| Promotional tour by Bruno Mars | |
| Example promotional poster | |
| Location | Asia, North America, Oceania, South America |
|---|---|
| Start date | October 14, 2022 (Sydney, Australia) |
| End date | November 5, 2024 (Belo Horizonte, Brazil) |
| No. of shows | 54 |
| Attendance | 2,497,449 tickets |
| Box office | $312,801,742 |
| Website | https://www.brunomars.com/tour |
| Bruno Mars concert chronology | |
American singer-songwriter Bruno Mars toured Australia, Asia, South America and North America from 2022 to 2024. Spanning fifty-four dates across sixteen countries, the tour began on October 14, 2022, in Sydney, Australia, and concluded on November 5, 2024, in Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
Mars announced various international shows individually throughout 2022 to 2024. The Sydney shows were announced in August 2022, [1] the Osaka and 2022 Tokyo shows were announced in September 2022, [2] the Seoul and Bulacan shows were announced in April 2023, [3] the Tbilisi and Tel Aviv shows were announced in June 2023, [4] [5] the 2024 Tokyo shows were announced in July 2023, [6] the AlUla show was announced in September 2023, [7] the Bangkok and Singapore shows were announced in January 2024, [8] the Inglewood shows were announced in April 2024, to commemorate the opening of the Intuit Dome, [9] and the Kaohsiung, Jakarta and Kuala Lumpur shows were announced in June 2024. [10] [11] All shows, except the Inglewood shows, were held at stadiums or equivalent-sized venues. The Inglewood shows were the tour's only shows in the United States; Mars continued to perform shows for the Bruno Mars at Park MGM residency in Las Vegas during the course of the tour.
Mars performed in Tel Aviv on October 4, 2023. A second show, scheduled on October 7, was cancelled due to a October 7 attacks that had occurred earlier on the same day. [12] [13]
In 2023, Mars amassed the highest-grossing concerts by an international artist in South Korea history, with $5.572 million each night at Olympic Stadium in Seoul on June 17-18, 2023. [14]
As of 2024, Mars has the biggest box office report with $43.5 million from 322,000 tickets sold at Tokyo Dome in Tokyo on January 11-21. [15]
As of 2025, a total of 29 concerts were performed in Asia. Of the aforementioned shows, Mars was able to sell a total of 1,301,445 (98.58%) tickets and had a revenue of $179,140,000. [16]
He also has the biggest box office report in Indonesian history, with $21.5 million from 142,000 tickets sold in 3 shows at International Stadium in Jakarta. [17] The tour is the second highest-grossing tour by a Western artist in Asian history, with $179.1 million in 29 shows, only behind Coldplay's Music of the Spheres World Tour. [17]
The Bruno Mars Live tour grossed a total of $312,801,742 and sold a total of 2,497,449 tickets. It became his second highest tour to gross over $300 million in ticket sales in 54 shows. [18] The year of 2024, is the most successful calendar year of Mars career, with $280.1 million from 1,986,709 tickets sold across 60 shows. [19]
After the great success of two performances at "The Town Festival" in September 2023, in São Paulo, Brazil, and recording an exclusive video thanking Brazilians titled "Come to Brasil", Bruno Mars announced this exclusive tour for the largest South American country. [20] [21]
On May 2, through its social networks, the producer Live Nation made the official announcement of the presentations. Initially, four shows were announced: October 4 in Rio de Janeiro, October 8th and 9th in São Paulo and October 17 in Brasília. Due to high demand, all four announced shows were sold out in less than 1 hour, which led the producer to subsequently announce 4 more performances: October 5 in Rio de Janeiro, October 12th and 13th in São Paulo and October 18 in Brasília. [22] [23]
On September 27, Mars released his first compilation on streaming services, as part of the tour celebrations in Brazil, titled "Bruno Mars Favoritas Da Tour 2024 Brasil", the compilation has 28 songs, including songs from the concert setlist. The Brazilian leg ended up spawning 14 dates across 5 different cities and another benefit show on October 1. So far, this is the biggest tour by an international artist in Brazil. [24] The record was held by the Mexican pop group RBD, with 13 shows, on the Tour Generación RBD, in 2006. Mars broke the record with 14.
