Spiritbox have announced a ‘Tsunami Sea’ UK arena tour set for this autumn – check out all the details below.
- READ MORE: Spiritbox on the road to ‘Tsunami Sea’: “It’s not the second coming of ‘metalcore Jesus Christ’ – it’s just us”
After sharing a ‘Tsunami Warning’ teaser with fans last week, the band have now officially announced a huge UK arena trek, which marks their biggest run here to date.
The Canadian metal outfit will be bringing the ‘Tsunami Sea’ tour across the pond this autumn, with support coming from Jinjer and Dying Wish.
The run kicks off at Glasgow’s SECC Hall 3 on September 12, and wraps with a show at London’s OVO Arena Wembley. The stops in between will see Spiritbox headline the country’s biggest arena in Manchester’s Co-op Live.
Tickets go on general sale this Friday (February 27) from 10am. You can check out a full list of dates below, and find your tickets here.
Spiritbox’s ‘Tsunami Sea’ 2026 tour dates are:
SEPTEMBER
12 – Glasgow Secc Hall 3
14 – Nottingham Motorpoint Arena
16 – Manchester Co-Op Live
17 – Cardiff Utilita Arena
19 – London Ovo Arena Wembley
News follows the band performing a searing rendition of ‘Soft Spine’ at at this year’s Grammys, which saw Courtney LaPlante and co. tore through the ‘Tsunami Sea‘ track.
They were up for Best Metal Performance, which ultimately went to Turnstile. It marked the third time the band have been nominated for that award, having first being nominated with ‘Jaded’ in 2024, and later ‘Cellar Door’ in 2025.
The latter year saw frontwoman LaPlante go viral after being mistaken for fellow nominee Poppy, whom she pretended to be in an interview at the awards.
She later teamed up with Poppy and Evanescence’s Amy Lee on ‘End Of You’.
“Instead of just dreaming about it, Poppy really went for it and made it happen. Instead of half-assing it, Amy went full out and crushed it,” LaPlante told NME. “All I can do is rise to the occasion and show them the respect they deserve, that they have also shown to me.”
LaPlante initially hinted at future collaborations with both Poppy and Fish in an interview with NME last year. “There is always going to be some way that we work with Jordan, because both of us really like collabs,” she said at the time.
“Maybe it’s not [Spiritbox’s] song, but we could help him with another artist.”

























