Sydney, get ready to belt out your Stick Season feelings—folk-pop superstar Noah Kahan has officially locked in his long-awaited return to Australia.
The Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter will open the Australasian leg of The Great Divide World Tour right here at Qudos Bank Arena, marking his biggest headline shows to date.
Finally, the Vermont-born artist, beloved for his witty stage banter and emotionally charged storytelling, is bringing his latest chapter to life with a string of arena dates this spring.
Australian and New Zealand Tour Dates

- 25th September 2026 – Melbourne, VIC – Rod Laver Arena
- 26th September 2026 – Melbourne, VIC – Rod Laver Arena
- 2nd October 2026 – Sydney, NSW – Qudos Bank Arena
- 3rd October 2026 – Sydney, NSW – Qudos Bank Arena
- 9th October 2026 – Auckland, NZ – Spark Arena
Michael Marcagi will be supporting Noah Kahan across Australia and New Zealand.
Additionally, promoters haven’t locked in ticket prices yet, but fans can expect standard seats to average between $113 and $130+, and premium and presale options will vary depending on the venue and demand.
Early access opens with several presales kicking off mid-April, before general sales drop 17th April at 1pm local time.
More On Noah Kahan

The tour lands just as Kahan releases his highly anticipated new album The Great Divide, due 24th April 2026 via Mercury Records. The record follows the runaway success of Stick Season, a global folk-pop phenomenon that saw Kahan top charts across multiple continents—including 14 non-consecutive weeks at #1 in Australia.
Moreover, Billboard is already tipping The Great Divide as an early frontrunner for the 2027 Grammy Album of the Year race.
Kahan will also hit screens next week with his new Netflix documentary Noah Kahan: Out of Body (streaming globally April 13th). Directed by Nick Sweeney, the film offers an unfiltered look at the artist’s meteoric rise, with Rolling Stone praising it as a “revealing portrait of a modern-era folk star finding his footing in fast-moving fame.”
With more than 15 billion streams, two Grammy nods and legions of devoted fans worldwide, Kahan’s return to Sydney promises a concert that’s shaping up to be an emotional, cathartic folk revival on arena scale.