Looking for Linkin Park tickets in Santiago de Compostela? The June 18, 2026 concert at Monte do Gozo is part of O Son Do Camiño and the From Zero World Tour, with classic anthems like "Numb" and "In the End" alongside new songs from From Zero. Plan your purchase and arrival early
Linkin Park in Galicia as a meeting of generations of rock audiences
Linkin Park comes to Santiago de Compostela at a moment when the band's name once again carries strong concert momentum. The performance is part of the O Son Do Camiño program, a festival held at Monte do Gozo that lasts three days, from its opening on June 18 to its finale on June 20. For visitors who see the ticket as a three-day experience, that means more than one concert: an entire open-air weekend in a city accustomed to receiving people from every direction.
For Linkin Park, this is a particularly interesting stop on the European part of the From Zero World Tour. In the band's schedule, Santiago de Compostela stands between performances in Lyon and Lisbon, and the concert is announced for Friday evening as part of the festival program. In this way, Monte do Gozo does not get only a major rock name, but also one of the most important phases in the band's current career: a return to big stages with new material and new concert energy.
Linkin Park is not a band that relies only on nostalgia. "In the End", "Numb", "Crawling", "Somewhere I Belong", "Faint" and "What I've Done" are still songs that the audience recognizes after just a few bars, but today's tour builds a bridge toward the album From Zero. Precisely for that reason, this performance can be attractive both to those who grew up with Hybrid Theory and Meteora and to those who are discovering the band through newer singles such as "The Emptiness Machine", "Heavy Is the Crown", "Two Faced" or "Up From the Bottom".
It is worth securing tickets in time, especially because this is a three-day festival format in which one arrival opens access to a broader program, and not just to an isolated concert.
A new phase of the band and a sound that once again looks forward
From Zero is the album that brought Linkin Park back into full concert rotation. It was released after a long break in studio releases and introduced a lineup in which, alongside Mike Shinoda, Dave "Phoenix" Farrell, Joe Hahn and Brad Delson, Emily Armstrong and Colin Brittain entered the creative circle. That change is not merely a biographical detail, but a key to understanding today's performance: the old material no longer sounds like a museum display, and the new material does not try to erase the past.
At their best, Linkin Park combine massive guitar riffs, electronic textures, a hip-hop pulse and choruses sung from the crowd. That has been their signature from the beginning, but From Zero moves it toward a cleaner, more direct concert power. "The Emptiness Machine" works as an entry into a new chapter, "Heavy Is the Crown" brings back an edge close to rock and metal audiences, while "Two Faced" sounds like a deliberate invocation of the band's early, nervous years.
For the audience in Santiago de Compostela, this means that what is expected is not just a sequence of hits, but a concert in which two eras constantly touch. The old songs carry collective memory, the new ones test how today's Linkin Park breathes in front of a large number of people. Precisely in that collision lies the most interesting part of the performance.
What the audience can expect from the live performance
At current performances, Linkin Park rely on the dynamics that have always been the center of their concert identity: explosive openings, quick changes of mood and moments in which electronic details merge with guitars. With a band like this, what matters is not only which songs will appear during the evening, but how the audience will react to the transitions between stadium choruses, Mike Shinoda's rap sections and Emily Armstrong's powerful vocal lines.
There is no need to speculate about the exact set list. What can be said is that the From Zero World Tour has a clear dramaturgical framework: the band presents a new phase, but cannot bypass the songs that shaped its status. Precisely for that reason, the concert can be emotionally intense without the need for grand words. The audience will recognize the breaks, quiet introductions and sudden drum strikes, and Monte do Gozo, as an open space, will give that sound breadth.
Linkin Park has always been strongest when combining opposites: anger and vulnerability, electronics and metal, rap and pop melody, introspective lyrics and choruses that can be carried by tens of thousands of voices. In a festival setting, such contrast comes to the fore more easily because the audience is not composed only of the most loyal fans, but also of curious visitors moving among several stages.
Tickets for this event are in demand because it is a performance that has both a comeback and a festival character: for some, it is a meeting with a band they have waited for years, for others an opportunity to see why Linkin Park is still a reference point of modern rock.
O Son Do Camiño and the festival context
O Son Do Camiño has been announced in 2026 as a three-day program at Monte do Gozo, with three days of music and several stages. Linkin Park is one of Friday's main highlights, and the same festival weekend also brings together names from pop, rock, indie and electronic music. Such a schedule changes the way arrival should be planned: the visitor does not choose only one time slot, but the entire rhythm of the day.
On Friday, when Linkin Park is announced, the festival context also includes performers such as Biffy Clyro, Hoobastank, Sexy Zebras and Niña Polaca, along with an electronic program in a separate area. This is a good combination for an audience for whom Linkin Park is the main reason for coming, but who also wants to make use of the rest of the day. Biffy Clyro can attract those who like strong alternative rock, Hoobastank will open the memory of the early 2000s for many, and the electronic section offers a later tempo after the big guitar performances.
Who this concert is especially interesting for
- Long-time fans: an audience that has been with the band since the albums Hybrid Theory and Meteora gets the opportunity here to hear how the old material fits into the new lineup.
- Lovers of big alternative rock: Linkin Park and Biffy Clyro on the same day give the program a firm guitar backbone.
