Taylor Swift extends “Eras Tour” until December 2024


All Taylor Swift I just had to stay – in Canada.
The 33-year-old singer took to social media on Thursday, November 2, to announce three additional dates for her international show Epoch tour. The concerts will all take place on December 6, 7 and 8, 2024 at BC Place in Vancouver, British Columbia, following six performances at the Rogers Center in Toronto.
Gracie Abrams – who joined Swift on the first leg of the tour earlier this year – will return as an opener for the additional shows. “What did you say? 3 more Epochs Shows in Vancouver next year? lfg,” Abrams, 24, wrote on her Instagram Story on Thursday along with a photo of her and Swift.
Swift is currently taking a break from touring after making her debut appearances in August, but will return to the road on November 9th with performances in Argentina and Brazil. She will later perform in Asia, Europe and Australia before returning to the US and Canada in October 2024.
Swifts Epoch tour – in which she takes fans through each “era” of her 10-album discography – has proven to be a huge success. Earlier this month, Forbes released its list of top-earning summer concert tours with Swift’s Epoch tour Landing at No. 1, its 56 U.S. shows grossed $305 million after expenses.
The income from the tour – in addition to the box office hit, their concert film in October, Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour – have propelled Swift to billionaire status, according to a Bloomberg News Analysis conducted last month.

The analysis states that Swift’s net worth is reportedly $1.1 billion and that she is “one of the few entertainers who has achieved this status based on music and performances alone, the result of work and talent, but also skill.” Marketing and timing.” Breaking down her net worth, Bloomberg reports that Swift’s music catalog is worth an estimated $400 million. Her other earnings reportedly include $370 million in concert ticket sales and merchandise, $120 million in Spotify and YouTube streaming royalties, $110 million in real estate and $80 million in royalties from music sales .
While Bloomberg reported that Swift could potentially double her billionaire status if she sold the rights to her catalog, which seems unlikely since the “Anti Hero” singer is in the process of re-recording her first six albums – a project that she is committed to later decided your masters were sold Scooter brown as part of a 2016 takeover with her former label Big Machine Records. (Braun later sold the Masters to Shamrock Holdings for $405 million in 2020.)
Swift first announced her plans to re-record in August 2019 Fearless (Taylor’s Version) to be the first album there is Taylor’s version Treatment in April 2021. Red (Taylor’s version) And Speak Now (Taylor’s Version) followed in October 2021 and July 2023 respectively 1989 (Taylor’s version) hit shelves last month. Call and their self-titled debut album are the only new recordings yet to be released.
“I’ve talked a lot about why I’m remaking my first six albums, but the way I chose to do it will hopefully help clarify where I’m coming from,” Swift wrote via Instagram in February 2021. “Artist There are so many reasons why one should own their own work, but the most obvious is that the artist is the only one who truly knows that work.”