
The rock band Journey will be making its final voyage across the country for its farewell “Final Frontier” tour in 2026.
“The wait is over JOURNEY is hitting the road on our FINAL FRONTIER TOUR!” the band announced on its official website.
Founder Neal Schon also announced the farewell tour with a post to his Instagram story, with “Separate Ways” playing in the background.
“As its founding member, I carry the Journey torch to this day, wherever I go,” Schon told Variety. “The sentiment and spirit of the band will always remain. While this marks a farewell to one powerful chapter of the Journey we’ve shared, I want everyone to know I’m not done. Music is still burning strong inside me, and there are new creative horizons ahead. This tour is both a thank you and the beginning of what’s next.”
The band — which now consists of Schon, Jonathan Cain, Deen Castronovo, Arnel Pineda, Jason Derlatka, and Todd Jensen — will head out for the 60-date farewell tour starting in February and closing up in July, per the announcement.
Presale for the tickets will begin on Nov. 11 for Citi Cardmembers at 10 a.m. VIP package presale will also begin at the same time. Local presale and Ticketmaster presale will begin on Nov. 13 at 10 a.m. Tickets will go on sale to the general public at 10 a.m. on Nov. 14.
The full tour schedule is:
- Feb. 28 — Hershey, Pennsylvania: Giant Center
- March 2 — Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: PPG Paints Arena
- March 4 — Washington, D.C. Capital One Arena
- March 5 — Trenton, New Jersey: Cure Insurance Arena
- March 7 — Ottawa, Ontario: Canadian Tire Centre
- March 9 — Hamilton, Ontario: TD Coliseum
- March 11 — Montreal, Quebec: Bell Centre
- March 12 — Quebec City, Quebec: Vidéotron Centre
- March 14 — Hartford, Connecticut: PeoplesBank Arena
- March 16 — Columbus, Ohio: Nationwide Arena
- March 17 — Indianapolis, Indiana: Gainbridge Fieldhouse
- March 19 — Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Fiserv Forum
- March 21 — Memphis, Tennessee: FedExForum
- March 22 — Lexington, Kentucky: Rupp Arena
- March 25 — N. Little Rock, Arizona: Simmons Bank Arena
- March 26 — Kansas City, Missouri: T-Mobile Center
- March 28 — New Orleans, Louisiana: Smoothie King Center
- March 29 — Bossier City, Louisiana: Brookshire Grocery Arena
- March 31 — Austin, Texas: Moody Center
- April 3 — Oklahoma City, Oklahoma: Paycom Center
- April 4 — Wichita, Kansas: Intrust Bank Arena
- April 6 — Sioux Falls, South Dakota: Denny Sanford Premier Center
- April 8 — Des Moines, Iowa: Casey’s Center
- April 9 — Lincoln, Nebraska: Pinnacle Bank Arena
- April 12 — Salt Lake City, Utah: Delta Center
- April 14 — Boise, Indiana: ExtraMile Arena
- April 15 — Spokane, Washington: Spokane Arena
- April 17 — Vancouver, British Columbia: Pacific Coliseum
- April 19 — Eugene, Oregon: Matthew Knight Arena
- April 21 — Sacramento, California: Golden 1 Center
- April 22 — Bakersfield, California: Dignity Health Arena
- April 24 — Fresno, California: Save Mart Center at Fresno State
- May 15 — Tampa, Florida: Benchmark International Arena
- May 16 — Jacksonville, Florida: VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena
- May 18 — Columbia, South Carolina: Colonial Life Arena
- May 20 — Charlotte, North Carolina: Spectrum Center
- May 21 — Greensboro, North Carolina: First Horizon Coliseum
- May 23 — Atlantic City, New Jersey: Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall
- May 27 — State College, Pennsylvania: Bryce Jordan Center
- May 28 — Charlottesville, Virginia: John Paul Jones Arena
- May 30 — Knoxville, Tennessee: Food City Center
- May 31 — Savannah, Georgia: Enmarket Arena
- June 3 — Hampton, Virginia: Hampton Coliseum
- June 4 — Roanoke, Virginia: Berglund Center Coliseum
- June 6 — Worcester, Massachusetts: DCU Center
- June 7 — Manchester, New Hampshire: SNHU Arena
- June 10 — Buffalo, New York: KeyBank Center
- June 11 — Allentown, Pennsylvania: PPL Center
- June 13 — Cincinnati, Ohio: Heritage Bank Center
- June 14 — Grand Rapids, Michigan: Van Andel Arena
- June 17 — Evansville, Indiana: Ford Center
- June 18 — Fort Wayne, Indiana: Allen County War Memorial Coliseum
- June 20 — Champaign, Illinois: State Farm Center
- June 21 — Green Bay, Wisconsin: Resch Center
- June 24 — Moline, Illinois: Vibrant Arena at the Mark
- June 25 — Springfield, Missouri: Great Southern Bank Arena
- June 27 — Tupelo, Mississippi: Cadence Bank Arena
- June 28 — Lafayette, Louisiana: Cajundome
- July 1 — Corpus Christi, Texas: Hilliard Center
- July 2 — Laredo, Texas: Sames Auto Arena
Journey was founded in San Francisco in 1973 by Schon, the only remaining original band member, who was a former member of Santana. Original founding member Gregg Rolie was also a former Santana musician, while former Steve Miller Band member Ross Valory and former Frumious Bandersnatch guitarist George Tickner rounded out the original lineup.
But the Journey era most people think of when they think of Journey began in the late 1970s, after the group changed its style to more popular American rock and added Steve Perry as lead vocalist. Under this new formation, Journey released “Infinity” in January 1978, the first of several megahit albums going into the 1980s.
Perry, arguably the most famous member of the band, served as frontman from 1977 to 1987 and then again from 1995 to 1998. Journey as a band, in various formations, has been active since 1995 — a long stint that the “Final Frontier” Tour is expected to bring to a close.
For more information on the Journey farewell tour, visit the band’s website here.
