
Post Malone BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2 Toronto 2026
Post Malone brings The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2 to Rogers Stadium Toronto on June 16, 2026 with Jelly Roll and Carter Faith. Get tickets from $70 and plan your visit!
Post Malone Is Bringing the BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2 to Toronto This June
If the summer concert calendar had a headliner, Toronto just found it. Post Malone is rolling into Rogers Stadium on Tuesday, June 16, 2026 as part of The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2, and he is not coming alone. Jelly Roll and Carter Faith are joining him for a night that is already one of the most anticipated concerts of the season. With tickets starting as low as $70 on secondary platforms and a lineup that covers country, hip-hop, pop, and everything in between, this is a show that genuinely does not care what genre you think you like. You are going to have a great time regardless.
What Is the BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2?
The original BIG ASS Stadium Tour launched in 2025, pairing Post Malone and Jelly Roll across a series of stadium dates that sold out across North America and proved beyond any doubt that the country-meets-hip-hop crossover audience is enormous, passionate, and ready to fill stadiums. The sequel, announced February 1, 2026, is a 25-date run launching April 10 in Fort Lauderdale and running through late summer with stops in cities across the United States and two Canadian dates: Toronto on June 16 and Edmonton on July 24.
That makes Toronto one of only two Canadian stadium stops on the entire tour, and the only one in Ontario. For fans in Toronto, southern Ontario, Quebec, and the maritimes, June 16 at Rogers Stadium is the show.
The Lineup: Post Malone, Jelly Roll, and Carter Faith
Three artists, three completely distinct sounds, one stadium in North York. Here is who you are getting on the Rogers Stadium stage on June 16.
Post Malone
Post Malone, born Austin Richard Post, is one of the most versatile and commercially successful artists of the past decade. He burst onto the scene with "White Iverson" in 2015 and followed it with a string of albums including Stoney, Beerbongs and Bentleys, Hollywood's Bleeding, and Austin, accumulating diamond, triple platinum, and multi-platinum certifications along the way. His music has never been easy to categorize: rap, rock, pop, country, and R&B all show up across his catalog depending on which moment of which album you are in.
Austin, released in 2023, was his most country-leaning record yet and marked a genuine artistic shift that made his collaboration with Jelly Roll feel completely natural rather than forced. His live shows are known for their emotional range and his willingness to play across his full catalog rather than just sticking to the hits.
Jelly Roll
Jelly Roll has had one of the most remarkable career arcs in recent music history. The Nashville-born rapper and country singer spent years building an underground following before breaking through to mainstream success in 2023 with "Need a Favor" and "Son of a Sinner," which became massive crossover hits on country radio. His honesty about his past, his struggles with addiction and incarceration, and his redemption arc have made him one of the most authentic storytellers in popular music right now.
His live performances are emotionally direct and deeply connected with his audience in a way that feels rare. When Jelly Roll sings about getting through hard times, the crowd knows he means every word.
Carter Faith
Carter Faith is the rising country singer-songwriter rounding out the bill for the Toronto date. A Georgia native who writes her own songs and plays guitar, Faith brings a traditional country sensibility that grounds the lineup with something warm and rooted before the night escalates into stadium-scale energy.
Rogers Stadium Toronto: What You Need to Know
Rogers Stadium at the former Downsview Airport site in North York has quickly become Toronto's premier outdoor stadium concert venue since opening in 2024. Located at 105 Carl Hall Road, the pedestrian access address for the venue, it has already hosted Bruno Mars' five-night record-breaking residency earlier in May 2026 and is proving itself as one of the most important concert venues in Canada.
The stadium is designed specifically for large-scale outdoor concerts and events, with capacity to accommodate stadium-size crowds, well-organized pedestrian flow, and sound and production infrastructure that meets the demands of the biggest touring productions in the world.
Getting to Rogers Stadium on June 16:
- By TTC: Wilson subway station on the Yonge-University Line is the closest subway stop; from there a bus or rideshare takes you to the pedestrian access point at 105 Carl Hall Road. Plan extra transit time as post-show crowds are significant
- By GO Transit: Go bus routes connect several regional hubs to the North York area; check GO Transit's trip planner for your specific departure location
- By car: Allen Road and Highway 401 provide main access to the North York area; parking in the surrounding area fills fast on stadium nights so arriving 90 minutes to two hours early is strongly recommended
- By rideshare: Uber and Lyft both service the venue; arrange your pickup location in advance for after the show as rideshare surge pricing and wait times are common after large stadium events
Ticket Prices and Where to Buy
Toronto is one of the more affordable stops on the entire tour, which is good news for fans who have been watching ticket prices across the run.
Here is the current pricing picture across major platforms:
- SeatGeek.ca: Starting from $70 CAD for the Toronto date, making it one of the lowest entry prices on the entire North American tour leg
- SeatGeek (general): Toronto tickets from approximately $86 CAD
- Vivid Seats: Starting from $95 USD, with an average price of approximately $446 USD
- Concerts50: Tickets available from approximately $104 CAD
- Official: Available through Ticketmaster.ca and Live Nation for any remaining face-value inventory
The general on-sale launched February 10, 2026. Remaining official inventory at face value should be checked through Ticketmaster.ca first, as face-value tickets represent the best value before turning to secondary market options.
