Blink‑182 have added three additional stops to their 2027 European tour, bringing the itinerary to Berlin, Milan and Paris.
Earlier this month the pop‑punk trio confirmed their first live appearances of next year at Germany’s Rock Am Ring and Rock Im Park festivals. They later added a slot at Rock For People in Hradec Králové.
The new dates begin at Berlin’s Waldbühne on June 8, followed by a show at Milan’s I‑Days Ippodromo Snai San Siro on June 13, and conclude at Paris’s La Défense Arena on June 15.
Germany’s concert will feature Billy Talent as the supporting act, while Pierce The Veil will open the Milan and Paris shows. Tickets go on sale Friday, June 26 at 10 a.m. local time, with a pre‑sale beginning Tuesday, June 23 at 10 a.m.
Newly announced 2027 dates:
June
8 – Waldbühne, Berlin
13 – I‑Days Ippodromo Snai San Siro, Milan
15 – La Défense Arena, Paris
In February, the band performed what they called their sole 2026 show at the Innings Festival in Tempe, Arizona, after a private Mercedes event in Los Angeles on May 19.
They have also issued a 20th‑anniversary reissue of the 2001 album Take Off Your Pants And Jacket, which includes six bonus tracks. While rumors circulate about a new record, none have been confirmed; a follow‑up would be the first album since 2023’s One More Time….
The 2023 album marked the return of the original lineup—Mark Hoppus, Tom DeLonge and Travis Barker—and launched the extensive “Missionary Impossible” tour.
In addition to the tour news, drummer Travis Barker will be the focus of the documentary Louder Than Fear, premiering at the Tribeca Festival on June 13 and streaming on Hulu (US) and Disney+ (international) from August 13.
Directed by Justin Krook and Michael Dwyer, the film examines Barker’s career, the 2008 plane crash that nearly claimed his life, and his subsequent “raw and redemptive” journey.
Last year, Mark Hoppus discussed his memoir Fahrenheit‑182 with NME, reflecting on the band’s evolution since its early‑90s beginnings.
“When we started Blink, our biggest goal was to sell out a small club in San Diego called Soma. The biggest room there held 1,200 people. When we sold it out in 1995, I thought we’d made it,” Hoppus recalled. “Then you get signed, go major, hit radio, play larger venues, and now we’re selling out stadiums in Los Angeles, Boston and New York. It’s wild to think it all started in Tom’s garage.”

