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A new chapter that celebrates freedom
The tour begins on April 8 in Charlotte, North Carolina, and will sweep through major cities like Atlanta, Nashville, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Houston before wrapping up on May 25 in Texas. Rising pop sensation ADÉLA joins as a special guest, bringing even more excitement to an already loaded lineup
This is Lovato’s first large-scale headlining tour in nearly three years, and it comes right after the release of her upbeat new album It’s Not That Deep. The project, out via Island Records, marks a clear shift from the rock-heavy tones of 2022’s Holy Fvck and the reimagined hits of 2023’s Revamped. Instead, she’s returning to the electric pop sound that made her a global name, with songs that shimmer with both nostalgia and confidence
The return of unapologetic pop
For longtime fans, this new album feels like a time capsule cracked open. Tracks like “Fast,” “Here All Night,” and “Kiss” carry the same infectious pulse as early hits such as “Cool for the Summer” and “Heart Attack”. But there’s a difference now, a kind of ease in her voice that wasn’t there before. The title says it all: she’s not here to dive deep into the drama, just to make people dance
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During her sold-out show at the Hollywood Palladium on October 25, Lovato previewed this energy with a 16-song setlist that spanned her entire career. She resurrected fan favorites like “This Is Me”, which she hadn’t performed in almost a decade, and “Really Don’t Care”, unseen since 2018. The crowd’s reaction? Pure electricity. Every lyric hit differently, not as an echo of the past but as proof of growth
A celebration of evolution
There’s something refreshing about watching an artist reclaim her identity after years of reinvention. Lovato’s been through every possible musical phase, from Disney roots to hard rock rebellion, and now she’s found a balance that feels unforced. It’s pop without pressure, emotion without chaos. You can hear that maturity in her vocals and see it in how she commands the stage
The tour isn’t just a marketing move for her album. It’s a victory lap, a moment to connect with the fans who’ve grown up alongside her and the new ones discovering her music for the first time. It’s Not That Deep feels like an invitation to let go, to laugh, to feel good again (which, frankly, everyone could use right now)
Tickets and fan access
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Tickets go on sale on October 31 at 10 a.m. local time, with early presales starting on October 30 through her official website. Demand is expected to be massive, given this marks her first major pop tour since 2018. For those who missed the intimacy of her Palladium show, this is the chance to experience the full vision, complete with a setlist that blends nostalgia and new beginnings
Full tour dates
- April 8 – Charlotte, NC
- April 10 – Orlando, FL
- April 12 – Atlanta, GA
- April 14 – Nashville, TN
- April 16 – Washington, DC
- April 18 – Philadelphia, PA
- April 20 – Toronto, ON
- April 22 – Boston, MA
- April 24 – New York, NY
- April 27 – Columbus, OH
- April 29 – Detroit, MI
- May 1 – Chicago, IL
- May 2 – Minneapolis, MN
- May 5 – Denver, CO
- May 8 – Las Vegas, NV
- May 9 – Anaheim, CA
- May 11 – San Francisco, CA
- May 13 – Seattle, WA
- May 16 – Los Angeles, CA
- May 19 – Glendale, AZ
- May 22 – Dallas, TX
- May 24 – Austin, TX
- May 25 – Houston, TX