For the best seats at the most reasonable prices, checking SeatGeek.ca regularly is worth doing as secondary market pricing fluctuates based on availability.
Planning Your Toronto Night: Before and After the Show
June 16 falls on a Tuesday, which means the pre-show window is a weeknight evening in Toronto. Here are some practical ways to build the full experience around the concert:
Dinner options before the show:
Rogers Stadium is in the North York area, which has fewer dense restaurant options immediately surrounding it compared to downtown venues. The most practical approach is planning dinner closer to the Allen Road and Wilson Avenue area, or making a reservation in the Yonge and Eglinton neighbourhood approximately 15 to 20 minutes south, which has a strong concentration of restaurants and bars.
If you are coming from downtown Toronto, eating along King Street West or Queen Street West before heading north to the venue makes logistical sense given that you are traveling uptown anyway.
Staying overnight:
For fans traveling to Toronto specifically for the show, hotels along Yonge Street in the Midtown area near Eglinton and Lawrence are well-positioned for both the venue commute and access to Toronto's broader attractions. Downtown hotels remain an option but add transit time to the venue. Booking early is important as summer hotel rates in Toronto rise quickly once major events are confirmed.
Post-show exploration:
A Tuesday night post-show in North York is going to wind down naturally as the stadium empties. If you want to continue the evening, heading back into downtown Toronto via subway gives you access to the late-night Entertainment District, King Street West bars, and the Harbourfront area, all of which stay active well past midnight on summer weeknights.
Why Post Malone and Jelly Roll Together Just Works
The pairing of Post Malone and Jelly Roll is not a random promotional match. These two artists share something genuine: a history of genre fluidity, a willingness to be emotionally honest in their music, and a fan base that skews younger than traditional country while remaining deeply connected to the rootsy, storytelling tradition that country music is built on.
When Post Malone leaned into country sounds on Austin, a significant portion of his existing fan base followed enthusiastically. When Jelly Roll crossed into mainstream country from a hip-hop background, the same dynamic happened in reverse. The audience overlap between these two artists is real and large, and putting them on the same bill in a stadium setting is one of those moments where the math just makes obvious sense.
For Toronto specifically, a city with a music audience as genre-diverse as any in North America, a show that defies easy categorization is always going to land well. This is not a rap show or a country show. It is a stadium event built around artists who resist those boxes, which is exactly what makes it genuinely exciting.
Do Not Miss Post Malone in Toronto This June
The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2 at Rogers Stadium on June 16, 2026 is one of the summer's must-attend events in Toronto. Three artists at the top of their respective games, a stadium purpose-built for this kind of production, and tickets starting at just $70 CAD on secondary platforms make this one of the best value propositions of the entire Toronto summer concert season.
Grab your tickets now through Ticketmaster.ca, Live Nation, or secondary market platforms like SeatGeek.ca and Vivid Seats. This is the kind of night that Toronto will be talking about well into July. Do not be the person who skipped it.
Frequently Asked Questions
When is Post Malone playing in Toronto in 2026?
Post Malone performs at Rogers Stadium in Toronto on Tuesday, June 16, 2026. Doors open before showtime with the concert starting at 7:30 PM ET.
Where is the Toronto show being held?
The show takes place at Rogers Stadium, with pedestrian access located at 105 Carl Hall Road in North York, Toronto.
Who are the opening acts for the Toronto show?
Jelly Roll and Carter Faith are both confirmed for the Toronto date as part of the full BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2 lineup.
How much are tickets for Post Malone in Toronto?
Secondary market ticket prices for the Toronto show start from approximately $70 CAD on SeatGeek.ca, with an average price of around $446 USD on platforms like Vivid Seats depending on section. Face-value tickets are available through Ticketmaster.ca while inventory remains.
Is Toronto the only Canadian date on the tour?
No, there are two Canadian dates: Toronto on June 16 and Edmonton at Commonwealth Stadium on July 24, 2026. Toronto is the only Canadian date on the eastern and central part of the tour.
How do I get to Rogers Stadium in Toronto?
The closest transit option is Wilson subway station on Line 1, followed by a bus or short rideshare to the venue. Driving via Allen Road or Highway 401 is also common; arriving 90 minutes early is recommended for parking.
Is this show all-ages?
Rogers Stadium concerts are generally open to all ages. Fans under 19 are subject to Ontario alcohol service rules at licensed areas within the venue. Check with the official venue for specific age policy details.
Verified Information at a Glance
Event: Post Malone Presents: The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2
Event Category: Stadium Concert / North American Tour
Date: Tuesday, June 16, 2026
Show Time: 7:30 PM ET
Venue: Rogers Stadium, Toronto, ON
Pedestrian Access Address: 105 Carl Hall Road, North York, ON
Artists: Post Malone (headliner), Jelly Roll, Carter Faith
Ticket Prices (secondary market): From $70 CAD on SeatGeek.ca; average approx. $446 USD on Vivid Seats
Official Tickets: Ticketmaster.ca and Live Nation
Canadian Tour Dates: Toronto, ON (June 16) and Edmonton, AB (July 24 and 25)
Tour Scope: 25-date North American stadium tour, April to July 2026