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Buy tickets for concert Lewis Capaldi - 22.04.2026., Scotiabank Arena, Toronto, Canada Buy tickets for concert Lewis Capaldi - 22.04.2026., Scotiabank Arena, Toronto, Canada

CONCERT

Lewis Capaldi

Scotiabank Arena, Toronto, CA
22. April 2026. 19:30h
2026
22
April
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar - illustration/ arhiva (vlastita)

Lewis Capaldi tickets for Scotiabank Arena Toronto - comeback tour concert with major hits and new songs live

Looking for tickets for Lewis Capaldi in Toronto? Secure your spot for the concert at Scotiabank Arena on 22.04.2026. and expect an evening of emotional pop, singalong choruses and songs like "Someone You Loved" and "Before You Go", alongside material from his current comeback era

Lewis Capaldi in Toronto: an evening for an audience that wants a voice, the silence between verses, and choruses they know by heart

Lewis Capaldi arrives at Scotiabank Arena on April 22 at a moment when his current career phase carries added weight. After a longer break, he returned with new material and a new series of major performances, and Toronto is right at the beginning of the North American run of concerts. That means the audience is not coming just for another festival stop or a routine arena date, but for part of a comeback chapter that is still being shaped from night to night. Ticket sales for this event are ongoing.

Capaldi’s strength is still the same as on his strongest studio recordings - songs that sound as though they were written for an intimate space, yet still fill a large hall without difficulty. His pop relies on piano, acoustic guitar, strong choruses, and a voice that carries the whole story without many embellishments. That is why his concerts also attract audiences who do not regularly follow contemporary pop: what matters here are the lyrics, the tension in the performance, and the feeling that the song is growing in front of you, not just a production effect.

For the wider audience, Lewis Capaldi remains most recognizable for the hits "Someone You Loved", "Before You Go", "Hold Me While You Wait", and "Bruises", songs that long ago moved beyond the frame of a classic fan base and became a shared repertoire for radio listeners, streaming audiences, and people who may not follow him every day but know the choruses as soon as the first bars begin. For long-time fans, the newer material is also important because it shows that he did not return only on the strength of past successes, but with a clear new chapter that has its own tone and its own themes.

Where Lewis Capaldi is now in his career

The new context is shaped by the "Survive EP", which is marked on his official site as the current release, and with it "Survive", "Something in the Heavens", "Almost", and "The Day That I Die" have come into focus. In April 2026, he also released the song "Stay Love", which he has already included in performances on the current tour. This matters for Toronto because it shows that the concert will not be built only around proven hits, but also around new material that the audience is only beginning to absorb. It is worth securing tickets in time.

Capaldi’s return is not only a recording comeback but also a live one. After stopping performances in 2023 for health and mental health reasons, he appeared live again in 2025 and then continued to build his return through new performances and a new release. That fact also changes the tone of the audience at the concert: alongside the usual singing in unison, there is also the feeling of watching an artist who deliberately slowed down, and is therefore returning to the stage with more control, less noise around him, and greater focus on the song itself.

At recent performances from April 2026, the repertoire combined new and old in a very clear way. In New York and Boston, the set included "Survive", "Grace", "Heavenly Kind of State of Mind", "Wish You the Best", "Almost", "Pointless", "Something in the Heavens", "Forget Me", "The Day That I Die", "Before You Go", "Stay Love", "Hold Me While You Wait", and "Someone You Loved". That does not mean Toronto will get an identical song order, but it says enough about the direction of the evening: plenty of space for audience singalongs, several heavy emotional peaks, and a balance between older singles and the new EP period.

What the audience can expect in the venue

If one looks at the rhythm of recent performances, Capaldi is currently building the concert more on voice, band, and contact with the audience than on an overstated stage spectacle. Reports from the Boston performance highlighted his humor, more relaxed talk between songs, and production that left plenty of air for the vocals themselves. In other words, this is not a concert that relies on constant visual overload. The strongest moments are more likely to come when the hall falls silent before a chorus or when the whole space is taken over by the ending of songs such as "Before You Go" and "Someone You Loved".

That is also the reason why this concert is attractive to different audience profiles. Long-time fans will get a comeback tour and new material that is already strongly tied to Capaldi’s personal narrative. The wider audience will get a series of songs that have been circulating on playlists and radio for years. Lovers of singer-songwriter pop and a more emotional mainstream sound will get an evening in which the song leads the program, not the other way around. And for couples, groups of friends, and audiences choosing the concert as a night out without deep knowledge of the full discography, Capaldi’s performances have that rare advantage that a large part of the hall starts singing together very quickly.

