
The Neighbourhood Wourld Tour Toronto 2026 Guide
The Neighbourhood bring The Wourld Tour to Scotiabank Arena in Toronto on April 6, 2026. Get tickets, setlist previews, venue tips, and everything you need to know!
The Neighbourhood Are Bringing The Wourld Tour to Toronto This April and It Is Going to Be Massive
Toronto has seen some incredible concert nights, but April 6, 2026 is shaping up to be one of the most talked-about of the year. California alt-rock band The Neighbourhood are rolling into Scotiabank Arena as part of their global Wourld Tour, and this is not just any tour stop. After a nearly five-year recording hiatus, the band is back with their fifth studio album, armed with new music that is already dominating alternative charts, and they are ready to remind North America why they became one of the most streamed indie acts of the past decade.
If you have had "Sweater Weather" on repeat since 2013, if you are a newer fan who found them through TikTok, or if you have been following every release from I Love You through to Chip Chrome and the Mono-Tones, this is the Toronto show you absolutely cannot miss.
Who Are The Neighbourhood?
The Neighbourhood formed in Newbury Park, California in 2011, built around vocalist Jesse Rutherford, guitarists Jeremy Freedman and Zach Abels, and bassist Mikey Margott. The band adopted the British spelling of "neighbourhood" on the advice of their manager, a detail that fit perfectly with the moody, atmospheric aesthetic they were building from the start.
Their debut studio album I Love You dropped on April 23, 2013, preceded by the single "Sweater Weather," which became one of the defining alternative rock songs of the decade. The song hit No. 1 on Billboard's Alternative Songs chart and peaked at No. 14 on the Billboard Hot 100. A decade later, "Sweater Weather" had accumulated over 2.1 billion Spotify streams and 1.7 billion YouTube views, earning RIAA Diamond certification, one of the rarest certifications in the music industry.
The band went on to release Wiped Out! in 2015, a self-titled record in 2018, and the genre-bending concept album Chip Chrome and the Mono-Tones in 2020, building a catalog of five multi-Platinum, six Platinum, and eight Gold certified singles along the way. Then they went quiet for the better part of five years, leaving fans wondering whether the hiatus would become permanent.
It did not.
The Return: (((((ultraSOUND))))) and The Wourld Tour
On November 14, 2025, The Neighbourhood returned with their fifth studio album (((((ultraSOUND))))) on Warner Records, their first full-length release in five years. The record is a 15-track collection that blends the raw energy of 90s alt-rock with modern indie textures, drawing inspiration from Brit-pop while maintaining the band's signature California sound. Produced by Justyn Pilbrow and Jono Dorr, the album features singles including "Hula Girl," "Private," and "Lovebomb," all released alongside official music videos.
The album was described as pulsating alt-pop earworms threading yearning R&B melodies with vibey indie textures, exploring themes of heartbreak, disillusionment, and emotional vulnerability with a maturity that reflects the band's artistic growth. Ultrasound dominated alternative charts across North America, Europe, and parts of Asia, with "Hula Girl" sitting in the Top 20 at U.S. Alternative Radio at the time of the tour announcement.
In February 2026, the band released (((((ultraSOUND)))))+, a deluxe edition adding five brand new tracks: "Start," "Good Grief," "Lulu," "Red Flag," and "Bed," deepening the album's sonic universe even further. If you want to be fully prepared for the Toronto setlist, the deluxe edition is the version to listen to before April 6.
The Wourld Tour: A Global Journey
The Wourld Tour is the most ambitious live run The Neighbourhood has ever undertaken, spanning over 30 shows across multiple continents throughout 2026. The tour kicked off at Austin's Moody Center on March 28, 2026, running through Fort Worth, Minneapolis, and then Toronto.
After the North American spring dates, the tour moves to Europe from late April through May, with stops in Istanbul, Prague, Krakow, Milan, Zurich, Berlin, Amsterdam, London, Paris, and beyond. From Europe the band heads to Australia and Asia through the summer months before returning to North America in the fall, concluding with a hometown show at the Kia Forum in Inglewood, California on October 9, 2026.
The scale of The Wourld Tour reflects how significant (((((ultraSOUND))))) is as a creative and commercial moment for the band. They are not dipping a toe back in. They are going fully global.
Toronto is one of only two Canadian dates on the entire tour: the April 6 show at Scotiabank Arena and a Vancouver stop at Rogers Arena on October 2. That makes the Toronto date the only Canadian arena show on the spring North American leg, and for fans from across Ontario and beyond, it is a genuinely rare opportunity.
