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Taylor Swift performs at the Monumental stadium during her Eras tour in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Taylor Swift performs at the Monumental stadium during her Eras tour in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Photograph: Natacha Pisarenko/AP
Taylor Swift performs at the Monumental stadium during her Eras tour in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Photograph: Natacha Pisarenko/AP

Taylor Swift’s Eras tour becomes first to gross over $1bn – report

This article is more than 5 months old

The star’s career-spanning tour sold over 4.3m tickets this year and is estimated to make another $1bn in 2024 sales

Taylor Swift’s Eras tour is the first tour to cross the billion-dollar mark, according to Pollstar’s 2023 year-end charts.

Not only was Swift’s landmark Eras Tour the number one tour both worldwide and in North America, but she also brought in $1.04bn with 4.35m tickets sold across 60 tour dates, the concert trade publication found.

Pollstar data is pulled from box office reports, venue capacity estimates, historical Pollstar venue ticket sales data and other undefined research, collected from 17 November 2022 to 15 November 2023.

Representatives for the publication did not immediately clarify if they adjusted past tour data to match 2023 inflation in naming Swift the first to break the billion-dollar threshold.

Pollstar also found that Swift brought in approximately $200m in merchandise sales and her blockbuster film adaptation of the tour, Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour, has reportedly earned approximately $250m in sales, making it the highest-grossing concert film of all time.

According to their estimates, Pollstar predicts a big 2024 for Swift as well. The magazine projects the Eras Tour will once again reach $1bn within their eligibility window, meaning Swift is likely to bring in over $2bn over the span of the tour.

Worldwide, Swift’s tour was followed by Beyoncé in second, Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band in third, Coldplay in fourth, Harry Styles in fifth, and Morgan Wallen, Ed Sheeran, Pink, The Weeknd and Drake.

In North America, there was a similar top 10: Swift, followed by Beyoncé, Morgan Wallen, Drake, Pink, Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band, Ed Sheeran, George Strait, Karol G and RBD.

For concert sales 2023 was a landmark year: worldwide, the top 100 tours of the year saw a 46% jump from last year, bringing in $9.17bn compared to 2022’s $6.28bn.

In North America, that number jumped from $4.77bn last year to $6.63bn.

Earlier this week, Swift was named Time Magazine’s person of the year. Last month, Apple Music named her its artist of the year; Spotify revealed she was 2023’s most-streamed artist globally, raking in more than 26.1bn streams since 1 January and beating Bad Bunny’s three-year record.

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