TWICE Tokyo Stadium concerts are set to become one of the group’s most meaningful milestones yet. In April 2026, TWICE will hold three solo shows at Tokyo National Stadium, officially scheduled for April 25, April 26, and April 28. The concerts are part of the group’s sixth world tour, “THIS IS FOR,” and they carry a historic distinction: TWICE will be the first overseas artist to hold solo concerts at the stadium.
For longtime fans, this is the kind of announcement that feels both huge and deeply earned. TWICE has already built a powerful live presence in Japan, and this next step takes them beyond the dome stage and into one of the country’s most symbolic large-scale venues. With three dates planned and a 360-degree seating setup, the concerts are expected to welcome around 80,000 people per show, for a total audience of about 240,000 across the three performances.
Why TWICE Tokyo Stadium Matters

Tokyo National Stadium is not just another stop on a tour schedule. For TWICE, entering this venue as the first overseas artist to hold solo concerts there adds a new line to the group’s already remarkable history in Japan. The announcement places the concerts in a special category: not simply bigger shows, but a new record for an international act at the stadium.
The scale is also striking. The concerts will use a 360-degree open seating format, which means the venue is being opened broadly around the stage rather than limiting the audience to a more conventional front-facing layout. That setup allows each performance to reach roughly 80,000 attendees. Across April 25, 26, and 28, the total expected audience reaches about 240,000 people.
That number says a lot about TWICE’s position as a live act. A stadium concert already signals major demand, but three shows at this size suggest a level of confidence in the group’s ability to fill the space and deliver an experience that feels worthy of the venue. For fans, it also means these concerts are not being treated as a symbolic one-night event. They are a full-scale stadium run.
Part of the “THIS IS FOR” World Tour
The Tokyo National Stadium dates are additional performances for TWICE’s sixth world tour, “THIS IS FOR.” The tour title gives the announcement an especially fitting frame, because these shows feel directly connected to the audience that has followed the group through each new stage of its career.
The official schedule lists three concert dates: April 25, April 26, and April 28, 2026. The April 28 performance will also be streamed live exclusively through U-NEXT as “TWICE <THIS IS FOR> WORLD TOUR IN JAPAN.” The viewing price for that live stream is 5,000 yen.
U-NEXT also announced a ticket giveaway campaign connected to the National Stadium concerts on April 25, 26, and 28. Alongside that, four past TWICE live works began exclusive streaming on the platform. For fans in Japan, this makes the stadium concerts part of a wider live-performance moment rather than a standalone announcement.
What makes the tour stop especially exciting is how clearly it connects TWICE’s current era with the group’s established strength in Japan. In September 2025, TWICE’s Japan dome tour drew 400,000 attendees. Moving from that dome-tour achievement to Tokyo National Stadium shows how large the group’s concert audience has become and how much demand remains for their live performances.
A New Chapter for TWICE in Japan
TWICE’s move into Tokyo National Stadium follows years of strong activity and audience support in Japan. The 2026 concerts are being described around several core facts: three solo shows, a 360-degree full-capacity-style setup, about 80,000 people per performance, and a total projected crowd of roughly 240,000. Together, those details make the scale easy to understand.
For fans, though, the meaning goes beyond numbers. Tokyo National Stadium is a venue where the setting itself adds emotional weight. Seeing TWICE headline there as an overseas artist first gives the concerts a sense of occasion. It is a career marker, a fan celebration, and a major live event all at once.
It also matters that the concerts are solo performances. This is not a festival appearance or a shared lineup. The stadium dates are TWICE’s own concerts, built around the group’s world tour and its connection with the audience. That distinction is part of why the “first overseas artist” record stands out so strongly.

The April 2026 Tokyo National Stadium concerts are shaping up as a landmark moment for TWICE and their fans. With three dates, a massive 360-degree seating plan, an expected total audience of 240,000, and a live stream for the April 28 show, TWICE’s “THIS IS FOR” stop in Japan is more than another tour addition. It is a historic stadium chapter that shows just how far the group’s live power has grown.