J. Cole announces a 50+ Worldwide tour for The Fall-Off
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J. Cole earns his seventh No. 1 album on the Billboard 200 with The Fall-Off.

Cole has revealed The Fall-Off Tour, featuring over 50 arena dates across North America, Europe, the United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa during the latter half of 2026.
J. Cole is hitting the road for his latest album. On Monday (Feb. 16), the Fayetteville rapper revealed his upcoming global The Fall-Off Tour, celebrating his album, The Fall-Off, which topped the Billboard 200 chart.
The headline tour will cover over 50 cities in 15 countries, with stops in North America, Europe, the U.K., Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. The extensive journey begins on July 11 at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, N.C., and concludes on December 12 at FNB Stadium in Johannesburg, South Africa. The tour will also visit cities including Miami, Atlanta, Montreal, Toronto, Chicago, Los Angeles, Amsterdam, London, Paris, Sydney, and Auckland.
Presale tickets for North America will be available on Tuesday (Feb. 17), and the general sale will start on Friday (Feb. 20) at thefalloff.com.
The Fall-Off Tour is J. Cole's first solo headline tour in five years, succeeding 2021's The Off-Season Tour. Additionally, it is his first comprehensive global tour in almost ten years, since the 4 Your Eyez Only World Tour in 2017.
The tour promotes his seventh studio album, The Fall-Off, which entered at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart, dated Feb. 21.
J. Cole has previously hit No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with The Off-Season (2021), KOD (2018), 4 Your Eyez Only (2016), 2014 Forest Hills Drive (2014), Born Sinner (2013), and Cole World: The Sideline Story (2011).
Here are the dates for J. Cole's 2026 The Fall-Off Tour.
July 11: Charlotte, N.C. (Spectrum Center)
July 14: Miami (Kaseya Center)
July 15: Tampa, Fla. (Benchmark International Arena)
July 17: Atlanta (State Farm Arena)
July 20: Philadelphia (Xfinity Mobile Arena)
July 23: Baltimore (CFG Bank Arena)
July 25: Montreal (Bell Centre)
July 27: Toronto (Scotiabank Arena)
July 31: Brooklyn, N.Y. (Barclays Center)
Aug. 4: New York (Madison Square Garden)
Aug. 5: Queens, N.Y. (UBS Arena)
Aug. 7: Boston (TD Garden)
Aug. 11: Chicago (United Center)
Aug. 15: Cleveland (Rocket Arena)
Aug. 16: Detroit (Little Caesars Arena)
Aug. 18: Minneapolis (Target Center)
Aug. 19: Kansas City, Mo. (T-Mobile Center)
Aug. 21: Denver (Ball Arena)
Aug. 24: Vancouver, British Columbia (Rogers Arena)
Aug. 25: Seattle (Climate Pledge Arena)
Aug. 27: Sacramento, Calif. (Golden 1 Center)
Aug. 29: Oakland, Calif. (Oakland Arena)
Sept. 1: Los Angeles (Crypto.com Arena)
Sept. 3: Inglewood, Calif. (Intuit Dome)
Sept. 6: Las Vegas (T-Mobile Arena)
Sept. 9: San Diego (Viejas Arena)
Sept. 10: Phoenix (Mortgage Matchup Center)
Sept. 13: San Antonio (Frost Bank Center)
Sept. 14: Austin, Texas (Moody Center)
Sept. 16: Houston (Toyota Center)
Sept. 19: Dallas (American Airlines Center)
Sept. 23: Fayetteville, N.C. (Crown Coliseum)
Oct. 7: Berlin (Uber Arena)
Oct. 9: Zurich, Switzerland (AG Hallenstadion)
Oct. 12: Amsterdam, Netherlands (Ziggo Dome)
Oct. 15: Cologne, Germany (LANXESS Arena)
Oct. 17: Antwerp, Belgium (AFAS Dome)
Oct. 19: London (The O2)
Oct. 20: London (The O2)
Oct. 22: Dublin, Ireland (3Arena)
Oct. 25: Birmingham, England (Utilita Arena)
Oct. 26: Glasgow, Scotland (OVO Hydro)
Oct. 28: Manchester, England (Co-op Live)
Oct. 31: Nottingham, England (Motorpoint Arena)
Nov. 5: Paris (Accor Arena)
Nov. 8: Hamburg, Germany (Barclays Arena)
Nov. 9: Copenhagen, Denmark (Royal Arena)
Nov. 11: Stockholm, Sweden (Avicii Arena)
Nov. 12: Oslo, Norway (Unity Arena)
Nov. 25: Brisbane, Australia (Brisbane Entertainment Centre)
Nov. 28: Melbourne, Australia (Rod Laver Arena)
Dec. 1: Sydney, Australia (Qudos Bank Arena)
Dec. 5: Auckland, New Zealand (Spark Arena)
Dec. 12: Johannesburg, South Africa (FNB Stadium)