The Toronto Show: Scotiabank Arena on April 6, 2026
Here are the confirmed details for the Toronto stop:
- Date: Monday, April 6, 2026
- Venue: Scotiabank Arena, 40 Bay Street, Toronto, ON M5J 2X2
- Doors open: 7:00 PM
- Show start: 7:30 PM
- Venue capacity: Up to 20,000 for concerts
Scotiabank Arena sits right in the heart of downtown Toronto, steps from Union Station, the CN Tower, and the waterfront. It is one of the most accessible large venues in the country, directly connected to Union Station's underground PATH network and serviced by multiple TTC subway lines. The arena regularly hosts concerts for some of the biggest names in music, and its concert setup accommodates up to 20,000 fans with excellent sightlines from most sections.
Getting to Scotiabank Arena
Scotiabank Arena is one of the easiest large venues in North America to reach without a car:
- Subway: Take the TTC Line 1 to Union Station, exit directly toward the Scotiabank Arena concourse connection
- GO Transit: Union Station is a major GO Transit hub serving commuters from Mississauga, Hamilton, Oakville, Oshawa, and the entire Greater Toronto Area
- UP Express: Direct rail connection from Toronto Pearson International Airport to Union Station in approximately 25 minutes
- Driving: Underground parking is available in the area; arriving early is important for a Monday evening show when downtown Toronto traffic can be significant
For fans coming from outside Toronto, staying downtown near King Street West, the Entertainment District, or the waterfront puts you within easy walking distance of the venue.
Ticket Prices and Where to Buy
Tickets for the Toronto show are available through Live Nation and Ticketmaster at official pricing, and through secondary market platforms for those seeking specific sections.
Here is the secondary market pricing picture as of current listings:
- Secondary market starting price: Approximately $97 to $130 depending on the platform and section
- Balcony sections: Secondary listings running from approximately $177 to $184 per seat for specific rows
- Floor and lower bowl: Pricing varies significantly based on availability
Always purchase through official Live Nation or Ticketmaster channels first to get the best face-value pricing before turning to resale platforms. For a Monday evening show at Scotiabank Arena, buying well in advance remains the smartest approach as inventory tightens closer to the date.
What to Expect From the Setlist
The Wourld Tour is built around (((((ultraSOUND))))), but The Neighbourhood have never been a band that ignores their back catalog for a new album cycle. Expect the Toronto setlist to pull heavily from the new record while weaving in fan favourites from across all five albums.
Songs that are almost certain to appear include:
- From (((((ultraSOUND)))))* : "Hula Girl," "Lovebomb," "Private," "Planet," and tracks from the deluxe edition
- From I Love You* : "Sweater Weather," "Female Robbery," "Afraid," "Warm"
- From Wiped Out!* : "Daddy Issues," "R.I.P. 2 My Youth," "The Beach," "Reflections"
- From the self-titled record and Chip Chrome* : "Softcore," "You Get Me So High," "Cherry Flavoured"
The Neighbourhood's live shows are known for being emotionally immersive, with Jesse Rutherford's vocal delivery and stage presence creating an atmosphere that feels more intimate than a 20,000-seat arena should technically allow. The band builds setlists that flow like an experience rather than a greatest hits rundown, and the new material from (((((ultraSOUND))))) fits that approach extremely well.
Planning Your Toronto Night Around the Show
April in Toronto is genuinely one of the city's best times of year to be out. The winter cold has largely lifted, the patios are starting to come back, and the city has an energy that feels right for a major concert night.
For pre-show dining near Scotiabank Arena, the Entertainment District and King Street West have some of Toronto's best restaurant options within walking distance:
- Buca on King Street West for elevated Italian
- MIKU on Bay Street for Japanese cuisine and aburi sushi
- The Chase at Temperance Street for a special occasion dinner before the show
- Bar Isabel on College Street (slightly further north) for late-night Spanish small plates if you prefer dinner after
The CN Tower observation deck, Ripley's Aquarium of Canada, and the Toronto waterfront boardwalk are all walking distance from the arena for anyone arriving early to make a full evening of the area.
If you are staying overnight, the hotels along Front Street West and King Street West place you within a five-minute walk of both Union Station and Scotiabank Arena, ideal for a stress-free Monday show night.
Why This Toronto Show Is Worth Your Monday Night
The Neighbourhood returning after a five-year hiatus, on a proper global arena tour, at Scotiabank Arena in downtown Toronto, is a genuinely significant concert event. The band's core audience in Canada is massive and passionate, and this is only the second time they will play in Canada on the entire Wourld Tour.
For Toronto's substantial indie rock and alternative music community, centered in neighbourhoods like Kensington Market, Queen Street West, and the Annex, a band of The Neighbourhood's stature playing at this scale is the kind of show that gets talked about for months in advance and years after.
The ultraSOUND era is shaping up to be one of the most interesting chapters of the band's career. Seeing it live, in the room, at Scotiabank Arena on April 6, is not something you will want to have skipped when the setlists start circulating online the next morning.