (with Dominic Fike)
- Sep 5 — Vancouver, BC — Rogers Arena (with Dominic Fike)
- Sep 8 — Portland, OR — Moda Center (with Dominic Fike)
- Sep 11 — Denver, CO — Ball Arena (with Dominic Fike)
- Sep 14 — Phoenix, AZ — Mortgage Matchup Center (with Dominic Fike)
- Sep 17 — Dallas, TX — American Airlines Center (with Dominic Fike)
- Sep 19 — Houston, TX — Toyota Center (with Dominic Fike)
The simplest way to think about this run is that it’s built for momentum: early-summer heat in the Southeast, a quick climb through the Northeast and into Canada, then a late-summer reset that re-launches across the Midwest and the West before landing in Texas. If your city is on the list, the key decision isn’t just where you sit — it’s whether you want the Djo stretch or the Dominic Fike stretch. Either way, the Deadbeat Tour is clearly being positioned as a headline arena moment, not a casual one-off.
Published: February 12, 2026












