
MGK & Wiz Khalifa Toronto 2026: Lost Americana Tour Guide
MGK and Wiz Khalifa bring the Lost Americana Tour to RBC Amphitheatre Toronto on June 14, 2026! Doors at 5:30 PM, tickets from $42. Your complete guide to the show.
MGK and Wiz Khalifa Are Coming to Toronto This June and This Is the Summer Show the City Has Been Waiting For
There are certain concert lineups that do not require much selling. Machine Gun Kelly and Wiz Khalifa sharing a stage at one of Toronto's most beloved waterfront venues on a June Sunday is one of them. The Lost Americana Tour rolls into RBC Amphitheatre (formerly Budweiser Stage) on Sunday, June 14, 2026, bringing two of the most energetic live performers in rap and alt-rock together for a night that is going to be loud, electric, and completely unforgettable. With doors opening at 5:30 PM, tickets available on the secondary market from around $42 USD, and the Toronto waterfront as your backdrop, June 14 is shaping up as one of the summer's can't-miss nights.
What Is the Lost Americana Tour?
The Lost Americana Tour is MGK's global concert tour supporting his seventh studio album, lost americana, released in August 2025. The tour is one of the most ambitious of his career, spanning three continents across late 2025 and all of 2026.
The tour launched November 15, 2025 in Orlando and moved through a full North American leg before heading to Europe from February through mid-March 2026 for 15 dates including stops in Munich, Paris, Amsterdam, and London. An Australia and New Zealand leg followed in April 2026 before the tour returned to North America for a 29-date summer amphitheatre run that launched in May. The full tour wraps on July 1, 2026 in Ridgefield, Washington.
The North American summer leg is where Wiz Khalifa joins as official co-headliner alongside special guest De'Wayne, making the Toronto date on June 14 part of the tour's most star-studded stretch. Produced by Live Nation, the tour has been described as a showcase of MGK's evolution as one of music's most dynamic live performers, blending rap, rock, and alt-pop into a high-energy spectacle that has made his shows a genuine event wherever they land.
Who Is MGK? The Artist Behind the Lost Americana Tour
Machine Gun Kelly, born Colson Baker in Houston, Texas, is one of the most genuinely interesting and unpredictable major artists working in popular music right now. He rose to prominence in the early 2010s as a Cleveland-based rapper with a street-level following built through relentless mixtape output and touring before breaking through to mainstream visibility with his major label debut album Lace Up in 2012.
What makes MGK different from most artists of his generation is the scope of his reinvention. After establishing himself as a rap act, he released Tickets to My Downfall in 2020, a full-on pop-punk album that debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 and introduced him to an entirely new and enormous audience that had no idea who he was from the rap world. The album, produced by Travis Barker of Blink-182, was the best-selling pop-punk album in years and demonstrated that MGK's ability to inhabit and execute a completely different genre was not a gimmick but a genuine artistic statement.
Mainstream Sellout in 2022 followed with the same pop-punk energy and similar commercial success. His 2025 album lost americana represents another evolution, pulling back toward a sound that mixes his rap roots with the melodic instincts he developed in the pop-punk era, creating something that feels genuinely hard to categorize and genuinely compelling because of it.
MGK's live shows are known for their theatrical energy, his physical engagement with the crowd, and his willingness to go places emotionally and physically on stage that feel genuinely unscripted. He has been selling out amphitheatres and arenas globally for several years now, and the Toronto date at RBC Amphitheatre's 16,000-person capacity is consistent with where his touring profile has settled.
Who Is Wiz Khalifa? A Hip-Hop Icon Returns to Toronto
Wiz Khalifa, born Cameron Jibril Thomaz in Minot, North Dakota, is one of the most enduring and commercially successful artists in hip-hop's past 20 years. His 2011 breakthrough single "Black and Yellow," a tribute to his hometown of Pittsburgh, reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and launched him from beloved underground mixtape artist to mainstream star virtually overnight.
His debut major label album Rolling Papers went platinum in 2011, and the following years produced a remarkable run of commercial and critical success: "Work Hard, Play Hard," "No Sleep," the blockbuster "See You Again" recorded for the Furious 7 soundtrack in 2015, which spent 12 weeks at number one in the US and became one of the best-selling digital singles in history with over 6 billion YouTube views. Wiz Khalifa has accumulated over 30 million monthly Spotify listeners and remains one of the most-streamed hip-hop artists alive.
What makes him an ideal touring partner for MGK is the overlap in their audiences. Both artists built enormous fanbases through authentic hustle and a prolific creative output before breaking mainstream, both have personal and musical connections to the pop-punk and alternative world (Wiz has collaborated with rock producers and artists throughout his career), and both know how to command a stage with a physicality and charm that goes beyond simply performing their catalog.