Mars earned his highest-grossing Latin American concert of all time on October 1, 2024, with $7.054 million at Estádio do Morumbi in São Paulo. It is the highest-grossing tour in Brazilian history, with $85 million from 817,000 tickets sold in 14 shows. It is also the biggest box office report in Brazilian history, with $42.3 million from 404,000 tickets sold in 6 shows at Estádio do Morumbi in São Paulo as part of the "Bruno Mars Live". [25]
This set list was taken from the show in Sydney on October 14, 2022. It does not represent all shows throughout the tour. [26]
Encore
| Date (2022) | City | Country | Venue | Attendance | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| October 14 | Sydney | Australia | Allianz Stadium | — | — |
| October 15 | |||||
| October 22 | Osaka | Japan | Kyocera Dome | ||
| October 23 | |||||
| October 26 | Tokyo | Tokyo Dome | |||
| October 27 | |||||
| October 30 |
| Date (2023) | City | Country | Venue | Attendance | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| June 17 | Seoul | South Korea | Seoul Olympic Stadium | 100,339 | $11,135,369 |
| June 18 | |||||
| June 24 | Santa Maria | Philippines | Philippine Arena | 76,252 | $10,377,192 |
| June 25 | |||||
| September 3 | São Paulo | Brazil | Interlagos Circuit | — | — |
| September 6 | Santiago | Chile | Estadio Monumental | ||
| September 10 | São Paulo | Brazil | Interlagos Circuit | ||
| September 29 | AlUla | Saudi Arabia | Azimuth Canyon | ||
| October 1 | Tbilisi | Georgia | Boris Paichadze Dinamo Arena | ||
| October 4 | Tel Aviv | Israel | Yarkon Park |
| Date (2024) | City | Country | Venue | Attendance | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 11 | Tokyo | Japan | Tokyo Dome | 322,000/322,000 | $43,500,000 |
| January 13 | |||||
| January 14 | |||||
| January 16 | |||||
| January 18 | |||||
| January 20 | |||||
| January 21 | |||||
| March 30 | Bangkok | Thailand | Rajamangala Stadium | 74,099/86,071 | $12,012,438 |
| March 31 | |||||
| April 3 | Singapore | Singapore National Stadium | 147,911/148,059 | $23,152,809 | |
| April 5 | |||||
| April 6 | |||||
| August 8 | Mexico City | Mexico | Estadio GNP Seguros | 174,000 | $18,900,000 |
| August 10 | |||||
| August 11 | |||||
| August 15 | Inglewood | United States | Intuit Dome | 26,648/26,648 | $6,727,495 |
| August 16 | |||||
| September 7 | Kaohsiung | Taiwan | Kaohsiung National Stadium | 110,225/110,225 | $13,833,890 |
| September 8 | |||||
| September 11 | Jakarta | Indonesia | Jakarta International Stadium | 142,119/145,108 | $21,500,000 |
| September 13 | |||||
| September 14 | |||||
| September 17 | Kuala Lumpur | Malaysia | National Stadium Bukit Jalil | 49,827/53,497 | $6,381,675 |
| October 1 | São Paulo | Brazil | Tokio Marine Hall | — | — |
| October 4 | Estádio MorumBIS | 403,619/403,619 | $42,324,56 | ||
| October 5 | |||||
| October 8 | |||||
| October 9 | |||||
| October 12 | |||||
| October 13 | |||||
| October 16 | Rio de Janeiro | Estádio Olímpico Nilton Santos | 195,776/195,776 | $17,375,840 | |
| October 19 | |||||
| October 20 | |||||
| October 26 | Brasília | Arena BRB | 91,767/91,767 | $11,156,115 | |
| October 27 | |||||
| October 31 | Curitiba | Estádio Couto Pereira | 72,427/72,427 | $8,378,689 | |
| November 1 | |||||
| November 5 | Belo Horizonte | Estádio Mineirão | 53,327/53,327 | $5,813,262 | |
| Date (2023) | City | Country | Venue | Reason | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| October 7 | Tel Aviv | Israel | Yarkon Park | October 7 attacks | [35] |
Bruno Mars, Live South Korea)
Bruno Mars, Live Japan)
Bruno Mars, Live in Asia; (1,301,445 (98.58%) tickets– $179,140,000)
Bruno Mars, Live Asia)
Bruno Mars Live; (2,497,449 (46,249 average) Tickets - $312,801,742 ($5,792,625 average)- $125.25 Average Price))
Bruno Mars, Live)
Bruno Mars, Live in Brazil)
October 26-30: Bruno Mars, Tokyo Dome, Tokyo (322,000 - $43,542,810); March 30-31: Rajamangala Stadium, Bangkok (74,099 - $12,012,438); April 3-7: National Stadium, Singapore (147,911 - $23,152,809)
August 15-16: Bruno Mars, Intuit Dome, Inglewood (26,648 - $6,727,495);September 11-14: International Stadium, Jakarta (142,119 - $21,518,727); September 17: Bukit Jalil Stadium, Kuala Lumpur (49,827 - $6,381,675), October 1-13, 2024: Estádio do Morumbi, São Paulo (403,619 - $42,324,565); October 16-20, 2024: Estádio Olímpico, Rio de Janeiro (195,776 - $17,375,840); October 26-27: Estádio Nacional, Brasília (91,767 - $11,156,115); October 31 - November 1: Curitiba, Estádio Couto Pereira (72,427 - $8,378,689); November 5: Estádio Mineirão, Belo Horizonte (53,327 - $5,813,262)