If you’ve been Googling “Stick Figure 2026 tour,” you’ve probably seen a wave of slick websites promising a massive world run: Red Rocks, The Gorge, Greek Theatre, Royal Albert Hall, Byron Bay, VIP lounges, meet-and-greets — the works. Some of the pages even read like full-blown press releases.
Here’s the problem: as of now, none of those 2026 dates are confirmed by Stick Figure or any official ticketing partner.
At The Pier we dug through the links, cross-checked venue calendars, and went straight to the band’s official channels to sort fact from fiction. Here’s what we found — and how fans can protect themselves until a real tour is announced.
No Official 2026 Stick Figure Tour (Yet)
The first and most important stop is the source that actually matters: the band’s official website at stickfigure.com. Their dedicated tour page, powered by Seated, currently lists no upcoming shows for 2025–2026. You can see that directly at the events page here: stickfigure.com/events.
From there, we checked every major legit ticketing and tour source:
- Ticketmaster – Stick Figure artist page – no 2026 dates are posted.
- Live Nation – Stick Figure events – shows historical and some 2025 listings, but no 2026 tour schedule.
- Bandsintown – Stick Figure concerts – clearly shows no upcoming shows and currently prompts fans to “request a show.”
- Songkick – Stick Figure tour dates – also shows no scheduled concerts for 2025–2026.
We also checked venue calendars that the fake pages love to name-drop: for example, Red Rocks Amphitheatre – official events calendar. Their 2026 listings are already filling in with other artists — but no Stick Figure 2026 hold or on-sale appears.
Bottom line: across all of the above — official site, ticketing partners, venue calendars — there is no verified Stick Figure 2026 tour on the books right now.
So What Are These “Stick Figure 2026 Tour” Websites?
If you’ve run into pages like:
… you’ll notice they read like generic tour announcements: sweeping copy about world tours, lists of big-name venues, VIP packages, and a lot of boilerplate “how to buy tickets” advice. However, they’re not linked anywhere from the official Stick Figure site, and the dates they mention do not show up on Ticketmaster, venue sites, or trusted tour aggregators like Bandsintown or Songkick.
Most of these pages also tuck a quiet disclaimer near the bottom along the lines of “We are not affiliated with Stick Figure” — a big red flag that they are likely not official sources, but more likely SEO-driven or scam-oriented sites trying to capture traffic from fans searching for 2026 tickets.
In short: they read like believable tour announcements — but there is no evidence they are legitimate.
How Stick Figure Has Actually Been Moving Lately
Just because 2026 isn’t on sale doesn’t mean Stick Figure has been quiet. The band has kept busy through past tours and one-off shows, all promoted directly through:
- Their official website: stickfigure.com
- Official news updates: Stick Figure – News
- Social media, especially Instagram: @stickfiguremusic
On the recorded side, the band’s 2022 album *Wisdom* and more recent releases have kept them high on the modern reggae radar. That kind of momentum is exactly what fans expect from a next tour — but as of now, that chapter has not been formally announced for 2026.
How to Verify a Stick Figure Show Is Legit
Until the band officially reveals a new tour, any “Stick Figure World Tour 2026” graphic or date list you see online should be treated as unconfirmed. Here’s a simple verification checklist:
- Start at the official site. If a date isn’t listed on the band’s official events page, it’s not officially announced.
- Cross-check primary ticketing. Legit shows will have listings on trusted platforms like Ticketmaster or on venue-ticketed pages for recognized amphitheaters. If tickets are only listed on random third-party domains or broker sites, treat with skepticism.
- Check major tour aggregators. Tools like Bandsintown or Songkick are a useful cross-check — right now, both clearly show “no upcoming shows.”
- Look at the venue calendar. If a site claims “Red Rocks – June 8, 2026,” but the official Red Rocks calendar shows a different artist on that date, you’ve got your answer.
- Follow the band’s channels. When a real tour drops, expect announcements via the band’s official website, newsletter, and social media — not just SEO-optimized “tour 2026” pages.
The Perils of Fake Tickets: Bigger Than Just One Show
This isn’t just about a single band. The problem of fake or fraudulent tickets is systemic — and growing. Consumer protection agencies, law enforcement, and ticketing platforms have repeatedly issued warnings. For example:
- Fans are often deceived by online ticket scams offering “hot concert” tickets that never exist; these fake tickets can be promoted on social media, fake websites, or resale marketplaces. AARP
- A report found that fraudulent websites account for a large share of concert-ticket fraud cases. – SURFSHARK
- Scam-prevention agencies advise concertgoers to only purchase tickets through authorized sellers, to avoid wire transfers or gift-card payments, and to suspect tickets offered at too-good-to-be-true prices. We Roam Away From Home
- Even official ticketing platforms have been under scrutiny: in 2025 the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) filed a major lawsuit against Ticketmaster and its parent company over resale practices, bot-enabled bulk buying, and inflated resale fees — underlining just how badly the resale market and ticket-scalping ecosystem have become distorted.
What this means: when fans fall for fake “2026 tour” announcements and buy tickets from unverified sellers, they’re not just risking a missed show — they’re fueling a broader underground economy of fraud, undermining trust in live music, and making real shows harder to access for genuine fans.
The Pier Take: Stay Patient, Stay Smart
For Pier readers, the takeaway is simple:
- As of now, there is no officially announced Stick Figure 2026 tour.
- Any “2026 world tour” pages you see are almost certainly not official — treat them as speculative or potentially fraudulent.
- The only dates you can trust are the ones you can verify on:
- stickfigure.com/events
- Ticketmaster’s Stick Figure page
- Official venue calendars like Red Rocks or other recognized venues.
- And — perhaps most importantly — fake-ticket scams don’t just prey on one fan at a time; they erode trust in the entire concert ecosystem, affecting promoters, artists, legitimate buyers, and the live-music industry as a whole.
Whenever the next real run of dates drops — whether 2026 or later — you’ll know it’s real because you’ll see matching listings across band, ticketing, and venue channels at once. Until then: save your money, bookmark the official links, and keep the playlists spinning.