Toronto audiences have always embraced Wiz Khalifa warmly, and his appearance as co-headliner for the June 14 show makes a compelling lineup genuinely extraordinary.
De'Wayne: The Toronto Opening Act Worth Showing Up Early For
De'Wayne rounds out the June 14 bill as the confirmed special guest and opening act. The Houston-born singer and songwriter is one of the more genuinely interesting artists on the current pop-punk and alternative circuit, blending hip-hop roots with the melodic rock sound that MGK helped bring back to mainstream relevance. His album STAINS was critically praised for its genre fluidity and emotional directness, and his live show is energetic and focused in a way that makes him a perfect opener for a night built around artists who resist easy categorization.
Getting to RBC Amphitheatre by doors open at 5:30 PM is strongly recommended if you want to catch De'Wayne's full set. Too many people miss great openers by arriving late and regret it immediately once the headliners start and they hear the crowd around them talking about what they saw.
RBC Amphitheatre Toronto: The Perfect Summer Venue
RBC Amphitheatre sits at 909 Lake Shore Blvd W, Toronto, M6K 3L3, on the western waterfront at Ontario Place. With a capacity of approximately 16,000, it occupies a unique spot in Toronto's concert venue hierarchy: large enough to deliver a full stadium-scale production but intimate enough that even the back of the lawn has a genuine connection to what is happening on stage.
The venue is an outdoor amphitheatre with covered reserved seating at the front and open general admission lawn behind, offering what is consistently rated as one of Toronto's most beautiful concert settings as the sun goes down over Lake Ontario in summer. For a June 14 show, the timing is ideal: the long Canadian summer evening means daylight will still be present for the early acts before the sky shifts through the golden hour and into darkness for the headliner performances.
RBC Amphitheatre has had one of the most active summer seasons in 2026, hosting Bruno Mars' record-breaking residency in May, Bleachers on June 9, Post Malone on June 16, and dozens of other major acts throughout the season, cementing its status as Toronto's premier outdoor music venue.
Seating at RBC Amphitheatre
- Covered reserved seating: Closest to the stage with protection from weather if needed; the strongest sightlines in the venue
- Reserved lawn: Assigned outdoor lawn positions behind the covered sections
- General admission lawn: Open lawn at the rear of the venue where the most relaxed, social festival atmosphere exists
- VIP options: The venue offers VIP experience upgrades for select shows including premium floor and lounge access
Ticket Prices and Where to Buy
Secondary market ticket pricing for the Toronto date, based on SeatGeek.ca data, shows options starting from approximately $42 to $43 USD across the tour's comparable amphitheatre dates. Toronto-specific secondary market pricing will depend on remaining inventory and section, with lawn seats consistently being the most affordable entry point and reserved floor and covered sections commanding the highest premiums.
Official tickets are available through Live Nation at livenation.com and Ticketmaster Canada. The general on-sale launched September 25, 2025, and inventory at official face value should be checked first through Ticketmaster Canada before turning to secondary platforms. Secondary market options include SeatGeek.ca, Vivid Seats, and StubHub for remaining inventory.
Getting to RBC Amphitheatre on June 14
June 14 is a Sunday, which means the evening commute to the venue will be relaxed compared to a weekday show:
- By TTC streetcar: The 509 and 511 Harbourfront and Bathurst streetcars run along Lake Shore Blvd W toward Ontario Place. From Union Station downtown, the lakeshore streetcar provides a direct connection. On major show nights, the TTC typically increases service frequency along these routes
- By bike: The Martin Goodman Trail along Toronto's waterfront connects directly to the Ontario Place area from both the downtown core and from communities to the west. The trail offers one of the best ways to arrive at a summer evening concert in the city, and secure bike parking is available at the east pedestrian entrance
- By rideshare: Both Uber and Lyft service the venue efficiently. For post-show pickup, arranging a meeting point in advance and expecting some surge pricing after a 16,000-person show disperses is the smart approach
- Driving: Ontario Place does not offer public parking on major event nights. The venue strongly recommends against driving directly; the Green P lots and Impark lots in the surrounding streets require a short walk to the venue entrance
The venue is walkable from downtown Toronto via the lakeshore path in approximately 35 to 40 minutes, and a Sunday evening walk along the Toronto waterfront before an outdoor concert is genuinely one of the city's best summer experiences.