- Festival visitors who want breadth: O Son Do Camiño brings together rock, pop, indie and electronic music on the same weekend, so the day can be built around different stages.
- Travelers who want to combine music and the city: Santiago de Compostela offers enough history, gastronomy and walks for a concert trip to become a short journey.
Monte do Gozo as an open concert stage
Monte do Gozo is not a classic hall. It is an open space on a hill above Santiago de Compostela, connected with the pilgrimage tradition and with a view toward the city. For a rock concert, that means a different feeling than in an indoor arena: the sound spreads across a large space, the audience moves more freely, and evening performances have that festival combination of lights, air and a mass of people.
Such a location is especially suited to a band like Linkin Park. Their songs require space, especially in the parts when electronics and guitars open into a broad chorus. In an indoor hall, the audience gets the pressure of the sound; at Monte do Gozo, it gets a horizon, an open sky and the feeling that the whole hill is turning into a shared choir. That does not mean one should expect an intimate club encounter, but rather a large festival picture in which closeness to the performer is felt through the audience's shared reaction.
In practical terms, an open space also requires a little more preparation. The weather in Galicia can change, so comfortable footwear, layered clothing and a return plan are just as important as the concert schedule. At festivals of this type, those who arrive earlier, get to know the stage layout and do not leave transport until the last moment gain the most.
Ticket sales for this event are in progress, and for a format like this it is smartest to plan the entire day, not just the time of the main performer's appearance.
Getting to the venue and moving around the city
Monte do Gozo is located outside the historic core of Santiago de Compostela itself, but it is well connected with the city. According to the venue's information, from the center one can reach the vicinity of the site by city bus lines 6 and 7; for line 6, the San Marcos stop is highlighted, and for line 7, getting off at the Aríns roundabout. During the period of festivals and concerts, additional shuttle lines are common, so before departure it is good to check the current transport arrangements for that day.
For arrival by car, access via the N-634 road and the connection with the AP-9 are mentioned, but festival days mean crowds, slowed approaches and limited practicality of parking. If arriving from another city or country, the simplest base remains Santiago: accommodation near the center, railway station or bus station makes the return after the late program easier.
Practical notes for visitors
- Plan to arrive earlier than the desired concert, especially if you are entering the Monte do Gozo area for the first time.
- Check the stage schedule before departure so that you do not lose time moving around during the busiest part of the evening.
- For the return, count on a large concentration of people after the performances of the main acts.
- Adapt your clothing to the open space: the evening may be cooler than the afternoon.
- For a three-day ticket, consider resting between days, because the program lasts a long time and the festival rhythm quickly becomes exhausting.
Santiago de Compostela as part of the concert experience
Santiago de Compostela gives this concert a different frame from a typical stadium stop. The city is known for its cathedral, the stone streets of the old center and the constant arrival of travelers who finish the Camino de Santiago. That energy of travel fits well into a festival whose name and location directly evoke the idea of a path.
For visitors coming from outside Galicia, the Linkin Park concert can be the central point of a short stay. The day can begin with a walk through the old center, lunch near the market or a visit to the cathedral, and then continue toward Monte do Gozo. The city is not huge, but it has enough content for the festival not to be reduced only to entering and leaving the concert area.
It is important to leave enough time for logistics. Festival days fill accommodation, restaurants and public transport, and late concerts require a clear return plan. Anyone traveling by train, bus or plane should check arrivals and departures so as not to depend on the last possible connection.
Why this stop is important for fans
Linkin Park's performance in Santiago de Compostela is important because it comes at a moment when the band is once again building its relationship with the audience on big stages. From Zero is not only the title of an album, but also a description of the situation: the band continues after a long pause, with a new voice, a new rhythm section and an old catalog that the audience does not want to let go. Such a combination can be sensitive, but precisely for that reason the concert has additional tension.
At Monte do Gozo, that difference between generations will probably be heard in the audience choir: someone will sing "Numb" the loudest, someone will wait for "The Emptiness Machine", and someone will come because of the entire festival day. The best concerts of this type arise exactly then - when the reasons for coming differ, but in the key chorus they join into the same voice.
The rhythm of the evening and a smart choice of ticket
Since the ticket is valid for three days, it makes the most sense to view the event as a festival stay, and not just as one evening. The program begins the day before Linkin Park's performance and continues after it, so visitors can distribute their energy: get to know the space on the first day, reserve the second day for the rock peak, and close the weekend on the third day with a different musical tempo.
Linkin Park at a festival like this is not just a name on a poster. It is a concert that carries the memory of the early 2000s, the current album and a large audience that wants to hear how the band sounds now. Monte do Gozo adds open space to that, and Santiago de Compostela adds the feeling of travel. It is worth securing tickets in time and planning the entire festival rhythm around an evening in which old choruses and new chapters meet under the Galician sky.
Sources:
- Linkin Park - tour schedule and confirmation of the performance in Santiago de Compostela as part of O Son do Camiño.
- O Son Do Camiño - festival dates, confirmation of Linkin Park, festival context and schedule announcement.
- O Son Do Camiño - published program schedule and list of performers by day.
- Monte do Gozo - information on getting to the venue, bus lines, road access and address.
- Linkin Park Store - information about the From Zero (Deluxe Edition) release and songs from the band's current phase.