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The Weeknd is set to bring his blockbuster After Hours Til Dawn Tour back to Manchester’s Etihad Stadium in June 2026, with two huge outdoor shows expected to draw tens of thousands of fans from across the UK and beyond.
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Dates and schedule at Etihad Stadium
Publicly available tour schedules show The Weeknd booked for two nights at Etihad Stadium in Manchester on Thursday 11 June and Friday 12 June 2026, as part of the latest European leg of his After Hours Til Dawn Tour. Listings from major ticket and venue platforms indicate both nights are full-scale stadium productions, continuing the run of high-demand shows the artist has staged across North America and Europe.
Event pages for the Manchester dates typically list doors opening from around late afternoon, with several outlets pointing to a 17:00 or 5 pm opening time. Setlist and touring data for the current run suggest The Weeknd usually takes the stage several hours after gates open, with recent averages indicating a headline start roughly four hours after doors and a show length close to two hours.
While individual timings can vary by city and production requirements, Manchester is expected to follow a similar pattern, with early evening entry, support performances and then a late-evening headline slot for The Weeknd. Fans are advised by transport and venue guidance to arrive in good time to clear security and find their seats or standing areas before the main performance begins.
Local transport information issued for the events highlights that both concerts are treated as major city-scale occasions, with additional tram and shuttle services planned around the evening peak and post-show departures. That planning underscores expectations of very high attendance across both nights at the Etihad.
Likely stage times, support acts and running order
Stage-time details for the June 2026 Etihad dates have not yet been fully confirmed across all official channels, but patterns from recent After Hours Til Dawn shows provide a reliable indication of how the night will run. According to concert statistics compiled across the tour, The Weeknd’s set commonly begins around four hours after doors open, giving space for support acts and changeovers.
On previous legs of the tour, the bill has often featured producer Mike Dean and high-profile rap or hip-hop support, though line-ups have evolved between regions and years. Current European dates for 2026 have been announced without full public confirmation of support artists at every stop, and Manchester appears in that category at time of writing. Fans can expect at least one opening slot ahead of the headliner, in keeping with other stadium shows on the tour.
The overall running time of the concert experience, from doors to the end of The Weeknd’s set, is typically in the range of five to six hours. The main performance itself tends to run just under two hours, weaving together material from After Hours, Dawn FM and earlier releases alongside some of his biggest collaborations.
Given the scale of the production, with extensive staging, lighting and visual elements, reports from previous cities recommend that ticket holders be inside the stadium early to avoid missing the opening sequences of the show. Production effects and a carefully sequenced intro have become a hallmark of the After Hours Til Dawn dates, setting the tone before the first full songs of the night.
What to expect from The Weeknd’s 2026 setlist
The exact setlist for the Manchester Etihad Stadium shows will only be confirmed once the European leg gets underway, but fans can look to the most recent After Hours Til Dawn concerts for a strong indication of what to expect. Setlist tracking sites and tour coverage from 2025 show a career-spanning selection built around the After Hours and Dawn FM albums, anchored by global hits that have defined The Weeknd’s rise.
Recent average setlists from the tour feature openers linked to the Dawn FM era, before moving into high-energy singles such as Take My Breath and Sacrifice, and then into a run of earlier favourites including Can’t Feel My Face, The Hills and Starboy. Mid-set sections have typically woven in collaborations such as Hurricane and Popular, along with deeper album cuts that resonate strongly with long-time fans.
The encore and closing stretch tend to lean heavily on the biggest streaming hits, particularly Blinding Lights and Save Your Tears, which have become fixtures near the end of the show. Coverage of 2025 performances suggests little day-to-day variation in the core song list, meaning Manchester audiences are likely to experience a similar sequence, even if one or two tracks rotate as the European dates progress.
Fan discussion ahead of the 2026 European shows indicates continued speculation about whether new material or rarer early tracks will appear, particularly as The Weeknd signals a transition away from his original persona. For now, however, the strongest guidance for Etihad ticketholders is that the set should closely resemble the tightly produced, hit-stacked performances seen across the most recent tour stops.
Tickets, resale options and availability
Ticket listings for The Weeknd’s Etihad Stadium dates show strong demand, with many primary allocations marked as limited or sold out depending on date and category. Several major ticketing platforms continue to advertise remaining seats or standing tickets, but availability appears fragmented across price bands, with hospitality and premium options often among the last to sell.
With the concerts still a year away, official resale channels and fan-to-fan marketplaces are already active for both 11 and 12 June 2026. Posts on ticket exchange forums in recent days highlight individuals reselling standing and seated tickets for the Friday night in particular. Buyers are consistently advised by consumer organisations to use authorised resale platforms associated with the primary ticket seller or venue, where possible, in order to reduce the risk of fraud and to ensure clear refund rights if event details change.
Price levels on secondary markets currently vary widely by section, with some listings close to face value and others significantly higher, depending on demand and seat location. Industry guidance suggests that prices can fluctuate sharply in the final weeks before a major tour date as more tickets move into resale and fans finalise travel plans.
Prospective attendees who have not yet secured a place for Manchester are encouraged to monitor official ticket outlets and verified resales regularly, as additional allocations sometimes appear when production holds are released closer to the show dates. At the same time, consumer watchdogs continue to warn against screenshots, unofficial sellers and social media offers that lack clear proof of purchase or guarantee.
Travel, access and practical information for fans
Transport planners in Greater Manchester have already issued guidance for the Weeknd shows at the Etihad Stadium in June 2026, treating the concerts as major events on the city calendar. Information published by the local Bee Network and transport authorities highlights increased tram frequencies to the Etihad Campus stop, located directly beside the stadium, with services from the city centre running as often as every few minutes around event time.
Fans are encouraged by travel advisories to use tram or other public transport rather than driving, particularly because parking in the immediate area is expected to be limited and surrounding roads will be busier than usual. After the concerts, shuttle buses from the stadium to central Manchester are planned to help disperse crowds, alongside late-evening tram services on key routes.
Venue guidance for Etihad Stadium recommends that attendees check entry rules in advance, including restrictions on bag sizes, prohibited items and the availability of cashless payment systems inside. As with other large-scale concerts at the venue, enhanced security screening is anticipated at all entrances, which can lengthen queues at peak arrival times.
Local accommodation listings around Manchester show strong interest for the concert dates, with hotels near the city centre and major transport hubs already attracting early bookings. Visitors travelling from other parts of the UK or overseas may find the broadest range of options by looking at city-centre hotels and using the tram to reach the stadium, which is typically around a 15 to 20 minute journey from central stops.