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Buy tickets for concert Florence + The Machine - 25.04.2026., Xfinity Mobile Arena, Philadelphia, United States of America Buy tickets for concert Florence + The Machine - 25.04.2026., Xfinity Mobile Arena, Philadelphia, United States of America

CONCERT

Florence + The Machine

Xfinity Mobile Arena, Philadelphia, US
25. April 2026. 19:30h
2026
25
April
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar - illustration/ arhiva (vlastita)

Florence + The Machine tickets for Philadelphia concert - Xfinity Mobile Arena and the Everybody Scream Tour

Looking for tickets for Florence + The Machine in Philadelphia? Explore this concert at Xfinity Mobile Arena, the context of the current "Everybody Scream" era, and what fans can expect from a live show built around new songs, major crowd favourites, and Florence Welch's unmistakable stage presence

Florence + The Machine on the coast: what is really happening with the April 25 concert

If you planned this show as an evening in Philadelphia, the most important news comes before anything else: the Florence + The Machine concert scheduled for Saturday, 25.04.2026, is no longer being held at Xfinity Mobile Arena, but has officially been moved to Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall Arena in Atlantic City, New Jersey. The change was announced a few days before the performance, and the reason is an overlap with the NHL playoffs. This significantly changes the arrival logistics, but not the core of the evening: it is still the American leg of the "Everybody Scream Tour", with a confirmed start at 19:00 and doors opening at 18:00.

At this stage of her career, Florence + The Machine is not playing on nostalgia, but on a blend of new material and the songs that built her status as a live constant. The band's sound is still easily recognizable: art pop, baroque pop, indie rock, and a gospel breadth in the arrangements, with Florence Welch's voice carrying both an intimate ballad and a huge chorus with equal conviction. That is why this concert is appealing both to audiences who have been with the band since the "Lungs" days and to those who see Florence as an artist for large, emotionally charged halls. Tickets for this event are in demand.

The current context is defined by the sixth studio album "Everybody Scream", released on 31.10.2025. The band's official materials and reviews of the album agree on one thing: this new era is not just another return to huge choruses, but a darker and sharper cycle of songs in which mysticism, anxiety, female strength, and physical vulnerability are pushed to the forefront. Among the songs that have already strongly marked this phase are "Everybody Scream", "One of the Greats", "Witch Dance", "Sympathy Magic", and "The Old Religion", and it is precisely this repertoire that carries the current tour.For the audience, that means they are not coming only for "Dog Days Are Over" or "Shake It Out", even though those are songs that still work powerfully in a large space. The concerts so far on the "Everybody Scream Tour" show that Florence does not treat the new album as a passing addition, but as the backbone of the evening. According to recent reports and published setlists, the performance mixes new songs with recognizable older moments such as "Spectrum", "Cosmic Love", "Never Let Me Go", and a finale that keeps the audience on its feet until the very end. That does not mean the setlist for Atlantic City is guaranteed in advance, but it gives a fairly clear picture of the kind of experience the audience can expect.

What particularly sets this tour apart is not an accumulation of effects, but the way Welch places herself at the center of the space. After the concert at TD Garden, Boston.com wrote that it was about a great voice, more minimal production, and a very powerful encore, while the Guardian in February described the performance as a darker and more stripped-back turn toward catharsis, with choir and theatricality intensifying the gothic tone of the new songs. In other words, do not expect randomly thrown-together hits, but a concert that builds an arc - from ritual tension to liberating choruses. It is worth securing tickets in time.

For this date, Sofia Isella has also been officially confirmed as the opening act on the eastern leg of the North American tour, including the originally announced date for the Philadelphia area. This is useful information for audiences who like to arrive early as well: in recent months, Isella has been emerging as a name that opens a space between art pop, alternative rock, and a pronounced stage personality, so it is realistic to expect that the evening will not truly begin only when Florence steps onto the stage. If you are planning to arrive for doors opening, it makes sense to be at the location early enough.

What the move from Philadelphia to Atlantic City means

This concert is no longer a typical arena evening in the sports complex of South Philadelphia, but a performance in a historic hall right on the Boardwalk. That changes the feeling of the event as well. Xfinity Mobile Arena is indeed a large modern hall at 3601 South Broad Street, connected with massive concert and sports traffic, but the current performance is now tied to Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall, a venue from 1929 which, after renovation, operates as an arena with a seating capacity of 14,770. For Florence's style, this is an interesting shift: instead of a standard urban arena environment, you get a historic space with a different acoustic and visual personality.

Boardwalk Hall is not just a large hall, but a place that itself carries part of the evening atmosphere. It is located at 2301 Boardwalk, in the center of the Atlantic City Boardwalk, bordered by Pacific, Georgia, and Mississippi Avenue. In the official materials, the hall is described as historic and architecturally recognizable, and that combination of older monumentality and contemporary concert setups often creates a warmer, more compact impression than generic arenas. For an artist like Florence Welch, who relies on voice, space, and contact with the audience, that is an important difference.

Quick facts about the new location


  • New concert location: Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall Arena, Atlantic City, New Jersey

  • Address: 2301 Boardwalk, Atlantic City, NJ 08401

  • Doors open: 18:00

  • Concert starts: 19:00

  • Main arena capacity: 14,770 seats

  • Location: directly along the Boardwalk, in the center of Atlantic City

  • Confirmed opening act for this part of the tour: Sofia Isella

That capacity is large enough for full arena momentum, but still restrained enough that the concert does not dissolve into a cold, stadium-like impression. If you have seen Florence, or imagine her, in the context of a hall that breathes as one voice, Boardwalk Hall makes sense. The history of the venue further intensifies the sense of ceremony: over the decades Elton John, Paul McCartney, The Rolling Stones, and The Beatles have performed there, which is not just a decorative fact but a signal that the hall has a long history with formats that require a strong performer presence. Seats are disappearing quickly.

