Here’s a number that reframes everything: $2,077,618,725. That’s what Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour grossed across 149 shows between 2023 and 2024, making it the first concert tour in history to surpass $2 billion. Per show, that’s an average of nearly $14 million. Every single night.
What the all-time highest-grossing tours list really tells you is how dramatically the music business shifted when recorded music stopped being the primary revenue source. In the 21st century, touring became the industry’s financial engine, and the numbers reflect that in ways that would have been unimaginable a generation ago. The first tours to crack $100 million were Michael Jackson’s Bad World Tour and Pink Floyd’s A Momentary Lapse of Reason Tour, both running from 1987 to 1989. That barrier feels almost quaint now.
Coldplay’s Music of the Spheres World Tour sits at No. 2 with $1.524 billion across 223 shows, and it’s still ongoing, making it the first tour to officially report crossing $1 billion in August 2024. Elton John’s Farewell Yellow Brick Road comes in at No. 3 with $939 million across 330 shows over five years, the longest run in the top 20. The contrast with Beyoncé’s Renaissance World Tour is striking: 56 shows in a single year, among the shortest in the top 20, and still one of the biggest grossing runs in history.
The Rolling Stones shadow this entire list in ways the raw numbers don’t fully capture. They set the all-time touring revenue record three separate times, in 1990, 1995, and 2006, more than any other act. Their Voodoo Lounge Tour held the record for highest-grossing tour of all time for 11 consecutive years. They and U2 have each mounted the highest-grossing tour of the year eight times, a record no other act comes close to matching.
Ed Sheeran appears twice in the top five, with the +−=÷× Tour at No. 4 ($875.7 million, still ongoing) and the ÷ Tour at No. 5 ($776.2 million). That’s a level of sustained live dominance that belongs in a separate conversation entirely. Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band’s 2023-2025 Tour lands at No. 7 with $729.7 million across 129 shows. The Weeknd’s After Hours til Dawn Tour sits at No. 8 with $693.2 million and is still running. Harry Styles’ Love On Tour generated $617.3 million across 169 shows. Pink’s Summer Carnival rounds out the top 10 at $584.7 million across 97 shows.
Top 10 Highest-Grossing Concert Tours of All Time:
- Taylor Swift, The Eras Tour (2023–2024) – $2.077B – 149 shows
- Coldplay, Music of the Spheres World Tour (2022–2025) – $1.524B – 223 shows
- Elton John, Farewell Yellow Brick Road (2018–2023) – $939M – 330 shows
- Ed Sheeran, +−=÷× Tour (2022–2025) – $875.7M – 169 shows
- Ed Sheeran, ÷ Tour (2017–2019) – $776.2M – 255 shows
- U2, 360° Tour (2009–2011) – $736.4M – 110 shows
- Bruce Springsteen and E Street Band, 2023–2025 Tour – $729.7M – 129 shows
- The Weeknd, After Hours til Dawn Tour (2022–2026) – $693.2M – 110 shows
- Harry Styles, Love On Tour (2021–2023) – $617.3M – 169 shows
- Pink, Summer Carnival (2023–2024) – $584.7M – 97 shows