Scotiabank Arena as a concert stage

Scotiabank Arena is not a small venue, but it has several advantages for this type of concert. It is located at 40 Bay Street in the very center of Toronto, at the corner of Bay Street and Lake Shore Boulevard West, right next to Union Station. It is a venue that opened in 1999, built on the site of the former Canada Post Delivery Building, with parts of the historic façade preserved. Over 25 years, the arena has hosted more than 13 million visitors at concerts, which says enough about its familiarity with major music evenings and the rapid movement of large numbers of people through entrances, corridors, and exits.For Capaldi’s type of performance, the internal logic of the space is also important. The venue is large enough for the choruses to gain the massiveness that suits his songs, but the layout of the lower sections, the floor space, and the closer side zones can create a sense of greater closeness than one expects from a classic arena. On the event page itself, the venue especially highlights sections 107-109 and 118-120 as an up-close option, and lounge tables on the west end of the arena with a view of the stage are also mentioned. Seats are disappearing quickly.

Basic information about arrival and entry


  • Venue address: Scotiabank Arena, 40 Bay Street, Toronto.

  • Event start on the venue page: 22/04/2026 at 19:30.

  • The simplest arrival by public transport: Union Station, which connects TTC, GO Transit, and other links in the city center.

  • The venue is mobile-only for tickets, so it is smart to prepare everything on your phone before arrival.

  • There is no re-entry after leaving the venue.

  • The bag policy is strict: only very small purses, clutch models, or fanny packs up to 16.5 x 11.5 cm are allowed.



For drivers, it is useful to know that the venue itself does not have a classic large public parking facility under the building for all visitors. Scotiabank Arena states that the two levels of parking under the building are intended for private suite users and office tenants, while other visitors rely on a large number of public parking spaces within the immediate walking zone. In practice, that means arriving by car is possible, but it requires earlier arrival and a bit more patience when leaving after the concert, especially because this is a busy part of downtown.If you are coming from outside Toronto, the venue location is a major advantage. Union Station is one of the city’s most important landmarks and the main transport hub, and the city center around the venue offers a very simple combination of transport, hotels, restaurants, and a short walk to the waterfront. Toronto presents itself as the largest Canadian city and one of the most multicultural urban centers in North America, so even a short concert visit can easily turn into a full evening out or a weekend stay in the city.

Why the Toronto date carries extra weight

This date comes immediately after the Montreal concert and before Chicago, therefore in the middle of a dense run of major arenas at the start of the tour. That is precisely why Toronto is not a passing stop, but part of a block in which one can see how the tour breathes in front of the largest North American audiences. On his official tour page, Capaldi lists Toronto as a sold-out date, which further strengthens the feeling that this is an evening with strong interest and a high concentration of an audience that was not waiting for him only because of one hit.

For the visitor, that means one very concrete thing: the hall will probably react loudly from the beginning, but the peak will not necessarily be at the noisiest moment, but in those songs where the audience spontaneously takes over the chorus. With Capaldi, that is precisely what often becomes the main image of the evening - not fireworks and not enormous stage design, but thousands of voices carrying a ballad together. Tickets for this event are in demand.

How to prepare for the evening

The smartest choice is to arrive earlier than one normally would for a classic club concert. The reason is not panic but logistics: the central location also means more people at the same time, entry checks are stricter because of the bag policy, and the mobile-only system requires you to have your ticket and phone ready before you get to the door. If comfort matters to you, it is practical to count on arriving by train, subway, or GO connection to Union Station and then doing the final few minutes on foot.

From clothing and mood to expectations from the program itself, this is an evening for an audience that accepts changes of pace. There will be songs that lift the whole hall, but also those that require calm and focus. Capaldi is an artist who works well when the audience gives him room for a verse to land, and then explodes only at the chorus. Anyone looking for a constant pace without a break may enjoy some other type of pop spectacle more. Anyone who wants a voice that carries the room and songs that the audience returns to the artist in unison is coming to the right place here. It is worth securing tickets in time.

Songs that could define the evening the most

When one looks at the recent concert run, several titles are especially important for expectations in Toronto. "Survive" carries the current period and opens the frame of the whole return. "Something in the Heavens" and "The Day That I Die" show the new emotional color of the material. "Before You Go" and "Hold Me While You Wait" are still among the songs that best combine silence and a mass chorus. And "Someone You Loved" remains the moment that still most easily binds Capaldi and the audience into one voice. It is not necessary to know every song in advance for the concert to work - it is enough to know how this author builds tension between the verse and communal singing.Sources:
- Scotiabank Arena - concert date and time, venue location, entry rules, mobile-only tickets, no re-entry, bag policy, and arrival information
- Lewis Capaldi Official Site - current tour and "Survive EP" as the current release
- The Guardian and People - context of Capaldi’s return after a break and the single "Survive"
- setlist.fm and Boston.com - recent repertoire and impressions from April 2026 performances
- City of Toronto and Toronto Union - city context and Union Station for visitors who are traveling

Everything you need to know about tickets for concert Lewis Capaldi

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3 hours ago, Author: Culture & events desk

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