Who this concert might particularly suit

For long-time fans, this is an evening in which the new album finally gets its full stage framework. On the studio recording, "Everybody Scream" works through a density of motifs and emotional charge, but on stage these songs make sense only when Florence performs them as a sequence of tension and release. Anyone who loves the band's earlier phase still has a good reason to come, because the tour so far has shown that the classics have not been pushed aside, but serve as a counterpoint to the new songs.

The broader audience, including those who may not follow Florence album by album, can count on a concert that is understandable even without deep knowledge of the discography. Her songs live often work precisely because they are built on a clear crescendo, a big chorus, and the physical feeling of communal singing. That is especially important in a hall like Boardwalk Hall, where the audience is not scattered across multiple levels of a huge arena, but more concentrated around the stage.For lovers of a broader genre spectrum, the concert may also be interesting because Florence + The Machine is not confined to one audience. On the same evening, listeners of art pop, indie rock, orchestral pop, and audiences who usually choose artists with more pronounced stage drama meet. In the new cycle of songs, the emphasis on rituality, darker lyrics, and vocal strength is especially felt, so the concert will easily draw in those for whom performance and intensity matter, not just a catalog of hits.

Practical matters: arrival, parking, and entry

For visitors arriving by car, the official directions for Boardwalk Hall lead to the garage at the end of Mississippi Avenue and the Boardwalk, with entry through the tunnel under the hall. The official information also lists the Atlantic City Convention Center Garage as an alternative, while Wave Garage is an additional nearby option. Parking prices depend on the event, so there is no point in guessing them in advance. It is more important to know that this is a location where weekend traffic can be heavy, especially because the concert is being held on a Saturday evening.

If you are arriving by public transport, Atlantic City Rail Terminal is connected to the Atlantic City Line, and NJ TRANSIT points out that a free shuttle service runs between the rail terminal and the city's casinos, coordinated with train arrivals and departures. This is useful for visitors arriving from Philadelphia or the wider region who want to avoid driving all the way to the coast. Atlantic City Convention Center is connected to the terminal, and from there you can continue toward the Boardwalk by local transport, taxi, or on foot, depending on how much walking through the city center suits you.At entry, it is worth expecting a standard screening. Boardwalk Hall states that medium and larger handbags are permitted, but are subject to inspection, while shopping bags, briefcases, backpacks of any size, travel bags, and similar luggage are prohibited. Will Call pickup begins several hours before the performance, and doors open at 18:00. Ticket sales for this event are ongoing.

Atlantic City as the host city

For those who are not coming only for the concert but are turning it into a short trip, Atlantic City has an advantage here over the classic arena district. Boardwalk Hall is located literally by the promenade and the sea, so before the performance it is entirely feasible to combine a late afternoon on the Boardwalk, dinner downtown, and then entry into the hall without major transfers across the city. The official tourism materials for the city emphasize exactly that combination: rail and bus arrivals are positioned close to the city's main points, and Boardwalk Hall is in a zone that easily fits into a one-day or weekend visit.

This is also useful because the date is positioned quite interestingly within the tour. That week, Florence has Boston behind her, two performances at Madison Square Garden, and a concert in Brooklyn, and Atlantic City comes as the only stop in that sequence on the New Jersey coast before continuing toward Florida and the American South. In other words, this is not a passing festival slot, but a standalone arena evening in a dense run of large indoor performances. For audiences from Philadelphia, South New Jersey, and the wider region, this is practically the nearest redirected opportunity to catch the tour without waiting for some later date.

What to expect when the lights go down

The fairest way to put it is this: do not expect a light, revue-style pop concert. Expect an evening that builds tension, uses silence just as deliberately as percussion and choruses, and places Florence's voice in the foreground. Recent reviews suggest that the "Everybody Scream Tour" is less focused on overcrowded scenography and more on performer presence, choir, band dynamics, and contact with the audience. That is good for an audience that wants the concert to have shape and weight, and not just a sequence of singles.

If Florence + The Machine matters to you precisely because of the blend of grandeur and vulnerability, this date makes sense even after the move. If you are going for the first time, you will get a very good cross-section of what the band is today: an artist with a large catalog, but also with enough confidence that the new era does not sound like a footnote to old successes. And if you planned the concert in Philadelphia, the most important thing is not to get the city wrong - the evening of 25.04.2026 now belongs to Atlantic City and Boardwalk Hall.

Sources:
- Xfinity Mobile Arena - information about the concert relocation from Philadelphia due to the NHL playoffs
- Florence + The Machine - official tour and the official page for the album "Everybody Scream"
- Boardwalk Hall - confirmed date, door opening time, address, capacity, and arrival instructions
- Boardwalk Hall A-Z Guide and Box Office - bag rules and entry information
- NJ TRANSIT and Visit Atlantic City - rail terminal, shuttle, and basic traffic context for visitors
- Boston.com and The Guardian - recent impressions and description of the current tour's stage approach
- setlist.fm - overview of songs performed at previous tour concerts as a framework for the expected repertoire

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3 hours ago, Author: Culture & events desk

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