Building Your June 14 Evening Around the Show
Pre-Show Dining Options
Doors open at 5:30 PM on June 14, which gives you a comfortable window for dinner before heading to the waterfront. A few approaches that work well:
Liberty Village is the closest dense restaurant and bar neighbourhood to RBC Amphitheatre, just north of the venue via Dufferin Street. The neighbourhood has developed significantly over the past decade into one of Toronto's most vibrant young professional areas, with dozens of restaurants and bars covering every price point and cuisine style. Walking or taking the 29 Dufferin bus south from Liberty Village to the venue takes approximately 15 to 20 minutes.
King Street West in the heart of downtown Toronto is a natural choice for groups coming from all parts of the city, offering a central meeting point with an enormous range of dining options before everyone heads west toward the waterfront for the show.
Harbourfront along the lakeshore east of the venue has excellent patio restaurants for a summer evening meal with waterfront views, and the walk west along the lakeshore to RBC Amphitheatre takes under 20 minutes from the Harbourfront area.
After the Show
A Sunday evening post-show in Toronto does not need to end at the venue. The King Street West and Queen Street West entertainment districts remain active into the early morning hours, and the post-show energy from 16,000 people who just watched MGK and Wiz Khalifa at the waterfront tends to flow naturally into the late-night bar scene along both strips.
For out-of-town visitors, the hotel corridor along Blue Jays Way, King Street West, and the downtown financial district puts you within a 10 to 15-minute walk or short rideshare from the venue.
Why Toronto Cannot Miss MGK and Wiz Khalifa on June 14
The Lost Americana Tour in Toronto on June 14, 2026 delivers three artists at different but complementary points in their careers: MGK as the creative headliner promoting the most ambitious album of his career, Wiz Khalifa as the established icon lending generational credibility to the evening, and De'Wayne as the emerging voice who represents where this musical conversation is heading next.
For a Toronto music audience that appreciates artists who resist easy categorization and performs with genuine conviction, this bill is exceptional. Get your tickets through Live Nation or Ticketmaster Canada, arrive by doors at 5:30 PM, and claim your spot at one of the summer's best nights on Toronto's waterfront.
Frequently Asked Questions
When is MGK and Wiz Khalifa performing in Toronto in 2026?
The Lost Americana Tour comes to RBC Amphitheatre in Toronto on Sunday, June 14, 2026. Doors open at 5:30 PM EDT.
Where is the Toronto show being held?
The show takes place at RBC Amphitheatre (formerly Budweiser Stage), 909 Lake Shore Blvd W, Toronto, ON M6K 3L3, at the Ontario Place waterfront.
Who are the opening acts for the Toronto date?
Wiz Khalifa performs as co-headliner and De'Wayne is the confirmed special guest opening act for the Toronto date on June 14.
How much are tickets for MGK and Wiz Khalifa in Toronto?
Secondary market tickets across comparable tour dates start from approximately $42 to $43 USD. Official face-value tickets are available through Ticketmaster Canada and Live Nation for any remaining inventory.
Is parking available at RBC Amphitheatre for the show?
No public parking is available at Ontario Place on major event nights. The venue strongly recommends transit, cycling via the Martin Goodman Trail, or rideshare. Nearby Green P and Impark lots require a short walk to the venue entrance.
What is MGK's Lost Americana tour about?
The Lost Americana Tour is MGK's global concert tour supporting his seventh studio album, lost americana, released August 2025. The tour began November 2025 and spans North America, Europe, and Australia/New Zealand through July 2026.
Is the show all-ages?
The Toronto date is listed as all-ages subject to venue policy. Licensed alcohol areas within RBC Amphitheatre are restricted to those 19 and over with valid ID in accordance with Ontario regulations.
Verified Information at a Glance
Event: MGK: Lost Americana Tour
Event Category: Multi-Artist Co-Headlining Concert Tour / Global Rock and Hip-Hop Tour
Date: Sunday, June 14, 2026
Doors Open: 5:30 PM EDT
Show Time: 7:00 PM EDT
Venue: RBC Amphitheatre (formerly Budweiser Stage)
Venue Address: 909 Lake Shore Blvd W, Toronto, ON M6K 3L3
Venue Capacity: Approximately 16,000
Headliner: MGK (Machine Gun Kelly)
Co-Headliner: Wiz Khalifa
Special Guest / Opener: De'Wayne
Album Being Toured: lost americana (2025, seventh studio album)
Promoted By: Live Nation
Official Tickets: Ticketmaster Canada and livenation.com
Secondary Market: SeatGeek.ca, Vivid Seats, StubHub; tickets from approx. $42 USD
Age Policy: All-ages (subject to venue policy; 19+ for licensed areas)