Rammstein have officially announced an explosive 2026 world tour, sending waves of excitement through the global metal community. Renowned for their uncompromising sound, industrial precision, and jaw-dropping stage production, the German metal giants are preparing to bring one of the most ambitious live spectacles of their career to fans across multiple continents.
The 2026 tour will see Rammstein return to stadiums and major arenas with a brand-new production that promises even bigger pyrotechnics, darker visuals, and an intensified theatrical experience. Known for turning concerts into full-scale fire-driven performances, the band has hinted that this tour will push their live concept further than ever before, combining classic elements with new creative ideas.
The tour is set to kick off in spring 2026 in North America, with confirmed stops in Los Angeles, Chicago, New York, Toronto, and Mexico City. From there, Rammstein will head to Europe for an extensive run, including shows in Berlin, Munich, Paris, Madrid, Rome, Amsterdam, London, Stockholm, and Warsaw. Summer dates will expand into Eastern Europe, featuring massive stadium performances in Prague, Vienna, Budapest, and Moscow.
In the latter half of the year, the band will take the tour worldwide, performing in Tokyo, Osaka, Seoul, Sydney, Melbourne, São Paulo, Buenos Aires, Santiago, and Cape Town. Additional dates across South America, Asia, and the Middle East are expected to be announced due to overwhelming demand.
The setlist is expected to span Rammstein’s legendary catalog, featuring fan favorites alongside powerful deep cuts, all delivered with the band’s trademark intensity. Production designers have teased towering stage structures, synchronized flames, and immersive visuals that will transform each venue into a fiery industrial landscape.
With full dates and cities now revealed, the 2026 Rammstein world tour is shaping up to be one of the most monumental metal events of the decade, reaffirming the band’s status as one of the most dominant live acts in music history.